Kerry pushes plan to \\\'clean up\\\' disputed Afghan vote


FE Team | Published: July 13, 2014 00:00:00 | Updated: July 12, 2014 21:19:39


AFGHANISTAN : US Secretary of State, John Kerry (L) speaks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during a meeting at the presidential palace in Kabul Saturday.-AFP

KABUL, July 12 (agencies): US Secretary of State John Kerry was Saturday to hold a second day of talks with Afghanistan's feuding presidential hopefuls, seeking a deal to "clean up the tally" after disputed elections.
Despite back-to-back meetings on Friday with rivals Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani and other officials that stretched deep into the night, US officials said an accord was not yet on the table.
The deadlock over last month's run-off vote to succeed outgoing President Hamid Karzai has plunged Afghanistan into crisis and dented US hopes of a smooth transfer of power as Washington seeks to withdraw all its troops by late 2016.
Kerry was to meet Saturday first with Abdullah and then with Ghani, US officials said.
Under a proposal put forward by the United Nations, the country's elections commission would audit ballot boxes from just over 8,000 polling stations where suspicions of ballot-stuffing have been raised.
While Ghani's campaign has embraced the UN plan, Abdullah's team remains sceptical arguing the proposals to review some 35 percent of all votes does not address all their concerns.
On Friday Kerry stressed that results released on Monday showing Ghani in the lead with some 56 percent of the vote were only "preliminary".
"They are neither authoritative nor final, and no-one should be stating a victory at this point in time," Kerry said.
"We want a unified, stable, democratic Afghanistan. It is important that whoever is president is recognised by the people as having become president through a legitimate process," he said.
Abdullah, who has already lost one presidential bid in controversial circumstances, has declared himself the true winner, saying massive fraud robbed him of victory in the June 14 run-off vote.
US officials told reporters late Friday that "many ideas were under consideration" as they seek to unblock the dispute.
Kerry was focusing on two tracks, a senior US administration official said.
Another US official said the UN audit would be very important. "There were serious allegations of fraud that were raised that have not been sufficiently investigated," he said.
These would be selected according to five criteria that could indicate fraud-such as if the results were multiples of 50, or where women's polling stations were staffed by men.
Abdullah, a former anti-Taliban resistance fighter, draws his support among Tajiks and other northern Afghan groups, while Ghani is backed by Pashtun tribes of the south and east-a disturbing echo of the ethnic divisions of the civil war in the 1990s.

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