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Defiant critic among first Afghan winners
the state.com ^ | Oct. 06, 2005 | Associated Press

Posted on 10/06/2005 12:35:40 PM PDT by mdittmar

KABUL, Afghanistan - A 27-year-old woman who is a defiant critic of Afghanistan's powerful warlords won one of the first seats declared Thursday in provisional results from landmark parliamentary elections, a key step in the nation's transition to democracy.

The U.N.-Afghan election body reported "serious" cases of fraud, including ballot-box stuffing after election day. It excluded 299 polling stations from the vote count, but declared the Sept. 18 poll was still credible.

President Hamid Karzai and NATO's chief diplomat, meanwhile, expressed confidence that a planned deployment of 6,000 NATO troops into volatile southern provinces would happen next year - a move that could eventually free up thousands of American forces.

Some NATO members, including France and Germany, are reluctant for the peacekeeping force, currently deployed in the more stable north and west, to become embroiled in counterinsurgency operations against Taliban-led rebels in the south, currently handled by a separate U.S.-led coalition. They also object to plans to put both missions under NATO command.

On a trip to the southern city of Kandahar after meeting Karzai, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he expected the alliance to resolve the issues "by November, certainly by the end of the year."

In Kabul, the election body declared unofficial winners for national and provincial assembly seats in two of the country's 34 provinces, Farah and Nimroz, and said most of the other results would be released in the coming week.

Final, certified results are expected by late October after what officials predict will be a frenetic complaints period.

"I'm very happy and thankful for Afghan men and women who voted for me," said Malalai Joya, a women's rights worker from Farah, who won one of her province's five seats in the 249-seat Wolesi Jirga, or National Assembly.

"My first priority when I go to parliament will be peace, security and stability, and to collect all the guns from warlords," she told The Associated Press.

Joya rose to prominence after daring to denounce powerful warlords at a post-Taliban constitutional convention two years ago. Despite concerted U.N.-backed efforts to disarm militia leaders, they remain a dominant force in much of Afghanistan.

It is hoped that democratic elections will be a major step toward stability and rule of law after two decades of conflict and the ouster of the Taliban in a U.S.-led war in late 2001. A quarter of parliamentary seats are reserved for women in a bid to adjust the heavily patriarchal slant of Afghan politics.

According to partial results displayed on the official election Web site, the top-ranking candidates in most provinces are warlords or leaders of mujahedeen factions - many of them veterans of the anti-Soviet resistance of the 1980s and the ruinous 1992-96 civil war that followed.

Electoral law bars anyone with links to armed groups from competing, but many of the most influential candidates slipped through a U.N.-backed review of who was on the ballot - a process human rights activists described as woefully inadequate.

Peter Erben, the chief electoral officer, acknowledged there were "serious cases" of vote fraud in some localities during the Sept. 18 poll but said it was not "systemic or countrywide."

He said he was confident the election would reflect the will of Afghan voters but noted that "further steps are needed in coming years to address the problems encountered in this election, especially reducing the level of localized fraud and intimidation."

Of the 299 polling stations ruled fraudulent - out of 26,200 nationwide - 62 were in the Paghman district of Kabul, a stronghold of Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, a powerful former guerrilla leader and arch conservative suspected of having had links to al-Qaida. He is on track to win a seat in the capital.

Erben said there was "no clear evidence" so far implicating any candidate in the vote fraud.

More than 200 other polling stations are still under review. A separate election complaints commission has the power to disqualify candidates found to have cheated.

---_

Associated Press writer Paul Ames in Kandahar contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanelection; afghanistan
Seems the ap wants to focus on "fraud" instead of a successful historic election in a new democracy.

Typical

1 posted on 10/06/2005 12:35:41 PM PDT by mdittmar
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To: mdittmar
Malalai Joya...

Joya rose to prominence after daring to denounce powerful warlords at a post-Taliban constitutional convention two years ago.

If U.S. women would support their sisters in the Islamic world, this battle against fundamental Islam would be a lot easier.

2 posted on 10/06/2005 12:41:30 PM PDT by Dark Skies ("...to them that love God, all things work together unto good..." Romans 8:28)
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To: mdittmar
It is a quagmire...they were better off under the Taliban (/s)
3 posted on 10/06/2005 12:51:13 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
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