Defying U.N., Afghans to keep fraud-marred polling centers

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KABUL, Afghanistan — In a rebuff to the United Nations, an
Afghan commission named by President Hamid Karzai disclosed Thursday that
centers rife with fraudulent votes during the summer’s presidential election
will remain open for the Nov. 7 runoff against challenger Abdullah Abdullah.

U.N. officials had hoped to shut down polling centers where
the worst fraud was documented in a recent audit, but the Independent Election
Commission said it will open 6,322 polling centers — about 500 more than U.N.
officials had proposed and 17 more than were open in the first round.

Commissioner Zekria Barakzai said that polling centers would
be closed only if because of security concerns or weather, not because of past
problems with fraud.

“The election commission is prepared for the second
round of elections,” he said.

A Western official Thursday described the Afghan action as
“maddening, and completely against our advice.” The official couldn’t
be named because he wasn’t authorized to speak publicly.

The U.N. mission in Afghanistan, reeling from a deadly
insurgent attack on its personnel Wednesday, is scrambling to salvage the
election after a disastrous Aug. 20 first round, in which rampant fraud —
largely to the benefit of Karzai — undermined the results and fed doubts in the
U.S. and Europe about continued military commitments. To bolster confidence in
the new vote, U.N. officials sought to shut down polling stations where
auditors had found extensive stuffing of ballot boxes and other misconduct.

“We will not give people the opportunity to use these
stations,” Aleem Siddique, a U.N. spokesman, told McClatchy Newspapers
last Friday.

The U.N. plays a key role in the elections, providing staff
for the Afghan election commission, and distributing some $300 million in U.S.
and other nations’ funds, and as of Wednesday’s attack, Taliban insurgents now
view U.N. staff as prime targets. Seventeen election workers were housed in the
Bakhtar guesthouse; five were killed and nine others wounded in the attack
involving firearms, grenades and suicide bombs.

U.N. officials Thursday focused on evacuating the survivors
of the attack and repatriating the remains of the five workers, including one
American.

“There are so many crises at the moment, that this
isn’t normal operations, or anything like it,” said Adrian Edwards, a U.N.
spokesman.

Many details of the attack remain unclear. Insurgents
touched off an intense fire that trapped some people in top-floor bedrooms, and
one of the dead was so badly burned that a day later, the body hasn’t been
positively identified.

Afghan security officials said that none of the insurgents
was able to detonate the suicide vests they were wearing. However, photos of
two of the dead insurgents reviewed by McClatchy Newspapers showed mangled
midsections, indicating at least a partial detonation of the vests.

U.N. officials said the attack will trigger a review of
security procedures, but it won’t halt the U.N. preparations for the election,
which are nearly complete.

Much of the vote rigging occurred at polling centers in
southern and eastern Afghanistan, many of which were in areas of strong support
for the incumbent, and not surprisingly, Karzai aides had objected to closing
these sites.

Barakzai said Thursday that fraud could be averted at those
sites by extensive monitoring on Nov. 7 and said that all sites had been
approved by security forces as not being under insurgents’ control. Responding
to a demand by Abdullah, Barakzai said that some 20,000 additional Abdullah
observers would be accredited to monitor the voting.

The U.N. plans to have its employees both in both Kabul and
provinces to assist Afghan election officials.

“‘Most of the preparation work is done,” Edward
said.

The Afghan election commission also faces pressure to clean
up its finances. ProPublica, a nonprofit investigative news service, said draft
audits concluded that the U.N. mission couldn’t properly account for tens of
millions of dollars provided to the Afghan election commission. The draft
audits indicated that as many as one third of the commission’s payroll requests
to the U.N. had the wrong names, amounts or other discrepancies.

Via McClatchy-Tribune News Service.