Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Afghan election crisis talks stall over release of vote results --- (Reuters) - Talks between Afghanistan's rival presidential candidates have stalled again, in part over when and how to release the final results of an election that both say was rigged by the other side, officials said on Wednesday. -- Former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and ex-Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani were close to a power-sharing deal on Tuesday after they met face-to-face, aides said, but they failed to reach agreement. --- One sticking point was that Abdullah did not want the results as they now stand - widely assumed to show him losing - made public. He also wants more ballots invalidated to narrow Ghani's presumed margin of victory, officials said. -- Both sides had earlier pledged to accept the results of a U.N.-monitored investigation into vote-rigging. -- The proposed unity government would see the eventual winner of the June runoff election named president. It would also create an expanded chief executive position for the runner-up. -- The idea was proposed by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in July after preliminary results of the runoff, which showed Ghani 1.2 million votes ahead, prompted protests by Abdullah supporters. -- Details of how much power the chief executive would wield have been a major obstacle in finalizing the deal. --- Abdullah is also insisting that the final election results, due within days, be delayed until a deal on a unity government is agreed, his spokesman, Mujib Rahimi, said on Wednesday. -- The Abdullah camp would walk out of negotiations if the results are released without its agreement, he said. --- Afghanistan's President Karzai said on Wednesday that the United States needed to work with other countries that also had an interest in the vote's outcome to help push through deal. -- "Afghanistan must not be a ground for competition between countries ... It is therefore important that the U.S. should seek an environment of common understanding with other countries," he said in a statement. -- His spokesman Aimal Faizi said the president wanted the U.S. to engage regional powers including neighboring Iran. --- One of the proposals Abdullah made in his meeting with Ghani was for the Election Complaints Commission to invalidate more votes in order to narrow the margin between the candidates while still allowing Ghani to win, according to three people with knowledge of the meeting. -- "We were asked to agree on an outcome of the result by a close margin," Ghani spokesman Tahir Zahir said on Wednesday. "But we did not accept it. We want the election bodies to announce the genuine result of the election." -- A government official with direct knowledge of Tuesday's meeting confirmed that Abdullah had asked for adjusted results that showed him losing narrowly so that he could sell the deal to his backers. An Abdullah aide, who asked not to be named, also confirmed the account. - Read More, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/17/us-afghanistan-election-idUSKBN0HC1TO20140917

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