The full audit of the about 8 million votes cast in the second round of Afghanistan’s presidential election will continue “without the direct physical engagement” of the two candidates’ observers, the United Nations said Wednesday. The announcement came hours after Abdullah Abdullah, a former foreign minister who led April’s first-round vote but reportedly was losing in the initial count from the second round, ordered his team to stay away from the audit. Abdullah’s camp charged in a statement that the review was “built in a one-sided manner” favoring his rival, Ashraf Ghani. Muslim Saadat, a spokesman for the Abdullah team, said there remained “a few points to find solutions to” in the audit process, but that talks between the Abdullah and Ghani camps were ongoing. Nicholas Haysom, deputy special representative of the U.N. secretary-general for Afghanistan, announced that the audit would go on without observers from both camps. Haysom said one of the concerns raised by the Abdullah team would be given “serious consideration.” Neither he nor Saadat would elaborate on the unresolved issues. So far, ballots in 72 boxes have invalidated and another 697 boxes have been sent for recount.
Haysom labeled as “regrettable” Abdullah’s boycott of post-election efforts to determine the winner, the third by his team since the June 14 runoff, but warned that “it will not disrupt the completion of a robust and critical audit.”
Though Ghani’s observers arrived at the Independent Election Commission’s headquarters in time for the morning shift, they were eventually persuaded by the United Nations to leave the audit site. Haysom said the change put a greater “premium on the participation of domestic and international observers.”
Full Article: Afghanistan election audit will go on without candidates’ observers – LA Times.