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AAN Election Blog No. 30: Which votes are to be counted - a crucial battle

posted: 08-09-2009 by: Martine van Bijlert

As the press continued to recount stories from far-flung districts (outraged elders, stuffed ballot boxes, intimidated electoral staff); as the international actors were “allowing the process to run its course”; as the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) stoically continued to announce its batches of preliminary count results, while releasing more and more “dirty” ballot boxes into the count; and as the Electoral Complaints Commission (ECC) was faced with an ever growing number of complaints, on Tuesday 8 September 2009 suddenly all strands came together in what may well become the elections’ most important confrontation.

On Tuesday 8 September 2009 two things happened. First of all the ECC ordered the IEC to do a monitored audit of all polling stations that showed implausible results (more than 600 votes cast – i.e. more than the number of ballot papers present – or more than 95% of all the votes cast in favour of a single candidate). After that, during the press conference in which the latest preliminary results were announced, the IEC seemed intent on dodging the instruction. Journalists were told that the IEC needed to seek clarification with regard to the reasons of the ruling before they could comment any further – but the ECC order is crystal clear. In fact, all it does is instruct the IEC to implement its original internal safeguards against counting obviously suspicious polling stations.

The confrontation had been brewing for days. There was never much appetite within the IEC to tackle the thorny issue of fraudulent votes, but in the course of last week it became clear that the leadership was seriously considering flooding the count process with unfiltered results. Statistical triggers and algorithms were removed or rendered practically ineffective and there were rumours that the full preliminary result would be announced on 5 September 2009 (which did not happen). The advantages from the IEC’s viewpoint were clear. Releasing all polling stations into the count – whether clean, suspect or overtly fraudulent – would provide an escape from the awkward responsibility of excluding large numbers of votes cast in favour of President Karzai (and some of the other candidates). There was probably also an issue of trying to make up for lost time, as the full preliminary results had originally been scheduled for 3 September 2009.

There were several tussles over the weekend. An IEC press conference scheduled for Saturday 5 September was cancelled due to “technical difficulties with the counting software”. An IEC decision to disqualify 447 polling stations, which was announced on Sunday 6 September, was reported to have been withdrawn as the IEC’s authority to do so had apparently been contested – indicating that the commission was suffering from both political pressures and internal divisions. The latest batch of preliminary results announced on 8 September 2009 – 91.6% of the votes counted and Karzai leading with 54.1% – finally indicated that the IEC had decided to push ahead with the results and with the release of the suspect polling stations. And now the ECC is stepping in.

The consequences of the ECC ruling will be considerable. Even the most cursory scan of the polling station counts – the latest of which can be found here – shows large numbers of quite obviously manipulated results (round figures, high turnout particularly in insecure areas, absence of the natural “sprinkling” of votes among different candidates). The EU Electoral Observer Mission released a strongly worded statement today in support of the ECC ruling, describing how they had counted 2,451 polling stations where more than 90% of the votes had been cast for a single candidate and 214 polling stations where the number of votes exceeded the number of voters assigned to the station (out of a total of 18,877 polling stations). This represents a total of almost 700,000 votes – not counting the stations that have not yet been released into the count. Such figures can alter election results, which explains the reluctance to implement what in essence are common sense measures.

The ECC ruling is appropriate in both its boldness and simplicity – in essence requesting the IEC to follow its own original rules, even though that may mean disappointing powerful patrons. It is a crucial ruling, as it asks the electoral authoritues to address what is one of the main weaknesses of the current Afghan government: the fact that laws do not apply to the powerful, nor do they apply to their friends. The ECC ruling thus goes against the grain of power – it will be fought, which means that it needs to be defended and upheld. The internationals cannot cave on this one, even if that means being accused of interference. If interference was ever both necessary and defendable, it is probably on this one. 

This could be one of the much needed signals of possible change.

AAN blogs provide timely update about political and security developments in Afghanistan.


Other blogs by Martine van Bijlert

Campaign trail (3): the candidates and their strategies

Kabul Conference (4): Don't Mention the War

Kabul Conference (1): Outsmarted and made to pay

The revolt of the good guys in Gizab

Continuing tug of war between the Parliament and Karzai

The resignation of Atmar and Saleh; early thoughts

PEACE JIRGA BLOG 6: An attack on the jirga, an end to peace?

A Ministers retreat, a rowdy crowd and the politics of the thinly veiled threat

Counterinsurgency in Kandahar: what happened to the fence?

Getting ready for the next election: the IEC pushes ahead

Reliable partners

Separating the government, the Taliban and the people (1): Karzai and the confusion in Kabul

Separating the government, the Taliban and the people (2): Meanwhile in the provinces

The Electoral Law that wasn't amended (yet) and fraud by foreigners

PEACE JIRGA BLOG 1: How serious is the Peace Jirga?

Strangers kicking in your door

Voices from Zabul

Dreaming of a pliable parliament and a ruling family

Wondering where all of this is going

Rules and Empty Promises

London Conference (2): Peace, Reconciliation and Reintegration

London Conference (1): Calling for Afghan ownership and Afghan leadership

The Cabinet vote: Fourteen in, eleven to go

So where are we with the 2010 elections?

Hope has returned to Afghanistan, or so they say.

Parliament votes off most of Karzai's Cabinet

Rearranging election outcomes while the IEC archive burns

The Cabinet list

Thoughts and worries

The confused fight against corruption

Parliament getting ready for the new Cabinet

Finishing the unfinished election (2): Panjshir and Kapisa

Finishing the unfinished election (1): Helmand, Khost and Farah

Small stories from the province (1): A very high-ranking dog

MEI paper repost: How to respond to a flawed election

NDS detention - not just a Canadian problem

Corruption, corruption, corruption

Waiting and watching

AAN Election Blog No. 40: The President has been elected

AAN Election Blog No. 38: I think we should be worried now

What about the voters (2)

AAN Election Blog 36: The next chapter of the conclusion

AAN Election Blog 37: The next chapter of the conclusion (2)

What about the voters

AAN Election Blog 35: The fog of an election result

AAN Election Blog 34: Rumours of a Run-off

What the preliminary results tell us (3): Logar, Baghlan and Uruzgan

AAN Election Blog 33: So what do we do with the audit?

What the preliminary results tell us (2): Nimruz provincial council

What the preliminary results tell us (1): Kabul provincial council

AAN Election Blog No. 32: We have a new universe - and an old problem

AAN Election Blog No. 31: We have a result – sort of – and some very frayed relations.

AAN Election Blog No. 30: Which votes are to be counted - a crucial battle

AAN Election Blog No. 27: A mysterious election and a fluid count

AAN Election Blog No. 26: If no one saw it, did it happen? - AAN recommended election reading (UPDATED)

A response to AAN Election Blog No. 23

AAN Election Blog No. 23: How much are we expected to believe?

AAN Election Blog 21: Observing the Vote - An Election with Many Faces

AAN Electoral Blog No. 17: Voter Turnout - stating the obvious

AAN Electoral Blog No. 19: The day before the 2009 elections

AAN Electoral Blog No. 18: Some last minute figures

AAN Election Blog No. 13: The Debate

AAN Election Blog No. 10: Elections in far-away places

AAN Election Blog No. 9: On the Campaign Trail III

AAN Election Blog No. 11: The Return of the General (to be continued)

AAN Election Blog No. 7: Parliament's closed doors and wedding discussions

AAN Election Blog No. 3: On the Campaign Trail II

AAN Election Blog No. 2: On the Campaign Trail

Teeth, flowers and another tale of violence

Modest beginnings