Karzai agrees to allow foreign poll monitors
KABUL: Afghanistan’s president has agreed to reverse an earlier decision and allow two foreigners on a commission monitoring upcoming parliamentary
elections, his spokesman
said today.
President Hamid Karzai’s move comes amid pressure to avoid a repeat of last year’s fraud-tainted presidential vote.
Last month, Karzai signed a decree allowing him to appoint all five members of the Electoral Complaints Commission in consultation with parliamentary leaders and the head of the Supreme Court. The body previously had three UN appointees.
The decree was criticized as a bid to control the body, which stripped Karzai of nearly one-third of his votes last year after complaints of ballot stuffing. Karzai was forced into a runoff but was declared the victor after his remaining challenger dropped out of the race.
Today, Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar told reporters the president is now willing to accept some foreigners on the watchdog body because the country is in a “transitional phase” to democracy.
“The Afghan government has shown its readiness to accept two non-Afghans on the
Electoral Complaints Commission and this has been announced to the United
Nations,” Omar said.
However, he said the monitoring body would still be controlled by Afghans, who would hold a majority vote.