Showing posts with label Karzai 50 percent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karzai 50 percent. Show all posts

Monday, July 5, 2010

US General Petraeus arrives in Kabul to take over Afghan war

US General Petraeus arrives in Kabul to take over Afghan war


 
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Kabul:  US General David Petraeus arrived in Kabul on Friday to take over as commander of the Afghan war, a NATO official said.

"General Petraeus arrived in Kabul by plane at 1400 GMT and took a helicopter to ISAF headquarters," the official said referring to NATO's International Security Assistance Force.

Petraeus takes over as commander of the 140,000 US and NATO soldiers in Afghanistan who are fighting Taliban insurgency amid growing concern that the war is bogged down as troop casualties reach record heights.
He is expected to make his public debut in Kabul on Saturday, when he attends celebrations at the US embassy marking the Fourth of July as United States' Independence Day.

His appointment was confirmed in Washington on Wednesday, in a 99-0 Senate vote, a day before the House of Representatives approved a bill to pump another US $37 billion into the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The funds will cover the cost of deploying an extra 30,000 troops to turn around the faltering campaign, as part of a counter-insurgency strategy devised by Petraeus and supported by US President Barack Obama.

Petraeus replaces US General Stanley McChrystal, sacked last month after he was quoted in Rolling Stone magazine disparaging US officials, including the President, and leaders of NATO allies also committed to the war.

A four-star general, Petraeus has said he will not alter strategy, despite complaints from soldiers that they are hamstrung by the rules of engagement, and an alarming rise in the number of foreign troops dying on the battlefield.

He has vowed to give his forces the right firepower to fight the Taliban but insisted sparing civilians remained a priority.

Civilian casualties are an incendiary issue in Afghanistan, where many civilians blame the very presence of foreign forces for the ongoing violence.
Source:ndtv.com
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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Karzai edges closer to 50 percent in Afghan vote


KABUL – President Hamid Karzai nudged closer to the 50 percent threshold needed to avoid a runoff in Afghanistan's election, according to the latest results released Sunday.

The Aug. 20 ballot has been marred by accusations of vote-rigging and election officials said they threw out results from 447 out of more than 26,000 polling sites because of fraud allegations. The head of the Independent Election Commission, Daoud Ali Najafi, said it was not yet clear how many votes were affected.

With 74 percent of polling stations counted, Karzai is leading with 48.6 percent. Top challenger Abdullah Abdullah has 30.1 percent. Karzai needs more than 50 percent to avoid a second round against Abdullah.

The country's election commission has slowly been releasing partial results, but says it will complete the count from all polling stations later this week.

Those results won't be finalized until later this month, after a complaints commission investigates more than 650 claims of serious violations on voting day and after. These include charges by Abdullah that Karzai supporters stuffed ballot boxes with tens of thousands of votes.

The commission has the power to nullify the results from districts or provinces, or even call for a new election, if it finds large-scale fraud.

Former Foreign Minister Abdullah on Saturday urged the election commission to stop announcing preliminary results because of "highly suspicious numbers" in tallies released so far.

He said a number of polling stations posted nearly identical numbers for Karzai and none for any other candidate. The challenger alleged electoral officials were beholden to Karzai, who appointed them.

"It is state-engineered fraud. It is not violations here and there," Abdullah said.

Commission chairman Najafi insisted Sunday that the commission was unbiased.

"The Independent Election Commission has been completely impartial in fulfilling its duties throughout the process," he said.

International and Afghan observers have been critical of the vote but have withheld judgment until counting and fraud investigations are complete.