US, UN urge probe into Afghanistan presidential polls
US, UN urge probe into Afghanistan presidential polls
There have been increasing allegations of vote fraud in the polls.

Washington: The issue of increasing allegations of vote fraud in Afghanistan presidential elections was the focus of the meeting between US Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry, UN officials and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, senior US State Department officials said.

Eikenberry and the UN officials urged Karzai on Monday to allow Afghanistan's Independent Election Commission (IEC) to thoroughly investigate vote fraud and determine which votes are accurate and then apply a very high standard to determine which votes are counted.

Once that is determined, Election Commission officials would determine if a runoff is necessary.

Eikenberry spoke to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about his meeting with Karzai, the officials said.

One official called it a "shot across the bow to the Afghanistan government" to make sure the Election Commission is free to do its job free of interference.

Karzai needs 50 per cent of votes to avoid a runoff.

Abdullah Abdullah, the main challenger to Karzai, has called the alleged vote rigging "state-engineered fraud".

He is demanding that the IEC stop announcing vote tallies from the provinces, and that the Electoral Complaints Commission inform Afghans about the status of its investigations.

By September, Afghanistan election officials said they had received nearly 2,500 complaints, with about 560 of them deemed serious enough to potentially affect the outcome of the race.

The grievances include polling irregularities, voter intimidation and ballot stuffing.

The complaints commission said that in order for election results to be certified, it must resolve the complaints it has received.

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