Abdullah, an eye doctor and Karzai’s urbane former foreign minister, appeared to rule out any immediate chance of a power-sharing deal with Karzai in return for withdrawing, but also told his supporters not to boycott the Nov. 7 vote. His voice faltering and his eyes welling with tears, Abdullah told hundreds of supporters, including white-bearded tribal elders, in a giant tent used for grand assemblies that he had reached the decision “in the interests of the nation.”
“As far as I’m concerned, the decision I have reached is not to participate,” he later told reporters at his Kabul home.
“I have strong, strong reservations about the credibility of the process,” he said.
Karzai had been favorite to win the runoff after getting the most votes in a fraud-marred first round on Aug. 20. His campaign team said the runoff would go ahead despite Abdullah’s withdrawal. Afghanistan has been racked by weeks of political uncertainty, with security also a major concern after the Taliban vowed to disrupt the runoff.
Taliban said Abdullah’s withdrawal made no difference. “There will be no change of policy as far as we are concerned,” Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousuf told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. Obama met his top military leaders on Friday as part of a strategic review. Some analysts were scathing in their assessment of what was seen as a flawed election staged against the backdrop of increasing violence after eight years of war.
“It is a shocking failure of efforts by the West and other international communities to build a democracy in Afghanistan,” said Norine MacDonald, president of policy research group The International Council on Security and Development.
The election should be postponed and reorganized in a manner that would yield a legitimate government and allow the Afghan people to participate effectively in a legitimate election.” A spokesperson for the White House could not immediately be reached for comment on Abdullah’s decision, but Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Saturday a decision by Abdullah to pull out would not affect the vote’s legitimacy.
Britain’s Foreign Office said it was up to Afghan authorities to determine what the next step would be. ”We will then look to President Karzai to form a government and program quickly that represents the interests of all Afghans,” a Foreign Office spokesman said.
Abdullah said he quit because the demands he had sought from the government and the Independent Election Commission (IEC), including the sacking of Afghanistan’s top election official in the wake of the tainted first round, had not been met.
He said there would be no demonstrations and urged his supporters “not to take to the streets, not to feel grief”.
Western diplomats said that talks between Karzai and Abdullah last week on ways to break the deadlock had foundered, but Abdullah had left the door open for future discussions.
A possible power-sharing deal had also been suggested but Abdullah said no such arrangements had been made.
“This decision has not been made in return for anything or for anybody,” Abdullah said. Analysts and diplomats had seen a power-sharing deal, perhaps in return for a top government post for Abdullah in Karzai’s next government, as a way to spare the country further political pain and insurgent violence.
The runoff was triggered when a UN-led investigation found widespread fraud, mainly in favor of Karzai, had been committed during the first round.
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