Sunday, April 13, 2014

Previous Afghan remote clergyman heads early vote tally in presidential race



Presidential competitor Dr. Abdullah, focus, and his running mates Mohammed Mohaqiq, right, and Mohammad Khan, left, demonstrate their fingers checked with ink in the wake of throwing their tickets at a surveying station in Kabul.

Presidential competitor Dr. Abdullah, focus, and his running mates Mohammed Mohaqiq, right, and Mohammad Khan, left, demonstrate their fingers checked with ink in the wake of throwing their tickets at a surveying station in Kabul.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
 Election is first fair move of force in Afghanistan

 Foreign Minister Abdullah is heading in right on time returns, authorities say

 Too early to tell if a solitary applicant will get dominant part of the vote and keep away from overflow

(CNN) - In Afghanistan's notable presidential decision, previous Foreign Minister Abdullah is heading the early comes back from a week ago voting, the nation's Independent Election Commission executive said Sunday.

Abdullah has 41.9% of the vote, as stated by Ahmad Yousuf Nuristani, who advised that it was so early there was no option tell if a solitary competitor might get most of the vote required to win the presidency without a spillover.

Previous Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani was second with 37.6% of the vote, authorities said.

Watch CNN's Christiane Amanpour's late question with Ashraf Ghani

Tallies are constantly hand-numberd the country over, and outcomes will require some investment to count.

Something like 7 million Afghans voted in the races on April 5, in the nation's first law based exchange of presidential force, picking a successor to friendly President Hamid Karzai. He is unavoidably needed to venture down.

Will Afghan rappers turn out youth vote?

Afghans vote for future notwithstanding dangers

Trusts and Fears of Afghans Abroad

An expansive number of Afghans turned out a week ago, in the third decision since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Voter enlistment began very nearly a year prior and 2.5 million names were added to the discretionary roll. As stated by the decision requisition, surveying hours were reached out to permit everybody in line to vote.

"Today I came here to select my next president and I trust whoever it is ... is a great individual, who will help the individuals and bring progressions to Afghanistan," a voter at a surveying station told CNN.

An alternate, in Kabul, said the president must secure the war-torn country.

"We require a great president so the bombings and war stops," the voter said. "I need my kids to go to class without apprehension."

READ: Afghans herd to vote in spite of dangers from Taliban

While Afghans cast their tallies, there was overwhelming security in the capital, Kabul, and all around the country. The Taliban had undermined to upset the methodology and rebuff all included in the decision.

About 20 individuals were killed in brutality the nation over on Election Day, Afghan Interior Minister Mohammad Umer Daudzai told news hounds, and no less than 43 individuals were injured in assaults focusing on voting focuses. A large portion of the injured, he said, were regular people.

Abdullah told CNN's Christiane Amanpour in February that in the event that he won the presidency, he might consent to an arrangement to keep worldwide compels in Afghanistan and support dollars coming into the country.

NATO troops are planned to draw down from Afghanistan by the end of the year.

Karzai has declined to consent to the respective arrangement, otherwise called the Status of Forces Agreement.

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