Video: Evidence of ballot stuffing?


McClatchy Newspapers

KABUL

As Afghan election officials sorted through thousands of voter complaints from the recent parliamentary election, new evidence emerged Monday of apparent vote-rigging in southern Afghanistan.

Video obtained by McClatchy Newspapers shows a man in an Afghan border-police uniform standing watch while three men appear to be stuffing votes into a ballot box.

The one-minute clip, which could not be independently authenticated, is one of thousands of cases that could tilt the balance of legislative races as elections officials examine the complaints and prepare to release full results in a few weeks.

The video, obtained from an Afghan politician who asked not to be identified for safety reasons, shows three men sitting on the floor filling out ballot after ballot and then stuffing them into the nearby ballot box. It shows a man in a border-police uniform standing with a Kalashnikov rifle and keeping guard over the apparent ballot stuffing.

The video, the politician said, was shot in Spin Boldak, a scrappy town along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border that is controlled by Abdel Razek, a feared border-police commander dubbed “the Master of Spin Boldak.”

The video was first aired by Al-Jazeera, a news network based in the Persian Gulf.

It was impossible, however, to determine the beneficiary of the apparent ballot stuffing.

Elections officials said Monday that they are investigating more than 3,600 complaints from the Sept. 18 election to select 249 members of the elected house of the country’s bicameral parliament.

More than half the cases, the country’s Electoral Complaints Commission said Monday, could tilt the balance of local races.

If the complaints process fails to win the confidence of Afghan leaders and the world community, it could undercut Afghanistan’s fragile democracy and international support for it.

“It’s a big concern,” said Jandad Spinghar, the executive director of the Free and Fair Elections Commission of Afghanistan, the country’s largest electoral watchdog organization.

“I hope elections officials will do their job well,” he said. “Otherwise, there will be great concern about the legitimacy of the election.”

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.