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Former
Taliban fighters display their weapons (AFP/File, Aref Karimi)
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KABUL — The
Taliban could stand in Afghanistan's next presidential election in 2014, the
country's top poll official said Wednesday, as a series of suspected insurgent
bombings killed 17 civilians.
President
Hamid Karzai, who is serving his second term as leader of the war-torn nation,
is constitutionally barred from running in the election and no clear candidate
to succeed him has yet emerged.
The vote,
scheduled for April 5, 2014, is seen as crucial to stability after the
withdrawal of NATO troops and Fazil Ahmad Manawi, the head of the Independent
Election Commission (IEC), insisted his body would act impartially.
"We
are even prepared to pave the ground for the armed opposition, be it the
Taliban or Hezb-i-Islami, to participate in the election, either as voters or
candidates," Manawi told a news conference.
"There
will be no discrimination," the IEC chief added, defending the body in
response to a question about its impartiality.
Hezb-i-Islami
is the faction of former prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar which wages an
insurgency along with the Taliban against Karzai's Western-backed government.
The
Taliban, whose hardline Islamist regime was overthrown in 2001 by a US-led
invasion for harbouring Osama bin Laden, did not take part in the 2009
election. Instead it launched polling day attacks that killed more than 20
people.
At least 17
civilians, most women and children, were killed in southern Afghanistan on
Wednesday in roadside bombings which officials blamed on "the enemies of
Afghanistan" -- the term they use for the Taliban.
In the
deadliest incident, seven women and three children died when a blast tore
through the vehicle in which they were travelling in Musa Qala district of
Helmand province.
Also on
Wednesday, a Taliban attack on a checkpoint in eastern Kunar province left four
police dead, while another five officers were killed in an insurgent raid on a
post in Zabul province, in the south.
The 2009
poll, in which Karzai was re-elected over former foreign minister Abdullah
Abdullah, was marred by widespread allegations of fraud. The credibility of the
2014 vote is seen as key to avoiding an escalation in violence after the NATO
withdrawal.
Donor
nations at a conference in Tokyo in July pledged $16 billion for Afghanistan to
prevent the country from sliding back into turmoil when foreign combat troops
depart, with several pre-conditions including presidential elections in 2014.
The
International Crisis Group think-tank warned in October that the Kabul
government could fall apart after NATO troops withdraw, particularly if the
presidential elections are affected by fraud.
Security
officials said they were confident they would learn lessons from 2009 as they
seek to prevent violence in the run-up to the next election, only the third
since the fall of the Taliban.
"Afghan
security institutions will start working to design a comprehensive plan for
security during the election," said defence ministry chief of staff Shir
Mohammad Karimi.
Under the
Afghan system, voters elect the president as an individual rather than as a
representative of a party, and candidates must submit their nominations by
October 6, 2013.
The IEC
will then rule on their admissibility and publish a final list of candidates on
November 16.
Initial
results of the ballot will be announced on April 24, 2014, and final results on
May 14, with May 28 set aside for any potential run-off vote. Provincial
council elections will be held at the same time as the main poll.
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