Peaceful Afghan Elections a 'Milestone' for Country
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13, 2004 – The presidential elections in Afghanistan Oct. 9 were a
"milestone" in the history of the troubled country, said a coalition spokesman in
Kabul today.
Army Maj. Scott Nelson said Afghans "demonstrated to all on Saturday their powerful
courage and resolve in the face of terrorist propaganda and threats of intimidation
and violence."
He said the success of the election is a testament to the will and perseverance of the
individual Afghan citizen. "We can all be nothing if not hugely impressed" by the
enthusiasm the Afghan people displayed, he said. "Terrorists … suffered a resounding
defeat at the hands of millions of Afghans voting for freedom," the major added.
United Nations officials estimate that about 8 million Afghans voted in the election.
More than 10 million had registered. About 80 percent of the ballots have been
collected, and others are in transit. The counting process has begun.
Nelson said the Afghan police and Afghan National Army deserve much of the credit for
the election going off as smoothly as it did. While Taliban and al Qaeda sympathizers
wanted to disrupt voting, they were unsuccessful, thanks in part to the effectiveness
of the security forces augmented by coalition troops. "The government of Afghanistan,
the Joint Electoral Management Body, the International Security and Assistance Force
and coalition forces all contributed to this successful day," Nelson said.
"There are so many election day anecdotes demonstrating the Afghan people's commitment
to peace, whether it was people across the country wearing their best clothes to vote,
or the women of Konduz who refused to move when a rocket landed 200 meters from where
they were waiting to vote," Nelson said during a briefing. "To leave, they said, would
mean the rockets, and the people who fired them, would win. These women would defeat
them by staying and voting."
There were reports of voter lines stretching 2.5 kilometers in the Maruf district of
Kandahar – once a Taliban stronghold. "Witnesses saw elderly people walking and being
ferried in goat carts, amputees on crutches in droves moving towards the polling
booths and then, late in the evening, more elderly adults running to beat the poll
closing deadline to cast their vote," he said.
In Central Afghanistan, voters began arriving at a polling station at 3 a.m., in cold
temperatures and a foot of snow, and waited for almost four hours for the station to
open, the major said.
"The overwhelming success of this election is a strategic defeat for the Taliban and
al Qaeda, and is a turning point for Afghanistan and the Afghan people," Nelson said.
"This election confirmed that a peaceful political process based on democracy and
freedom will always trump terrorist threats and intimidation."
(Courtesy of Combined Forces Command Afghanistan.)
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