Wednesday, August 25, 2010 - 1:23 PM
What might campaigning and election preparation look like in this province
about 34 days before parliamentary election?, I asked myself when I was about
to travel to Paktika's provincial capital Sharana. The short answer is: grim -
and that despite many actors - international, electoral or candidates - trying
their best to make this undertaking somehow workable and less fraudulent then
past year.
The large dilemma in Paktika - as in many places in the Afghan south and south
east - is the question on whether to open a larger number of polling centers on
election day, which cannot be observed and thereby are highly prone for fraud,
or whether to keep a considerable number of polling centers closed, creating
less accessibility for voters and admitting that insecurity is widespread. In
the 2009 presidential and provincial council elections there were 265 polling
centers (for an estimated population of 400,000). The number has this year been
reduced to 190 due to insecurity (and the linked level of fraud). Any considerable
lesser number would be seen as loss of face for governmental authorities.
According to the provincial head of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC),
after the 2009 election, 1555 of its staff members were blacklisted in
Paktika alone due to allegations of fraud. Hence, hiring around 3000 qualified
and trustable electoral staff, with the goal to have at least 10 per cent
females, over the next weeks in districts heavily marked by the insurgency is
possibly the worst job one can imagine. Some staff do not want to work in their
own district because they fear to become known and hence more vulnerable to
attacks by the Taleban. By consequence, in some districts staff has to be hired
from the bordering provinces of Khost or Logar.
Meeting candidates is quite difficult in Sharana, not because they are all busy
campaigning in the districts - no, because most of them are simply not there.
Out of 22 candidates (one of lowest numbers in the country), six were in the
province during my visit, the rest staying in Kabul mainly due to security
concerns. Only two of them were said to be campaigning in the safer districts.
This already tells you loads about the possible (and in certain cases wanted)
presence of MPs in their constituency once they are actually in parliament.
Out of the five female candidates, one is said to be campaigning in Paktika,
taking high risks. The others are in Kabul - which does not mean that they are
inactive or unpopular. Their campaigns in the provinces are run by males and
all their candidate's agents are male, since finding female campaign staff is
almost impossible. As is finding female FEFA observers for the provinces: as
the FEFA provincial representatives stated, having one or two female FEFA
observers on election day for the whole province is probably realistic. So, one
asks oneself what will happen in the 42 per cent of the polling stations that
are meant to serve female voters. As during the last elections, many of
the female votes are going to be handed in by male heads of the family anyhow.
As for the other present candidates, there is the mix of powerful incumbents
likely to succeed, of sons of current MPs, of those with strong power basis in
Paktika and/or Kabul and of unknowns (a deeper analysis of the Paktika
candidates will follow on this blog) for the four Paktika seats in the Wolesi
Jirga, one of them female. The anti-international, especially anti-US and
anti-UK, rhetoric and mistrust rings high. One of the candidates I spoke
to,says he is going to build ‘bridges between the Taleban and the Government' -
having had a post in provincial government under the Taliban regime, he is of
course perfectly fitted to do so. The slogan on his visiting card is ‘Serving
weak families and bringing back prisoners who did not commit a crime -- which
makes you think on how current reintegration efforts are aiding his campaign.
In general, the level of acute or perceived threats by the Taleban to
candidates seems high -- and it remains to be seen what general level of
intimidation this creates on election day.
Being in a place for three days (with limited chances to move around), it is of
course hard to get a sense of the general motivation to vote in these
elections. But my feeling is that it is very low. And if this is coupled with a
high risk: who is willing to go out and vote? Rumors and stories of empty
polling centers, bought voter cards and stuffed ballot boxes last year do not
make for a good incentive either.
So who will observe these elections in Paktika - giving you at least a sense of
what happens on election day and in the crucial days thereafter? In Sharana,
the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, through local partners, organizes observation
training for candidate agents these days, who on election day can go into
polling centers and observe the process for their candidate. There is no limit
to the number of agents a candidate can register, making it again easier for
those with power and money to enlist high numbers of them and increase their
influence inside the polling centers. In the different sessions held, there was
a total of 55 agents - and the IEC did not estimate a much higher number to be
registered. However, some candidates at least claimed that they will have over
100 agents.
FEFA stated it would try to find one national observer for every polling
center. As for international observers, there were a handful in 2009, being
limited to the provincial capital. For the presence of national and
international observers to make sense this time, the question of movement
beyond the provincial capital is central - and in case of the internationals
this is unrealistic. Also, it would be important that observers stay days after
polling day observing the transfer of sensitive material and salaries for
electoral staff as well (it took some ballot boxes ten days to be transferred
last year, and the lack of payment due to corruption and difficulties of
transportation has been a huge issue last year).
And let us not forget about the Electoral Complains Commission: the three ECC
commissioners for Paktika were sitting in one room with toshaks but no
desks, no computers and no internet. They said they air radio messages about
their role and presence and people come to them with complaints. But since they
do not have any means to note, file and transmit them properly to Kabul, they
currently do not do so. Once a week they can check their mails at the IEC but
beyond that, there is no exchange with that body.
In general, many people I spoke to saw weak and corrupt governance alongside
the mistrust of NATOs efforts as the main reason for the growing support of the
insurgency. Flying out, there was the nagging question of what sense it makes
to hold parliamentary elections in Paktika on 18 September - and what they will
actually change in the lives of people. While there is an inclination to give a
pessimistic answer, I still tell myself that it is too early to judge - if not
at least out of deep respect for those voting, supporting and running in
Paktika.
Tina Blohm is head of the Kabul office of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, a German political foundation. All views expressed in this blog are her own. This article was originally published by the Afghan Analysts Network.
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