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Afghanistan fears bloodshed on election eve

Afghanistan's 17 million voters were set to choose a president for only the second time in history with security forces on high alert against a threatened Taliban onslaught.

Updated on: Aug 19, 2009, 15:16:45 IST
AFP | By , Kabul
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Afghanistan's 17 million voters were set to choose a president for only the second time in history with security forces on high alert on Wednesday against a threatened Taliban onslaught.

HT Image
HT Image

Ahead of Thursday's presidential and provincial council polls, authorities have been battling to reassure voters that it will be safe to visit polling centres as US and allied forces step up their anti-insurgency offensive.

But a suicide bomber and rocket strikes on the capital on Tuesday escalated tensions in the final run-up to the election, which western-backed President Hamid Karzai hopes to win by a big enough margin to avert a run-off vote.

"It (security) is of concern but to get free of this situation, we must cast our vote," said a 25-year-old Kabul woman employed by an international company who gave her name only as Massouda.

Others said the risks were not worth it.

"I will not let my family to go and vote in such a bad situation," said Abdul Qadir, a 40-year-old cigarette seller in Kabul where on Tuesday's suicide blast killed a NATO soldier and nine Afghans, two of them UN staffers.

"We should elect our president -- one that all the nation will be happy with," said Haji Mohammad from the nearby province of Logar. But he added: "If election day is bad, I will not let the family vote."

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