Al-Zawahiri criticises Afghan elections
by
Monday 19 September 2005 8:41 PM GMT

The al-Qaida deputy also claimed the 7 July London bombings

Al-Qaida number two Ayman al-Zawahiri has dismissed the legitimacy of
Afghanistan's parliamentary elections in a new tape broadcast by
Aljazeera.

In the tape, al-Zawahiri played down US accomplishments in 
Afghanistan, saying it had just managed to move the Taliban 
government from Kabul to the mountains and countryside. 



The tape aired by Aljazeera was produced by al-Sahab Productions,
which usually distributes al-Qaida's videos.



The taped interview of al-Zawahiri had apparently been conducted to
commemorate the fourth anniversary of the September 11 attacks on
Washington and New York.

"What did they do? They drove Taliban's government out of Kabul, but
it has been active in the mountains and countryside, where the real
power of Afghanistan lies," al-Zawahiri said.

The al-Qaida deputy chief dismissed the legitimacy of the just-
concluded Afghan parliamentary elections. 

"The elections have been conducted under the terror of 
[Afghanistan's] warlords," al-Zawahiri said.

He added that northern Afghanistan and Kabul had become "an area of
chaos, plundering, theft, violations and drug business" under American
occupation.



"The elections were a masquerade more than anything else, as various
regions of the country are under the control of highwaymen and
warlords, and international observers ... cannot cover more than one
tenth of the (electoral) districts," al-Zawahiri said.



He added that "the international mercenaries (UN observers) had seen
only staged polls in some cities".

Vote counting 

Counting of the ballots will
continue for the next two weeks
Counting of votes in Afghanistan's parliamentary elections began on
Tuesday.



Trucks, helicopters and even donkeys were bringing the estimated 6
million ballots from far-flung regions for counting over the next two
weeks to decide the makeup of Afghanistan's first new parliament in
more than 30 years.


A spokesman for the Afghan-UN election board, Aleem Siddique, said the
transportation of ballots to 32 counting centres nationwide was
expected to be completed on Thursday.



Tallying of the votes, set to involve more than 7000 staff, had begun
in several centres on Tuesday.

Afghan and international officials hailed Sunday's vote as a major
step towards democracy after decades of war and turmoil, although
initial indications were that the turnout was just more than 50% -
compared with 70% in last year's presidential election, when 8 million
voted, installing President Hamid Karzai.


London bombings

Al-Zawahiri heaped praise again in Monday's tape on the 7 July London
Underground blasts which killed 56 people, including the four
attackers.



Ayman al-Zawahiri (R) is
al-Qaida's second-in-command

Claiming responsibility for the blasts, he said the London bombings
were carried out by the group to strike at "British arrogance".



"The London attack is one of the attacks that al-Qaida ... had the
honour of carrying out against Zionist, British arrogance," al-
Zawahiri said.



"This blessed attack revealed the real hypocritical face of the 
West," al-Zawahiri said in the tape in reference to British threats to
deport anti-West Muslim clerics to their countries of origin.

UN criticised

Al-Zawahiri criticised the UN for turning a blind eye to the 
violations that took place in the Afghan elections.

Al-Zawahiri says the UN was silent
about Iraqi deaths under sanctions
"While the UN opposed the elections in Zimbabwe because the time for
polling was inadequate, the organisation keeps silent on the elections
in Afghanistan where the polling was carried out under the terror of
the warlords.

"Even the ballot boxes remained in the hands of warlords, bandits and
the US agents before they were deposited at the polling centres,'' he
said.

He also criticised the UN for seeking to set up trials for alleged war
criminals in Darfur, while ignoring more serious violations by the
world's key players. 

"The UN had been silent about the death of [a] million Iraqi children
under the sanctions," he said. 

US denounced

The Egyptian-born al-Zawahiri also denounced US demands for political
reforms around the world, including in Muslim countries.

George Bush and Tony Blair are
accused of lying to their people
He said "there is no reform without jihad for the sake of God and any
call for reform without jihad will eventually be greeted by death and
failure".

"Our enemies will not give us our rights without Jihad," he added.



''We should not be deceived by what had occurred in Georgia, Ukraine
or Kyrgyzstan.



"Those were changes wanted by the Americans after they had prevented
the Russians from interfering. Thus the Americans will never permit
any Islamic regime to assume power in the middle of the Islamic world,
unless such regime is in full collaboration with them, as the case is
in Iraq."


Iraq war

Al-Zawahiri also accused US President George Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair of lying to the people.



"The London attack is one of the attacks that al-Qaida ... had the
honour of carrying out against Zionist, British arrogance"

Ayman al-Zawahiri,
al-Qaida deputy chief

He alleged that the losses inflicted on the US-led forces in Iraq were
much more than what the two government had been showing.



He called on all the armed factions in Iraq to unite against the
invading forces.



"I urge the mujahidin (warriors of the holy war) to unite. It is a
first priority now."



Palestine

Al-Zawahiri also criticised efforts to integrate Palestinian 
resistance factions into the Palestinian Authority.

He said the invitation to resistance factions to participate in the
parliamentary elections was an attempt to buy them off. 



In addition, he strongly criticised the Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf for closing the religious schools in Pakistan and condemned
Islamabad's close ties to the US.

Rocket attack

Supporters of the Taliban government ousted by US-led forces in late
2001 for harbouring al-Qaida have stepped up assaults in Afghanistan
this year, and more than 1200 people died in violence in the six
months before the elections, many of them "militants".


Two rockets struck Jalalabad, the main city of eastern Nangahar 
province early on Tuesday, slightly injuring one person at a 
government building, Interior Ministry spokesman Yusuf Stanikzai said.

Another election board spokesman, Baheen Sultan Ahmad, said vote
counting had not yet started in the province because of security
concerns.


Initial indications were that voter
turnout was just over 50%
A roadside bomb exploded near a truck carrying ballots in Nangarhar
shortly after polls closed on Sunday, but there was no damage to the
vehicle or ballot boxes.


Although there were no major attacks to disrupt voting, officials
believe the lower turnout may have been due to fears of Taliban
threats of violence, the presence of regional commanders on the
ballots and the bewildering choice of candidates.


Also, many Afghans distrust politicians they blame for plunging the
country into chaos and are not convinced they can drag it out of
poverty and pain.

Discrepancies


Abdul Satar, a 50-year-old shopkeeper in Kabul, said he went to a
polling place but marked his ballots with an 'X' as a protest.


"Warlords, illiterates, communists, Taliban. How can I believe these
people will serve the country?"

Kabul shopkeeper Abdul Satar
"Warlords, illiterates, communists, Taliban," Satar said. "How can I
believe these people will serve the country?"


In a preliminary report, a European Union observer mission gave the
polling a positive review, but said vote secrecy was not always
maintained.


It said shortcomings during the campaign included intimidation, 
intervention by officials, inadequate voter lists and "deplorable"
killings of candidates and election workers.

Complete provisional results from the voting for parliament and 34
provincial councils are not expected for at least two weeks. Officials
hope to have certified results by 22 October.

Aljazeera + Agencies
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0BB3E65C-0ADD-48B8-BF40-
6FBB3C069647.htm
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