Afghan parliamentary election, 2005

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Afghanistan held parliamentary and provincial council elections on 18 September 2005. On 9 October the first results were declared. It is anticipated that all results will be known by 20 October. Turnout is estimated at about 50 percent, substantially lower than at the presidential election in October 2004. This is blamed on the lack of identifiable party lists as a result of Afghanistan's new electoral law, which left voters in many cases unclear on who they were voting for.

Turnout was highest in the Turkmen, Uzbek and Tajik ethnic minority provinces in the north - generally over 60 percent - and lowest (below 30 percent) in some of the Pashtun-speaking south-eastern areas where the Taliban insurgency is strongest. Turnout was also surprisingly low (34 percent) in the capital, Kabul.

Electoral system

Approximately twelve million voters were eligible to vote for the 249-seat Wolesi Jirga, the lower house of parliament, and 34 provincial councils. The 2,707 parliament candidates (328 female, 2,379 male) are all independent; parties are not recognized by law and lists do not exist. This has been the subject of criticism: relatively unknown people could win a seat as easily as very popular candidates. It has also made it considerably difficult for the population to decide who to vote for, even though some candidates may be a member of or (financially) backed by a political party.

Another source of criticism is the use of the single, non-transferable vote in multi-member constituencies, particularly in the absence of party lists. In other words, each province elects a number of members, but each voter can vote for only one candidate. This runs the risk of fragmenting the vote to the point where candidates can be elected virtually by chance. Early returns confirm this fear. For example, in Farah Province, one of the first provinces to declare its results, 46 candidates competed for five seats. No candidate polled more than 11 percent, and four of the five elected candidates polled less than 8 percent. This creates the risk of a legislature in which the majority of members have little or no legitimacy.

Because a sizable percentage of the Afghan population is unable to read and write, all candidates had an icon as well. Those icons were included on the lists. These included, but were not limited to, pictures of footballs, cars or different sorts of flowers. Because there were not enough different icons, some candidates had multiple icons as their symbol: two or three footballs behind each other, like Gulallay Habib (page 16 of the Kabul parliament candidate list). For example, the candidate list for the Nurestan section of the parliament looks like this. Candidates were not able to chose the icons themselves: instead, the electoral committee chose them. Forty-five candidates were refused because of connections with armed groups or for not giving up their government jobs.

People vote for a candidate in their own province. Each province has a number of representatives in parliament, depending on the population. The largest province by population, Kabul, has 33 seats (390 candidates, 50 female, 340 male), whereas the small ones like Nurestan, Nimruz and Panjshir, have only two.

The total number of candidates for the provincial councils is 3,025. Each province except Oruzgan had women running for seats in the provincial council. Female candidates are running for parliament in all districts. District council elections, originally also scheduled for this date, will not be held in 2005 (district numbers, boundaries and population figures have to be determined first).

These were the first elections in Afghanistan in 33 years: after communist rule, civil war and Taliban rule, the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan toppled the Taliban regime and after the presidential elections in 2004, parliamentary elections were organized in 2005. Originally, according to the 2001 Bonn agreement, the elections were to be held in June 2004. However, due to the security situation, Hamid Karzai, then interim president (now president) of Afghanistan, moved the elections more than a year to the later date. Security is still an issue, as Taliban and others threatened to disrupt the elections violently. Several candidates were killed before polling.

An Afghan man casts his ballot at a polling station in Lash Kar Gah, Helmand Province, September 18, 2005. Polling stations were busy, but orderly, across the city.
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An Afghan man casts his ballot at a polling station in Lash Kar Gah, Helmand Province, September 18, 2005. Polling stations were busy, but orderly, across the city.

A quarter of the seats - 68 seats - in the parliament are reserved for women, as well as 10 seats for the Kuchi community. Those are minimum numbers: there is no maximum for the number of seats for those groups. The 102 members of the Meshrano Jirga, the upper house, are indirectly elected by the provincial councils.

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