We
should look at today´s presidential elections from a positive perspective. The
news is good indeed. The participation rate, estimated at 58%, is very
significant in a country that is still confronted with major security threats.
It was encouraging to see long lines of men and women waiting their turn to
vote. It is true that the logistics were not exemplary. In many places they
could even be said to be messy. But flaws were corrected throughout the day and
people could eventually vote.
Among
the eight candidates, the two leading hopefuls, Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf
Ghani, are very reasonable people. Any of them could be a good leader for the
country.
The
point is to keep the credibility of the elections. The last ones, in 2009, were
too fraudulent. Hamid Karzai was elected then in a manner that made his tenure very
fragile and compromised his capacity to fully exercise the democratic authority
that was key for a rapid transition to a more legitimate government. He spent
his last mandate just trying to balance the interests of very powerful allies,
without having the legitimacy to go beyond that.
Karzai
will however be reminded as the leader that carried the nation through many difficult
years, close to thirteen. The last deed everyone expects from him is very simple:
keep the current electoral process clean, do not interfere. His candidate –apparently
it is Zalmai Rassoul – might not make it to the second round. But Karzai should
make it to the good books of the Afghan history.
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