insisted on it...
From the current World Media Watch....
4//The Sydney Morning Herald, Australia September 19, 2005 - 11:16AM
http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/tilt-at-democracy-tests-karzai/2005/09/19/1126981976164.html?oneclick=true TILT AT DEMOCRACY TESTS KARZAI
The future is daunting for the President as Afghans vote, writes Paul McGeough.
The Afghan poll is a high-stakes contest over who knows best how to run this broken-down country - President Hamid Karzai or the army of foreign diplomats push-pulling his government down the democracy road.
They pleaded with him. Out of sheer frustration, the United Nations, the Europeans and others warned Karzai: "You'll be sorry."
But insisting he was on top of things, the Pashtun President stuck with his choice of an electoral system that many fear could backfire explosively.
Karzai disagrees. But the new parliament could be elected by as few as 20 per cent of voters, making it utterly unrepresentative; and Karzai's black-balling of political parties risks returning an unruly rabble that might eat him alive.
(SNIP)
Karzai's insistence on the rarely used SNTV electoral system - single non-transferable vote - allows voters to choose just a single candidate in fields of up to hundreds for no more than a dozen seats in most provinces. The most populous, Kabul, has 33 seats - but there is a field of 389 candidates.
A senior foreign diplomat observed: "Predicting the outcome is impossible. No candidate is likely to get more than 10 per cent. If the rest are lucky they'll get about 1 per cent each.
"We hope we are wrong. But a 20 per cent parliament is a risk because Afghans are bad losers. With such a thin spread of votes, how is a 1.09 per cent loser going to feel when he sees a 1.1 per cent winner?"
He is referring to one of Afghanistan's most absurd election rules. Known as the "assassination clause", it calls for the next-highest vote winner to replace any MP who dies. A similar rule applied to the election of delegates to a national political conference in 2002. Within four hours of the announcement of the successful candidates two were assassinated.
The diplomat shrugged: "But Karzai says none of this is a problem."
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