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Leading candidates raise the stakes in Afghan elections
By David Loyn BBC News, Kabul
Both Mr Abdullah and his main rival say they want as resounding a democratic mandate as possible
Both of the leading candidates in Afghanistan's presidential election have ruled out a deal and say they want to contest a second round if neither wins outright.
Official results are still some days away, but campaign officials have been carrying out their own counts.
Abdullah Abdullah has been more reluctant than Ashraf Ghani to give a figure for his vote, but he told the BBC that he was confident that he was doing "better than every other candidate".
If no candidate wins more than 50% of the vote, there will be a second round in May, unless one stands aside.
There had been speculation that there might be a deal, but Dr Abdullah has now told the BBC that "the people should be given a chance".
Ashraf Ghani insists that he is on course for outright victory
Dr Ghani, who insists that he has won more than 50% of votes cast, made his position about a possible run-off race clear in an earlier BBC interview, saying the public should not be deprived of their voice.
"There has to be a clear winner," he said.
The results collected by candidates come from counts posted outside polling centres after counts on Saturday and Sunday.
The ballot boxes were then sent for verification to the Independent Election Commission (IEC) in Kabul, the official body overseeing the process. Officials there have privately expressed concern about candidates speaking so openly ahead of official results.
The IEC will not publish any results until they have them from an even geographical spread of at least 20 provinces.
A separate body, the Electoral Complaints Commission (ECC), will assess complaints and issue rulings, which could involve fining candidates or declaring ballots ineligible.
Tight security has been in place before and after the vote
Officials have been working to ensure the process is seen as independent
The head of the Electoral Complaints Commission says that he is determined that the vote be as free and fair as possible
The ECC held a public hearing where the vice-presidential candidates for six of the eight campaigns made their complaints. Dr Abdullah's deputy Mohammed Khan had the longest list of complaints.
These ranged from shortage of ballot papers to alleged widespread corruption, with voters told to go home because ballot papers were already filled in.
Many of these complaints related to Kandahar, Zabul and Paktia - three frontier provinces in the south-east.....
By David Loyn BBC News, Kabul
Both Mr Abdullah and his main rival say they want as resounding a democratic mandate as possible
Both of the leading candidates in Afghanistan's presidential election have ruled out a deal and say they want to contest a second round if neither wins outright.
Official results are still some days away, but campaign officials have been carrying out their own counts.
Abdullah Abdullah has been more reluctant than Ashraf Ghani to give a figure for his vote, but he told the BBC that he was confident that he was doing "better than every other candidate".
If no candidate wins more than 50% of the vote, there will be a second round in May, unless one stands aside.
There had been speculation that there might be a deal, but Dr Abdullah has now told the BBC that "the people should be given a chance".
Ashraf Ghani insists that he is on course for outright victory
Dr Ghani, who insists that he has won more than 50% of votes cast, made his position about a possible run-off race clear in an earlier BBC interview, saying the public should not be deprived of their voice.
"There has to be a clear winner," he said.
The results collected by candidates come from counts posted outside polling centres after counts on Saturday and Sunday.
The ballot boxes were then sent for verification to the Independent Election Commission (IEC) in Kabul, the official body overseeing the process. Officials there have privately expressed concern about candidates speaking so openly ahead of official results.
The IEC will not publish any results until they have them from an even geographical spread of at least 20 provinces.
A separate body, the Electoral Complaints Commission (ECC), will assess complaints and issue rulings, which could involve fining candidates or declaring ballots ineligible.
Tight security has been in place before and after the vote
Officials have been working to ensure the process is seen as independent
The ECC held a public hearing where the vice-presidential candidates for six of the eight campaigns made their complaints. Dr Abdullah's deputy Mohammed Khan had the longest list of complaints.
These ranged from shortage of ballot papers to alleged widespread corruption, with voters told to go home because ballot papers were already filled in.
Many of these complaints related to Kandahar, Zabul and Paktia - three frontier provinces in the south-east.....