1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Ghani declared president-elect

September 21, 2014

A disputed presidential election in Afghanistan has been resolved, with Ashraf Ghani being named president-elect. Yet questions remain whether the presidential rivals can successfully share power in a unity government.

https://p.dw.com/p/1DGUr
Einigung über Einheitsregierung in Afghanistan unterzeichnet 21.9.2014
Image: AFP/Getty Images

Afghanistan's election commission announced former finance minister Ashraf Ghani has won the country's presidential election, bringing an end to an acrimonious six-month stalemate between Ghani and his rival Abdullah Abdullah.

The exact vote tally has been kept under wraps, and the final result was only announced after a United Nations audit.

"The Independent Election Commission of Afghanistan declare Dr. Ashraf Ghani Ahmad as the president of Afghanistan," Independent Election Commission chairman Ahmad Yousuf Nuristani Nuristani said.

Power sharing agreement reached

Afghanistan's new leaders signed a pact on Sunday that will see the formation of a unity government. Abdullah Abdullah was named “chief executive officer,” a new post similar to that of a prime minister.

Minutes before the signing, outgoing President Hamid Karzai pledged his support for the new government.

"I'm very happy that two of our brothers [Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah] have come to an Afghani agreement for the sake of prosperity of this country and for the development of this country," Karzai said.

The "Afghan nation has been waiting for this day," he added.

Disputed election

The two new leaders had been vying for the presidency during this year's elections. In June, Ashraf Ghani won the run-off election, according to the election commission. However, Abdullah Abdullah contested the results, accusing his rival of voter fraud.

US Secretary of State John Kerry brokered a deal in July under which both candidates agreed to abide by a UN -monitored audit of all 8 million ballots to avert a descent into violence. The negotiations also paved the way for the power-sharing agreement without knowledge of who actually won in June.

The Independent Election Commission was expected to release the final official results of the June run-off on Sunday evening.

New challenges

Ghani is expected to be sworn in within days, replacing Karzai, who has led the West Asian country since the US invasion in 2001. Roughly 13 years later, Afghanistan must now transition yet again as the NATO-led mission withdraws its troops.

In anticipation of the challenges facing the new Afghan leaders, Karzai promised to aid them in their new roles.

"[I and the current government] will always be willing to help and advise them to the best of our abilities," he said.

bw/glb (AP, AFP, Reuters)