Afghan Voter Registration Passes 3.5 Million Mark, UN Mission Says
More than 3.5 million Afghans have registered to vote, nearly 35 per cent of them women, the United Nations Assistance
Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has reported.
Briefing reporters in Kabul on Sunday, UNAMA spokesman Edward Carwardine put the total at 3,591,572 Afghans, including
1,253,605 women.
A month ago, UNAMA said women made up about 30 per cent of the 2 million voters who had signed up at 400 registration
sites.
Meanwhile, the Afghan Ministry of Justice has approved 21 political parties out of the 50 seeking recognition, Mr.
Carwardine said. The parties next must apply to the Joint Electoral Management Body for accreditation. That Board is
also mandated to decide on the date of the election.
In another development, UNAMA chief Jean Arnault on Saturday began an official visit to Iran, where he met with
President Mohammed Khatami and senior government officials.
Their talks touched on Iran’s aid to and trade with Afghanistan and the fight against illegal narcotics, Mr. Carwardine
said.
The Tehran authorities re-affirmed their support for the Bonn Agreement, which was brokered by the UN in December 2001
and set the blueprint for Afghanistan’s political transition.