Massive car bomb as Afghan race runs tight

KABUL, (Reuters) – With early results yesterday  showing Afghanistan’s presidential race neck-and-neck, a massive  truck bomb that killed 40 civilians and wounded 60 in Kandahar  showed the scale of problems facing the eventual winner.
The blast took place shortly after dusk as Afghans across  the country were breaking their daily fast in the holy Muslim  month of Ramadan.

There was confusion over whether the explosion was from one  big truck bomb or a series of smaller, simultaneous devices. A  Reuters witness saw a restaurant set ablaze and a shop and  several houses flattened.

Provincial Governor Ahmed Wali Karzai told Reuters that 40  people were killed and more than 60 wounded, all civilians.
Four U.S. servicemen were killed by a roadside bomb  elsewhere in the south, NATO and the U.S. military said, making  2009 the deadliest year for the growing contingent of foreign  troops in eight years of war.

Earlier, the first partial results from last Thursday’s  election had President Hamid Karzai and his main rival running  neck-and-neck, suggesting a close race headed for a second  round.

The country has been in political limbo since the vote, with  Karzai and chief rival Abdullah Abdullah each claiming victory.  Abdullah and other challengers have accused Karzai and the  authorities of widespread fraud.

The elections are a major test for Karzai after eight years  in power and for U.S. President Barack Obama, who has poured in  thousands of extra troops as part of his new regional strategy  to defeat the Taliban and stabilise Afghanistan.

The partial election results, based on 10 percent of votes  counted, gave Karzai a slight edge with 41 percent against 39  percent for Abdullah, his former foreign minister — a  difference of about 10,000 out of about 524,000 valid votes  counted.
Election officials warned against drawing conclusions about  the final count from the initial samples. They promise to  provide daily updates but the complete count is not due until  Sept 3.

U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke urged caution, saying the early  results were misleading.
“You don’t call it with 10 percent. It’s too early to call,”  Holbrooke, who left Afghanistan on Monday, told reporters in  Turkey.

Behind the two leaders, Ramazan Bashardost, a member of the  Hazara ethnic minority who ran a quixotic campaign from a tent  across the street from parliament, placed third with around 11  percent. Former finance minister Ashraf Ghani won 3 percent.

Speaking after the announcement of first results, Abdullah  said it was too early to draw any conclusions, but he would not  accept any outcome affected by major fraud.