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Obama to Afghan president: Time for a new chapter
by BEN FELLER
Posted: 11.02.2009 at 2:18 PM
0

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says he spoke to Afghan President Hamid Karzai to congratulate him on his second-term victory and to call for a "new chapter" of better governance after the tumultuous and fraud-ridden election.

Obama said on Monday that he noted to Karzai that the election had been "messy" but that he was "pleased to say the final outcome was determined by Afghan law."

Karzai was named winner of the August vote on Monday.

Election officials had scheduled a run-off vote for Saturday, but challenger Abdullah Abdullah, the second-place finisher and Karzai's former foreign minister, pulled out of the second-round vote. Abdullah says there were no guarantees the run-off would be any more legitimate than the first.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House said Monday President Barack Obama planned to call Afghan President Hamid Karzai about his victory in the fraud-marred election.

Spokesman Robert Gibbs also said that Americans should "take heart" that the laws and institutions of Afghanistan had prevailed.

Gibbs further said that there was no reason to believe the Afghan people would not accept a Karzai government as legitimate, even though challenger Abdullah Abdullah, Karzai's former foreign minister, dropped out of a planned run-off vote on Saturday.

The tumultuous election process has coincided with a prolonged study by Obama to decide on a new Afghan strategy, including a request by his top commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, for as many as 80,000 additional forces to battle the militant Taliban and its al-Qaida allies.

Gibbs declined to say if Obama's decision on a new strategy or troop strength would be hastened now that a run-off was unnecessary. He stuck to the White House formulation that the president would make up his mind in a "matter of weeks."

Only moments earlier Obama declined to comment on a ruling by Afghanistan's election commission to name Karzai the victor.

The results of the initial August vote were overturned last month, with about 1 million ballots marked for Karzai having been thrown out as fraudulent. That left him with fewer than 50 percent, requiring a run-off vote that was set for Saturday. On Sunday, Abdullah, the second-place finisher, dropped out of the race.

Karzai's administration has been under heavy U.S. pressure to eliminate corruption and to widen its support among the country's key ethnic groups.

With Karzai's re-election confirmed, Gibbs said, "now begin the hard conversations about ensuring credibility, ensuring and improving governance, addressing corruption. We are focused on what has to happen in order to have a credible partner."

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