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"We have learned a lot from last year's election," Manawi said. There are some hopeful signs. Polling stations will be open in Marjah -- the town in Helmand province that was wrested from Taliban control in a major U.S. offensive earlier this year. Abdullah Jan, who works at a transportation business in the capital of Helmand, said he's worried about safety but he'll vote anyway. He hopes that the lessons of 2009 have been learned. "I don't think it will be safe, but I think it will be a fair election," Jan said. The presidential vote last summer brought with it a spike in violence, particularly in the south. Poll workers and voters were attacked, and Taliban insurgents fired rockets into Kandahar city. Even so, Hekmatullah, the cosmetics vendor, who like many Afghans uses only one name, voted last year. Now, even with more U.S. and Afghan troops in the streets, he said he doesn't feel safer and has lost trust in the system. "Nothing has changed. The Taliban still have their hold here, so I'm sure it won't be safe to vote. And it won't be fair," he said.
The major test of reform will likely be the number of voting sites that open. In the presidential vote, officials opened hundreds of so-called ghost sites that were too dangerous for voters to visit. Though observers said few voters showed up, boxes came back to Kabul full of ballots. Electoral officials plan to open 5,897 voting sites for the parliamentary election, having discarded more than 900 proposed venues because army and police could not guarantee security. Last year, 6,167 voting centers nominally operated. Security officials first promised they could secure 6,835 sites. The election commission persuaded them to reduce the number to a more reasonable figure, Manawi said. "The security forces are always trying to make the situation look much better than it is," Manawi said. "They weren't looking at reality." All the steps to encourage a clean election mean little to Aghnozada, a thin 48-year-old with a long beard in Kandahar's Arghandab Valley. He said the Taliban are too powerful for him to consider voting. "I haven't seen any election commission officers or candidates," he said, sitting on the grass outside his mud-brick house. Aghnozada said he didn't know who was running in his district.
[Associated
Press;
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