Kabul: The campaign team of Afghan chief executive Abdullah Abdullah has said that it would not accept the results of the September 28 presidential election which has been won by the current head of state, President Ashraf Ghani.
The 59-year-old Abdullah's campaign said in a statement on Sunday that the candidate's stability and convergence team would not accept any results based on fraud.
Election officials said on Sunday that Ghani was on course to winning the presidential election, the results of which were delayed by months due to protests over allegations of electoral fraud.
The vote tally released by the Independent Election Commission and conducted nearly three months after the election showed that Ghani garnered 50.64 percent of the ballots cast, followed by Abdullah with 39.50 percent.
Of the 1,824,401 votes considered valid, Ghani got 923,868 votes compared to Abdullah who received 720,099 votes, IEC head Hawa Alam Nuristani said in a press conference on Sunday.
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar finished in third place with 70,243 votes, or 3.85 percent of the total, the IEC said.
On September 28, only 2.7 million of the 9.6 million people eligible came out to vote, a very low turnout rate mainly due to continued threats from the Taliban and people's mistrust of the electoral process.