The camps of the two candidates former Foreign Minister Abdullah and former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai said the two were expected to meet later today or tomorrow to negotiate a final deal on what powers should be given to a proposed chief executive position, the final sticking point of a national unity government.
Ominously, a spokesman for Abdullah the man most here believe is behind in the official ballot count insinuated that the election could still end violently. In what appeared to be either a threat or a negotiating tactic, the spokesman said Abdullah's powerful factional supporters are pressuring their candidate to not cede any power to Ghani Ahmadzai.
"But imagine if you have an agreement that insults one side and promotes the other side and each side firmly believes he is a winner that could be a recipe for radicals to re-emerge and challenge the leadership and say this is not acceptable," he said.
Abdullah won the first round of the election in April but did not secure enough votes to avoid a June runoff. A preliminary count showed Ghani Ahmadzai winning the second round, but both sides alleged widespread fraud. Abdullah's camp says it believes some 2.5 million votes out of a total 8 million cast were fake.
A spokesman for Ghani Ahmadzai said the former World Bank official is committed to a national unity government, but he also said that giving the losing candidate chief executive power over cabinet ministers would violate the Afghan constitution.