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Election observer accuses Trump of 'gross abuse of office'

This article is more than 12 months old

BERLIN: The head of an international observer mission to the US elections accused Mr Donald Trump yesterday of a "gross abuse of office" after the president alleged he was being cheated and demanded that vote counting be halted.

"The most disturbing thing was that with presidential fanfare of the White House, that is, with all the insignia of power, the American commander-in-chief called for an end to the count because of his purported victory," Mr Michael Link from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) told the German daily Stuttgarter Zeitung.

"That was a gross abuse of office," he said, adding that Mr Trump's "claims of manipulation are baseless".

Mr Link warned that Mr Trump's repeated false allegations of fraud could have far-reaching consequences.

"The major concern is that the US will not be able to put back into the bottle the genie that Trump has let out.

"Even if he were to admit defeat and hand over office properly, his supporters, incited by rhetoric, may see violence as a legitimate tool because they no longer feel democratically represented," said Mr Link.

And that is "a danger that goes far beyond election day," added the mission chief of the OSCE, which monitors elections in Western nations and the former Soviet Union.

NO BASIS

On Wednesday, the mission released a statement saying there was no basis to Mr Trump's claims of cheating, and that Tuesday's vote was "competitive and well managed".

Mr Trump, 74, had claimed victory unilaterally before counting in key battleground states had concluded.

He also made clear he would not accept the reported results, issuing unprecedented complaints - unsupported by any evidence - of fraud. - AFP

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