Former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah and ex-World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani will compete in a head-to-head vote after results from the April 5 election showed neither gained the 50 per cent needed for first-round victory.
The eventual winner will lead Afghanistan into a new era as US-led NATO combat troops end their 13-year war against the Islamist insurgency that erupted after President Hamid Karzai took power in 2001.
"With the evidence we have, the victory of our team is evident and clear," Abdullah said, adding that he would have won the first round decisively if the election had been clean.
"There were fraud violations -- organised, systematic fraud."
Abdullah also accused the government of "meddling" in the vote.
The 2009 election, when Karzai retained power after defeating Abdullah, was marred by massive fraud in a chaotic process that shook the multinational effort to develop the country after the ousting of the austere Taliban regime.
Preliminary results released on Saturday showed Abdullah secured 44.9 per cent of the first-round vote, with Ghani on 31.5 per cent.
Another expensive, and potentially violent, election could be avoided by negotiations in the coming weeks, but both sides have dismissed talk of a power-sharing deal.
Ghani sounded a defiant note despite finishing 13 percentage points behind Abdullah.
"After inspection of fraud, the distance between the two top candidates will lessen," he said. "A second round is a must according to the constitution. Any doubts will threaten the stability of Afghanistan.
"We will go for principles, not deals. The people's votes tell me not to strike any deals with anyone behind the curtains."
The United Nations mission in Afghanistan welcomed the results, but warned election officials that they must address all fraud complaints "in a professional, expeditious and open manner".
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