In Afghanistan, election fever is gaining pitch with candidates wooing potential voters everyday.<br/> <br />But here at this refugee camp on the outskirts of Peshawar, April 5 will just be another ordinary day.<br/> <br />There are 80 camps like this across Pakistan home to some 1.6 million Afghan refugees.<br/> <br />But none of them will have a say in who will be the next leader of the country.<br/> <br />Many can't return home due to the violence for the April 5 polls. Others are just too poor.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (Pashto) AFGHAN REFUGEE HAJI SARBULAND SAYING:<br/> <br />"We are unable to go to Afghanistan. Therefore, it would be nice if an office is set up here. We will vote for whoever is a good candidate."<br/> <br />When incumbent president Hamid Karzai was voted into power in 2004, candidates ran lively campaigns in Pakistan, heralding a democratic rule after the fall of the Taliban.<br/> <br />But this time, the elections are a far away event on the other side of the border.
