Afghan troops to lead security by 2014-communique

July 20 (Reuters) – The international conference in Afghanistan will agree on Tuesday that Afghan forces should begin taking security responsiblity in some areas by the end of this year and should lead security operations in all provinces by the end of 2014, according to a copy of the final communique.

“Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) should lead and conduct military operations in all provinces by the end of 2014,” said the communique, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.

(reporting by Jonathon Burch; editing by Andrew Quinn; via Kabul newsroom +93794354074)

Taliban hit Afghan police posts; free 23 prisoners

Afghanistan (Reuters) – Taliban guerrillas staged a series of raids in western Afghanistan Sunday, blowing up the gate of a jail and freeing 23 insurgent prisoners, officials said.

Ousted in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, dealing heavy losses to Afghan and foreign forces and carrying out brazen attacks on key locations, including in the capital.

Insurgents attacked four police posts leading to the center of Farah town early Sunday, said Mohammad Younus Rasooli, the governor of western Farah province, bordering Iran.

“They kept the police preoccupied and the same time blew up the gate of Farah’s jail, which resulted in the escape of 23 prisoners,” Rasooli told Reuters by phone.

Four of the inmates were immediately arrested because they had suffered wounds in the escape, he said, adding seven more were captured.

A policeman was killed during the incident, which lasted several hours, he said.

A spokesman for the Taliban, Qari Mohammad Yousuf, confirmed that members of the movement were behind the attacks.

(Reporting by Sharafuddin Sharafyar; writing by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox)

McChrystal expects Afghan progress by year-end – Gates

June 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, expects to make solid progress in the conflict across the country by the end of this year, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday. Speaking at the end of a gathering of NATO defence ministers in Brussels, Gates said the road ahead would be “long and hard” but said progress in the offensive so far was sustainable.

“General McChrystal told the ministers that he is confident that he will be able to show progress in the south and across the country and that the strategy is working by the end of the year,” Gates told reporters.

Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KANDAHAR – A suicide bomber killed around 40 people and wounded 77 others in an attack on a wedding party in the Arghandab district of southern Kandahar province on Wednesday night, police and provincial officials said.

GHAZNI – A roadside bomb killed three Afghan policemen in the southwest of Ghazni province on Wednesday, Interior Ministry said.

KUNAR – Three insurgents were killed and two others wounded in a gun battle when Taliban attacked a police post in the eastern Kunar province overnight, Interior Ministry said in a statement. Two police officers were also wounded, it said.

(Compiled by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by David Fox)

Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KANDAHAR – A suicide bomber killed around 40 people and wounded 77 others in an attack on a wedding party in the Arghandab district of southern Kandahar province on Wednesday night, police and provincial officials said.

GHAZNI – A roadside bomb killed three Afghan policemen in the southwest of Ghazni province on Wednesday, Interior Ministry said.

KUNAR – Three insurgents were killed and two others wounded in a gun battle when Taliban attacked a police post in the eastern Kunar province overnight, Interior Ministry said in a statement. Two police officers were also wounded, it said.

(Compiled by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by David Fox)

Pakistani militants behead Afghan man for ‘spying’

Islamabad, June 6 (IANS) Unidentified militants beheaded a 60-year-old Afghan man for allegedly ‘spying’ for the US military based in neighbouring Afghanistan, media reports said.

The body, identified as that of Wadeen, was found in Darpa Khel village, five km from Miranshah, in North Waziristan tribal area bordering Afghanistan, Xinhua reported citing a statement in the Daily Times.

A piece of paper found near the body said the man was beheaded was spying for the US and that anyone else doing the same ‘would meet the same fate’.

In February this year, Taliban militants beheaded three men including two Afghans in Mir Ali area in North Waziristan, accusing them of spying for the US.

Afghanistan not prepared to go 10 years back, says Afghan MP

Kabul, June 6(ANI): Afghanistan’s Member of Parliament, Fawzia Kofi, has said that the nation or the Hamid Karzai-led Government is not ready to accept any path which threaten to throw the country back in time.

Kofi’s comments came after the Afghan’s Consultative Peace Jirga outlined a path for Karzai to negotiate with the Taliban, which included removal of senior Taliban figures from a United Nations blacklist and strengthening of Islamic law.

“This nation is not prepared to go 10 years back,” The Globe and Mail quoted Kofi, as saying.

“The delegates showed that they have already been influenced by Talibanization, making sure the insurgents’ ideology is included in these proposals. We cannot offer impunity to these people. They need to be equal before the law,” she added.

The jirga advised the government to act “immediately” on seeking the removal of the names of militant leaders from a blacklist drawn up by the UN Security Council in response to the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US.

The list designated Taliban and Al-Qaeda leaders, who were then based in Afghanistan, as terrorists, and helped to provide a UN-sanctioned justification for the US-led invasion of the country in November 2001. (ANI)

‘Not right time for India and Pak to address Kashmir issue’

The US has said that this is not the appropriate moment for India and Pakistan to hold discussions on the Kashmir issue as they need to go for confidence building measures first.

“I think that’s not going to be an issue that’s going to be addressed right away,” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Robert Blake said in response to a question at a special news conference on India yesterday.

Blake emphasised that it was for India and Pakistan to take a call on it, but felt that it would be better for the two countries go for confidence building measures first.

“I think, again, that what’s most important is first to get these talks going again and to focus on — once they’ve gotten beyond the immediate counter-terrorism issues, to focus on some of the important opportunities like trade that exist between these two countries,” Blake said.

“Once they have developed a degree of confidence, they might then be able to take up some of these more sensitive territorial issues,” Blake said.

He was responding to the question: “Where does Kashmir and the line of control fit into this puzzle?” The State Department official also did not agree with the allegations coming from some of the top Pakistani officials about India’s role in Afghanistan, which he said is nothing but constructive.

“I am not sure that India’s providing that much training to the Afghan army,” Blake said when referred to the remarks of General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani that he was against India training Afghan Armed forces.

“The vast majority of the assistance that the Indians are providing to Afghanistan is in the form of economic assistance,” Blake said.

“I would say we’ve welcomed very much the assistance that India has provided and all of our cabinet-level officials have welcomed that and will continue to do so,” he said.

“We think that they’ve really played a very important role with the USD 1.3 billion in assistance that they provided to date, mostly in infrastructure and other kinds of reconstruction projects, but also capacity building and training and so forth.

And so we think that is a very important part of the international effort to help stabilise Afghanistan,” Blake said.

Suicide bomber blows himself up in Kabul

Kabul, May 29 (IANS) A man tied an explosive device on to his body and blew himself up in Kabul Saturday, police said.

The incident happened in the 9th precinct of Kabul city at around 12.30 p.m. local time, Xinhua quoted a police officer as saying.

Though the bomber killed himself, there was no other loss of life or property, the officer said but declined to be named. The blast occurred in Depichary area, through which convoys of Afghan and NATO-led forces’ often pass.

No militant outfit has made any comment on the incident till now, he said

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

Pak must shun India ‘obsession’, Afghan ‘meddling’ ‘bad habits’: Obama

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Noting Pakistan’s ‘obsession’ with India, US President Barack Obama has said that Islamabad must shun the ‘bad’ custom of viewing its neighbouring nation as a primary threat and realise that it was extremists emanating from its own soil that are threatening the country’s very existence.

Speaking during a joint press conference with Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, Obama pointed out that his administration was working both with the Pakistani and Afghan leadership to help them do away with some of their ‘bad habits’ and old suspicions.

While describing Pakistan’s obsession with India as one of its ‘bad habits’, he acknowledged that Islamabad is now slowly overcoming the practice.

“I think there has been in the past a view on the part of Pakistan that their primary rival, India, was their only concern,” The Dawn quoted Obama, as saying.

“What you’ve seen over the last several months is a growing recognition that they have a cancer in their midst; that the extremist organisations that have been allowed to congregate and use as a base the frontier areas to then go into Afghanistan, that now threatens Pakistan’s sovereignty,” he added.

Responding to a comment of an Afghan journalist that Pakistan was the “the only reason that Afghanistan was not civilised today”, the US President said Washington was determined to help improve relations between Islamabad and Kabul.

“Our goal is to break down some of the old suspicions and the old bad habits and continue to work with the Pakistani government to see their interest in a stable Afghanistan which is free from foreign meddling,” he said.

During the briefing, Karzai was asked about reconciliation with the Taliban, to which he replied that there are “thousands of Taliban who are not against Afghanistan or against the Afghan people or their country; who are not against America either or the rest of the world”.

Karzai said there are many Afghan Taliban who wanted to come back if provided an opportunity and political means to do so.

“It’s this group of the Taliban that you’re addressing in the peace Jirga. It is this group that is our intention,” he said.

Without mentioning Pakistan, the Afghan President said that the Taliban being controlled from ‘outside’ were increasing troubles for his country. (ANI)

Karzai visits wounded Afghan troops at Bagram Air Force base

Bagram Air Force Base (Afghanistan), May 8 (ANI): Wounded Afghan troops received a surprise visitor on Saturday — their President, Hamid Karzai, at the Bagram Air Force base medical facility on the outskirts of Kabul.

Praising their courage, Karzai handed over envelopes of cash to them.

The Afghan President was accompanied by General Stanley McChrystal, the commander of U.S. and Nato forces in Afghanistan.

A foreign news agency quoted him, as saying: “Afghanistan and the United States have began a journey together now for almost eight years to bring security and stability to Afghanistan and to the United States and by extension to the rest of the world and in this undertaking you alongside the Afghan forces are doing all that you can to bring us success.” (ANI)

US”, Iraq, Afghan policies changed Shahzad from liberal to terror suspect

New York, May 6 (ANI): What was the turning point that transformed him into an alleged terrorist? That is the question that has loomed large ever since Monday’s arrest of 30-year-old Pakistani American Faizal Shahzad for the attempted car bombing of Times Square.

Accordingly, an ABC News team traveled to Peshawar to speak with his acquaintances and find the beginning of the trail to a potential bombing.

What emerges is that Shahzad was by local standards from a wealthy family and friends described him as a “mama””s boy” who hated violence when young.

However, one of his cousin’s says he can””t believe Shahzad had a role to play in the foiled Time Square bombing plot.

“He wasn””t that type of person,” he says.

His family was apparently not religious. Family friends say they were never seen praying.

Faisal Shazad’s family are a professional, educated family.

Friends say two of his siblings moved to Canada, and one of his sisters is a doctor.

According to people in Pakistan who knew him, his shift to the United States 11 years ago changed him.

Villagers in Mohib Banda told ABC News, “before his marriage he was liberal, even cosmopolitan. After, he changed.”

This change also turned him against the United States of America, people who knew him said.

“We talked about the American policies toward Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan,” a childhood friend of Shahzad, Nasir Khan, told ABC News. “He was very much angry at that.”

Khan said he last saw his former friend 18 months ago. (ANI)

Afghan test for wary India in T20 WC

Up against an unheralded Afghanistan in their tournament-opener, India will have to guard against complacency to ensure a flying start to their campaign in the T20 cricket World Cup here tomorrow.

Considering there is very little room for errors in the slam-bang format of the game, India would have to be at their best to avoid the ignominy of being destroyed by the minnows of international cricket.

Skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni has already warned his star-studded legion not to underestimate Afghanistan and teammate Yuvraj was also worried about the X-factor of their opponents, who have caught the imagination of the world over the last two years.

“It can be dangerous when you don’t know what the opposition is like. After ten overs you will end up in a situation when you don’t know what you are going to do.

Detainees destined for air base

The Department of Immigration says it expects to have Curtin Air Base up and running as a detention centre within two weeks.

The department says staff are conducting an audit of what beds and facilities are already available at the base and has already begun talking to local contractors about what services they can provide once the detainees arrive.

A spokesperson for the department says there are more than 200 beds available as part of the air base’s barrack-style accommodation.

It is understood the Afghan and Sri Lankan asylum seekers will use these rather than rely on dongas being brought in.

Pak doesn’t want any Indian military, intelligence presence in Afghanistan: Haqqani

Washington, Apr.17 (ANI): Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US Hussain Haqqani has said that his country would not want India to establish any military or intelligence base in Afghanistan, which would prove detrimental for Islamabad’s integrity and stability.

In an interview to The Financial Times, Haqqani said Pakistan wants peace and stability in the region, adding that it would never want Afghan soil to be used to destabilise and weaken other countries.

“Any Indian presence in Afghanistan should not be a strategic military or intelligence presence that threatens Pakistan’s integrity, stability and strength,” Haqqani said while replying to a question.

When asked to explain Pakistan’s concerns over India’s increasing presence in Afghanistan, Haqqani said Islamabad has shared with the US, information and intelligence regarding its activities inside Afghanistan that are unfavourable for his country’s security.

He stressed that Pakistan is committed to rooting out militancy from its soil, and would not allow it to be used by organisations such as the Al-Qaeda.

“There will be no area of Pakistan which will be available to any al Qaeda-linked group whether it is Afghan originated or Pakistani, that pose a threat to Pakistan or any member of the international community,” Haqqani said.

Haqqani asserted that Pakistan does not want the Taliban to take over Afghanistan once again after the US pulls out of the war ravaged country.

“That should be clear to everyone. It is not in Pakistan’s interests to see the Taliban return to power in Afghanistan. All we are looking for is that post-American withdrawal from Afghanistan, the biggest reality for Pakistan is that we do not want the Taliban running Afghanistan, with demands from Pakistani Taliban to try to create a similar system on the Pakistani side,” he explained. (ANI)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, April 9

April 9 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan as of 0700 GMT on Friday:

HELMAND – Taliban insurgents ambushed and killed a tribal elder, Haji Abdul Samad, along with four others in the town of Marjah, southern Helmand province on Thursday, provincial governor spokesman Dawood Ahmadi said.

KUNDUZ – Afghan and NATO-led troops killed three insurgents during an operation in the northern Chardara district of northern Kunduz province overnight, district chief Abdul Wahed Omarkhel said.

TAKHAR – Two Taliban insurgents were killed and three policemen and three insurgents wounded during a firefight in the northern Takhar province on Thursday, provincial police chief Sher Ahmad said. (Compiled by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by Jerry Norton)

US may still cancel Obama, Karzai Washington meeting

Washington, Apr.7 (ANI): The May 12 meeting between US President Barack Obama and his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai in Washington could still be cancelled, White House sources said Tuesday.

Obama has asked Karzai to crack down on internal corruption, and according to sources here, his administration is also unhappy with comments attacking the U.S. and its allies.

Over the last several days the White House has maintained that next month’s meeting wouldn’t be compromised as a result of Karzai’s remarks.

However, according to Fox News, in his daily briefing Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs changed his tone. “We certainly would evaluate whatever continued or further remarks President Karzai makes as to whether that’s constructive to have such a meeting.” (ANI)

Afghan Taliban issue video of U.S. soldier Bergdahl

The Afghan Taliban issued a video on Wednesday of an American soldier captured last summer that showed him him saying “please bring me home.”

The video of Idaho National Guard Private Bowe Bergdahl was posted and described by SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors websites used by extremist groups.

The Afghan Taliban had previously issued a video of Bergdahl on Christmas Day.

“I’m a prisoner. I want to go home. You know, the Afghanistan men who are in our prisons want to go home too. Let me go. Get me to come home. Release me,” Bergdahl says, according to SITE.

The video ends with Afghan Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid saying his group demands the release of a limited number of prisoners in exchange for Bergdahl’s release, SITE said.

A Pentagon spokeswoman said: “We have seen reports of the video but we have not seen the video.”

(Reporting by Tabassum Zakaria; Editing by Eric Beech)