Factbox: Afghan women after the Taliban

Critics accuse the government of squandering millions in foreign aid, but President Hamid Karzai says most waste occurs on development projects outside official control, and he wants direct access to more of the $13 billion pot.

One of the pillars of the conference is social development for women, a key issue after a rights group last week warned last week that they risked sacrificing hard-won freedoms as the government seeks peace with the hardline Islamist Taliban.

Following are some facts about women in Afghanistan:

RIGHTS AFTER THE TALIBAN

For five years under the Taliban’s Islamist regime, women were banned from education and work. Since the Taliban’s 2001 fall, women’s rights have improved.

But it is often still taboo for women and girls to go to school or work in rural areas. Forced marriage, often of young girls, is still common.

Afghan women are among the world’s worst off, and violence and rape are a “huge problem”, according to the United Nations.

A law for Afghanistan’s minority Shi’a Muslims caused international outcry because one of its articles was seen as permitting marital rape. U.S. President Barack Obama called the law “abhorant” and it was changed by President Hamid Karzai.

GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

Karzai’s first cabinet after his 2004 election contained three female ministers and a female vice president. The current cabinet has a woman Minister for Martyrs and the Disabled, while two others are acting in women’s’ affairs and public health roles after permanent appointments were blocked by parliament.

The Afghan parliament uses a quota system to ensure at least 25 percent of seats go to women. While affirmative action is seen as necessary by many, some have complained that in many provinces women get seats based on gender rather than voter support.

Outside urban centers like Kabul and Herat, where Afghanistan’s only female chief prosecutor works, Afghan women are poorly represented in local government. The first female city mayor was appointed in Daikundi province last year.

HEALTH

Afghanistan has the second worst maternal mortality rate in the world, after Sierra Leone. For many women becoming pregnant is akin to a potentially fatal illness, the U.N. says. For every 100,000 live births, 1,600 women die in labor.

Poverty, rugged terrain and a shortage of female medical staff have contributed to the high maternal mortality rate. In remote northeast Badakhshan province, the rate is the world’s worst with 6,500 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.

Although midwife numbers have increased over the past few years, it is still well under the 8,000 needed to help bring down the level of maternal mortality, the U.N. says.

EDUCATION

The number of girls and women in education has soared since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001, but is still poor by world standards. Just 24 percent of girls were in secondary education by 2007, with drop-outs highest among older students.

Cultural and religious practices still keep many girls from school, especially in rural areas. Even in Kabul, girls are often harassed and bullied by young men for attending school.

According to the ministry of education between January 2006 and December 2008, there were 1,153 attacks on schools, from small arms explosions to death threats. The majority of attacks, 40 percent, were against girls’ schools.

FACTBOX-Afghan women after the Taliban

July 19 (Reuters) – Afghanistan will ask for more control of billions of dollars pledged to reconstruct the war-torn country at a major international conference next week.

Critics accuse the government of squandering millions in foreign aid, but President Hamid Karzai says most waste occurs on development projects outside official control, and he wants direct access to more of the $13 billion pot.

One of the pillars of the conference is social development for women, a key issue after a rights group last week warned last week that they risked sacrificing hard-won freedoms as the government seeks peace with the hardline Islamist Taliban. [ID:nSGE66C0D9]

Following are some facts about women in Afghanistan:

RIGHTS AFTER THE TALIBAN

For five years under the Taliban’s Islamist regime, women were banned from education and work. Since the Taliban’s 2001 fall, women’s rights have improved.

But it is often still taboo for women and girls to go to school or work in rural areas. Forced marriage, often of young girls, is still common.

Afghan women are among the world’s worst off, and violence and rape are a “huge problem”, according to the United Nations.

A law for Afghanistan’s minority Shi’a Muslims caused international outcry because one of its articles was seen as permitting marital rape. U.S. President Barack Obama called the law “abhorant” and it was changed by President Hamid Karzai.

GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

Karzai’s first cabinet after his 2004 election contained three female ministers and a female vice president. The current cabinet has a woman Minister for Martyrs and the Disabled, while two others are acting in womens’ affairs and public health roles after permanent appointments were blocked by parliament.

The Afghan parliament uses a quota system to ensure at least 25 percent of seats go to women. While affirmative action is seen as necessary by many, some have complained that in many provinces women get seats based on gender rather than voter support.

Outside urban centres like Kabul and Herat, where Afghanistan’s only female chief prosecutor works, Afghan women are poorly represented in local government. The first female city mayor was appointed in Daikundi province last year.

HEALTH

Afghanistan has the second worst maternal mortality rate in the world, after Sierra Leone. For many women becoming pregnant is akin to a potentially fatal illness, the U.N. says. For every 100,000 live births, 1,600 women die in labour.

Poverty, rugged terrain and a shortage of female medical staff have contributed to the high maternal mortality rate. In remote northeast Badakhshan province, the rate is the world’s worst with 6,500 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Although midwife numbers have increased over the past few years, it is still well under the 8,000 needed to help bring down the level of maternal mortality, the U.N. says.

EDUCATION

The number of girls and women in education has soared since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001, but is still poor by world standards. Just 24 percent of girls were in secondary education by 2007, with drop-outs highest among older students.

Cultural and religious practices still keep many girls from school, especially in rural areas. Even in Kabul, girls are often harassed and bullied by young men for attending school.

According to the ministry of education between January 2006 and December 2008, there were 1,153 attacks on schools, from small arms explosions to death threats. The majority of attacks, 40 percent, were against girls’ schools.

(Sources: World Health Organisation, Reuters reports, UNIFEM, World Bank, Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs and Afghan Ministry of Education) (Reporting by Golnar Motevalli; Editing by Rob Taylor) (golnar.motevalli@reuters.com; +93 708 871 211; Reuters Messaging: golnar.motevalli.reuters.com@reuters.net) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an email to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Karzai eyes Chinese investments to rebuild Afghanistan

Kabul, Mar. 22 (ANI): In order to rebuild his war-torn country, Afghan President Hamid Karzai is set to seek Beijing’s assistance in the form of Chinese investments during his visit to the communist nation this week.

Eight years after the Taliban regime was toppled by US-led forces, Karzai will also look forward to strengthen bilateral relations with China, however, financial issues are likely to dominate talks.

“Most of what will be discussed with the Chinese government will be on economic issues and a large number of Afghan businessmen will accompany the president,” Taipei Times quoted Karzai’s spokesman Waheed Omar, as telling reporters in Kabul last week.

During the trip, Karzai will hold separate talks with his counterpart President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.

Karzai will also demonstrate his plan for reconciliation with the Taliban to China, which is increasingly seen as a key player in maintaining stability in Afghanistan after US troops pull out.

China has a keen interest in Afghanistan’s natural resources.

While Beijing has refused to send troops into the Afghan war, it has provided aid and assistance to the militancy-infested nation.

Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi recently pointed out that China had given “unconditional” assistance to Afghanistan in areas such as the construction of schools, hospitals, roads and waterworks.

Referring to the latest international conferences on Afghanistan, Yang said: “Representatives of many countries at the conferences were of the view that military means did not offer a fundamental solution to the Afghanistan issue.” (ANI)

Karzai eyes Chinese investments to rebuild Afghanistan

Kabul, Mar. 22 (ANI): In order to rebuild his war-torn country, Afghan President Hamid Karzai is set to seek Beijing’s assistance in the form of Chinese investments during his visit to the communist nation this week.

Eight years after the Taliban regime was toppled by US-led forces, Karzai will also look forward to strengthen bilateral relations with China, however, financial issues are likely to dominate talks.

“Most of what will be discussed with the Chinese government will be on economic issues and a large number of Afghan businessmen will accompany the president,” Taipei Times quoted Karzai’s spokesman Waheed Omar, as telling reporters in Kabul last week.

During the trip, Karzai will hold separate talks with his counterpart President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.

Karzai will also demonstrate his plan for reconciliation with the Taliban to China, which is increasingly seen as a key player in maintaining stability in Afghanistan after US troops pull out.

China has a keen interest in Afghanistan’s natural resources.

While Beijing has refused to send troops into the Afghan war, it has provided aid and assistance to the militancy-infested nation.

Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi recently pointed out that China had given “unconditional” assistance to Afghanistan in areas such as the construction of schools, hospitals, roads and waterworks.

Referring to the latest international conferences on Afghanistan, Yang said: “Representatives of many countries at the conferences were of the view that military means did not offer a fundamental solution to the Afghanistan issue.” (ANI)

Karzai to run for second term in Afghan presidential polls

Kabul – Afghan President Hamid Karzai announced on Monday that he intended to run for re-election in the country’s presidential polls slated in August 20. Karzai, who has led Afghanistan for more than seven years since the ouster of the Islamist extremist Taliban regime in late 2001, had hinted his intention for re-election in the past, but had said that he would do so if the Afghan people asked him.

“In a few days, I will go along with my vice presidents to register for the post of next Afghanistan’s president,” Karzai said in a joint press conference with visiting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown in Kabul.

Karzai, who was elected in Afghanistan’s first presidential election in the country’s history in 2004 from a pool of 18 candidates, said the vote was “another step towards strengthening of democracy in Afghanistan.” (dpa)

Brown visits Kabul before unveiling new war strategy

vKabul – British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday in Kabul that the world could not tolerate the existence of terrorist bases in border areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan, saying a new strategy would be unveiled this week.

Brown arrived on a surprise visit in Afghanistan on Monday morning and met with President Hamid Karzai to discuss his plans to fight the “crucible of terrorism” in the border region, to be formally announced in the House of Commons this week.

“Stability of the streets of London depends on stability of the border areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan,” Brown told a joint press conference in Karzai’s presidential palace.

“These border areas between Afghanistan and Pakistan are the breeding ground, the crucible of terrorism,” he said. “A chain of terror links these areas to the streets of many capital cities of the world.”

Brown said Britain would help strengthen Afghan security and would cooperate with Pakistan authorities to deal with “terrorists and terrorist threats in their area.”

Tribal areas in Pakistan bordering Afghanistan have been a weak spot in the fight against the Taliban and al-Qaeda networks.

Afghan and NATO military officials say militants retreat to rear bases inside Pakistan after attacks in Afghanistan.

Karzai told the press conference that “terrorists” were defeated in Afghanistan in 2001, when the Taliban regime was ousted in a US military invasion, but said that NATO and US forces were needed to continue fighting them.

“Security is an area where we still have problems,” he said, adding, “It is not the return of the Taliban, it is the continuation of the threats that we are facing that we are trying to remove and defeat.”

“The question of existence of the terrorism in the region, their sanctuaries, their holding grounds their sources of finance and all that enables them for whatever reason to launch attacks in Afghanistan or in Pakistan or in the rest of the world.”

Earlier in the day, Brown traveled to southern Helmand province, where he met with provincial authorities and British troops.

“There is a crucible of terrorism in the mountainous border between Afghanistan and Pakistan,” Brown told soldiers in Camp Bastion in Helmand province. “Our approach to these countries is different, but must be complementary.”

About 8,300 British troops are stationed in Afghanistan, mostly in Helmand. London plans to send 700 additional soldiers to the country to provide security for the August presidential election.

Brown was scheduled to visit Islamabad later on Monday. (dpa)

Taliban militants kill five police forces in western Afghanistan

Kabul – Taliban militants stormed a police post in western Afghanistan overnight and killed five police forces, officials said Sunday.

Dozens of militants driving several vehicles overpowered the policemen, who were manning a checkpoint in Karez Shaikha area of western Farah province, said deputy provincial governor Mohammad Younus Rasouli.

“Tens of enemy forces attacked one of our police posts in an area some 20 kilometres from center of Farah city last night and killed five policemen,” Rasouli said.

The police forces fought back and inflicted casualties on Taliban side, he said, but could not give any figures

“There were Pakistanis, Arabs and Chechens among the attackers,” said Abdul Raouf Ahmadi, spokesman for police forces in western region.

Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousif Ahamdi said by phone from an undisclosed location that their forces seized weapons and ammunition from the police post before withdrawing to their bases in the province.

The poorly trained and equipped Afghan police forces have borne the brunt of Taliban-led attacks since the ouster of Taliban regime in late 2001. More than 2,300 police were killed in rebel attacks in 2007 and 2008. (dpa)

NATO admits killing six civilians in eastern Afghanistan

Kabul – NATO said Thursday that its forces killed six civilians in an airstrike in eastern Afghanistan while the military alliance’s top commander in the country said that more efforts would be made to avoid such killings in the future.

Six people, including a woman and children, were killed and 14 were wounded in Monday’s airstrike in Kunar province.

In its initial reporting of the incident, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said the operation resulted in the deaths only of Taliban insurgents.

But the Afghan presidential palace said in a statement Thursday that NATO’s top commander in Afghanistan, US General David McKiernan, admitted to President Hamid Karzai that “despite repeated efforts by NATO and coalition forces, civilians sustained casualties in Khost and Kunar provinces.”

“A joint investigation by the Afghan government and ISAF determined that four enemy fighters and six Afghan civilians were killed during the [Kunar] operation,” NATO said in a separate statement.

“Four civilians were seriously injured, 10 received minor injuries and a local home was damaged,” the statement said.

The presidential statement also said that McKiernan assured Karzai that the alliance would work more closely with Afghan security forces to avoid such incidents.

The NATO forces apologized for the loss of life and offered assistance to the families affected by the operation, the statement said.

During operations in the east-central province of Khost on April 8, five civilians, including two women and a 7-day-old child, were killed. The ISAF had earlier admitted those killings and apologized.

Civilian casualties have become a delicate issue in Afghanistan. Karzai has repeatedly pleaded with international forces to avoid civilian killings during their anti-insurgent operations.

Afghan civilians have borne the brunt of the conflict in the seven years following the fall of the Taliban regime. More than 2,100 civilians were killed in the conflict last year, the United Nations said.

Meanwhile, an ISAF soldier was killed Wednesday in a roadside bombing in eastern Afghanistan, the alliance said in a statement Thursday.

The statement did not disclose the nationality of the deceased, but most of the troops stationed in the eastern region of the country are from the United States.

Nearly 60,000 troops are serving under the command of NATO-led ISAF forces in Afghanistan. The US government has planned to send 21,000 additional combat troops and military advisers to the country before August’s presidential election.(dpa)

Female Canadian soldier killed in Afghan roadside bomb blast

Kabul – A female Canadian soldier serving with NATO forces was killed and four others were wounded by a roadside bomb in the volatile southern region, officials said Tuesday. Trooper Karine Blais was killed and four of her comrades were wounded when their armoured vehicle was blown up in Shah Walikot district of southern Kandahar province on Monday afternoon, the Canadian defence ministry said in a statement.

“The injured soldiers were evacuated by helicopter to the Multinational Medical Unit at Kandahar Airfield,” the statement said, but did not elaborate on their condition.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement posted at their website, saying the tank was blown up by remote control in the Chama area of the district.

The statement said that NATO helicopters evacuated the victims, but the destroyed tank was still in the area.

Blais was the second female soldier to die in Afghanistan since the fall of Taliban regime in late 2001. A total of 116 Canadian soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan in the past seven years.

Canada has more than 2,500 soldiers as part of some 60,000-strong NATO-led troops deployed to Afghanistan from 42 nations. The Canadian forces are stationed in the restive province of Kandahar. (dpa)

Most Canadians against Afghan mission if rape law implemented

Ottawa (Ohio), Apr. 12 (ANI): Forty percent Canadians support their country’s military mission in Afghanistan, but if the Afghan Government proceeds with a law allowing marital rape, opposition to the mission would rise to a whopping 75 percent, according to a survey.

A proposed family law for Afghanistan’s Shia minority would make it illegal for women to refuse to have sex with their husbands.

The proposed law would also require women to get approval from a male relative before leaving the house, globeandmail.com reports.

A survey by The Canadian Press/Harris-Decima clearly indicates that such a level of opposition would make it difficult to the Harper government to maintain its commitment to keep combat troops in Afghanistan until 2011.

“This brings into very clear light exactly how tenuous the support is for this effort in Afghanistan,” Jeff Walker, senior vice-president of Harris-Decima, said.

Afghanistan’s national assembly has passed the controversial code but the international outrage has forced President Hamid Karzai to review of the proposed law.

Even without the code controversy, Canadian support for the Afghan mission appears weak. The poll suggests 55 per cent nationwide oppose it.

Respondents were three times more likely to strongly oppose the mission (27 per cent) than strongly support it (nine per cent).

Walker said support for the mission is based on a belief that Canada is helping to improve the lot of women, whose rights had been severely restricted under the oppressive Taliban regime.

The telephone survey of just over 1,000 Canadians was conducted April 2-5 and is considered accurate within 3.1 percentage points 19 times in 20. (ANI)

Karzai’s new ‘rape law’ allows a man to demand sex from wife every 4 days

New York, Apr 3 (ANI): The new law brought by Afghan President Hamid Karzai that allows Shiite men to demand sex from their wives every four days and keep them indoors indefinitely is causing an uproar.

The new Shia Family Law negates the need for sexual consent between married couples, tacitly approves child marriage and restricts a woman’s right to leave the home.

US State Department is trying to force a repeal of a law more restrictive than even the old Taliban regime, the Daily News reported.

“We’re very concerned about these reports with regard to the legislation,” said State Department spokesman Robert Wood.

The passage of what some call “legalized rape” means American women have died fighting in Afghanistan to give men there the right to subjugate women.

Clinton and Karzai met privately on Tuesday at The Hague, but Wood could not say if she pressed him to reverse the law he just signed.

“She may have. I don’t know. President Karzai is certainly well-aware of our views with regard to this legislation,” Wood said.

The law, which has not yet been published but was leaked by a UN agency, rules that a Shiite woman must seek her husband’s permission to go outside.

“Obedience, readiness for intercourse and not leaving the house without the permission of the husband are the duties of the wife,” states the law.

“As long as the husband is not travelling, he has the right to have sexual intercourse with his wife every fourth night,” it says.

In a divorce, a father always gets custody of any children, according to the law.

The law also attempts to protect Shiite women from sexual neglect, mandating that men must take their wives to bed “at least once every four months.” (ANI)

Afghan women condemn Karzai’s decision to sign law legalizing rape

Kabul, Mar.31 (ANI): Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai has signed a law which “legalises” rape, women’s groups and the United Nations warn.

Critics claim that Karzai helped rush the bill through parliament in a bid to appease Islamic fundamentalists ahead of elections in August.

In a massive blow for women’s rights, the new Shia Family Law negates the need for sexual consent between married couples, tacitly approves child marriage and restricts a woman’s right to leave the home, according to UN papers seen by The Independent.

“It is one of the worst bills passed by the parliament this century,” fumed Shinkai Karokhail, a woman MP who campaigned against the legislation.

“It is totally against women’s rights. This law makes women more vulnerable,” she added.

The law regulates personal matters like marriage, divorce, inheritance and sexual relations among Afghanistan’s minority Shia community.

“It’s about votes. Karzai is in a hurry to appease the Shia because the elections are on the way,” Karokhail said.

The provisions are reminiscent of the hardline Taliban regime, which banned women from leaving their homes without a male relative.

But in a sign of Afghanistan’s faltering steps towards gender equality, politicians who opposed it have been threatened.

The bill lay dormant for more than a year, but in February it was rushed through parliament as President Karzai sought allies in a constitutional row over the upcoming election. (ANI)

Is Obama set to surrender in Afghanistan? (Article)

New Delhi: The latest news coming out of Washington sounds extremely ominous for a much battered Afghanistan. It seems President Barak Obama is giving up his policy to defeat the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

Instead an alternative is being worked out to seek peace with these very terror outfits. The objective is to make sure that Afghanistan and Pakistan are no longer launching pads of terror attacks against the US. It is clear that the US may be working out a deal similar to Pakistan’s surrender to the Taliban in Swat.

Pakistan has obviously succeeded in confusing policy makers in Washington by its talk of good and bad Taliban? Is there an extremist who could be called a good Taliban? The very birth of Taliban has its roots in violence. This was the creed and training that its Pakistani mentors gave this organisation in late eighties.

Taliban was created by Pakistan as a force that carried out inhuman acts in the name of Islam-and justified it as a step to red Afghanistan of Soviet forces. . Such inhuman violence apparently in the cause of Islam was also used to wipe out the tolerant Islamic society of Afghanistan.

The mentors of Taliban wanted to turn Afghanistan into a colony of Pakistan albeit via proxy rule of the demon that Pakistan created. Afghanistan was pushed back into the Stone Age with little chance of being able to regain its individuality.

The entry of Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda into Afghanistan consolidated the first terrorist state in the world, As for Pakistan, it got its much needed depth to deploy its missiles against India in that country. That did not worry Al Qaeda or the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan.

Let it not be forgotten that the US administration was –directly or indirectly– negotiating with the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in the late nineties to secure pipeline access from Central Asia. They did not know that the Taliban and Al Qaeda had something else on their mind : the attack of 9/11 on the US.

President Bush reacted by declaring an all out war against terror. It now seems that the Obama administration perhaps treats the “war on terror’ as a legacy of the Bush era that it wants to get away from.

During his tenure as President, Clinton dithered in his response to Al Qaeda even as he bombed their hideouts in Afghanistan. Why did the US administration not go all out against Al Qaeda at that time? Was there a secret understanding with Pakistan or its Agencies? This author came away with that impression after a long interview with the then US Under Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Ms. Robin Raphael.

Whatever explanation one may unearth, the simple fact is that the Taliban and its mentors managed to hoodwink the world’s one super power and mounted the 9/11 attack with impunity. They had the last laugh.

President Barak Obama during his election campaign made his intentions quite clear that the Taliban, Al Qaeda and jehadi terrorism waged around the world had to end. To that extent the US President also made his intentions and policy clear towards Pakistan on this issue. To eliminate the evil if he had to attack it in Pakistani territory he would do so. And he has done that. Why now the cold feet?

Pakistan has mastered the art of deception and double- talk as no other nation in the world. General Musharaff succeeded in keeping the wrath of US administration away even as the various arms of his government kept Al Qaeda and Taliban well protected. No one knows it better than India. It has seen how Pakistan has drawn innumerable circles around its so-called investigation into the Mumbai attacks.

In Pakistan if ever there was a challenge or threat to the existence of Taliban and their supporters it only came through the short lived pronouncements of late Benazir Bhutto as she prepared to return to Pakistan.

She had kept the US administration fully informed. Yet when she landed in Karachi, she had to face a dastardly attack on her life, but survived. Her luck did not last long. She was killed in Rawalpindi as she campaigned for the return of her party to power. In her death a major threat to the Taliban was removed.

Even before Barak Obama formulated his policy for Afghanistan, Pakistan succeeded in planting enough doubts in the minds of US officials about the ability of the Karzai government in Afghanistan. They want the US to accept ‘good’ Taliban and hand the country back to it.

That much for the resolve of the new President of the United States to settle the Afghan issue! If the current confusion about the role of Taliban continues, then the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan could get compounded in a terrible manner.

Pakistan is not interested in a sovereign and independent Afghanistan. It does not want to return to the glorious era of Afghanistan. That was the period when the country was ruled by King Zahir Shah. Afghanistan was a modern state even under the Presidency of Daud or for that matter even Najibullah.

Pakistan wants a puppet regime of Taliban in Kabul, one that would play to its tunes. Is that the kind of peace that the US is looking for in Afghanistan by surrendering that country to Taliban and Pakistan? The US and Pakistan perhaps do not realise that the ‘good Taliban’ hopes to take over Pakistan some day.

This unfolding scenario throws up a huge challenge not just for India, but also for China, Iran and countries of Central Asia. India cannot remain a silent witness to all this.

Afghanistan should be able to regain its sovereignty and independence that it had during the reign of King Zahir Shah, President Daud or under Najibullah after the withdrawal of Soviet troops. Today the United States seems to have lost all respect for Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

India can help rebuild the Afghan defence forces. That alone can safeguard that country from the evil designs of Pakistan or the threat of Taliban. US sponsored democracy cannot work in a multi- ethnic and fiercely tribal society of Afghanistan. India can help bring various ethnic groups into an all encompassing “loha jirga” a meeting of the tribal heads.

Being protective as they are of their identity such a “loha jirga” can never permit the country to go under Pakistan or bring back the Taliban. The success of former King Zahir Shah of Afghanistan lay in retaining the loyalty of all such ethnic tribal groups. To back it up, he had a strong and powerful Afghan army and air force.

It is here that India must take the initiative and offer to train and equip Afghan army with or without US help. This alone is a sure guarantee against any evil designs by Pakistan or its proxy the Taliban. It is not something that any US administration can understand easily. They are too used to dealing with pliable sycophantic states.

India cannot afford to allow Afghanistan to slip back into the Stone Age. India’s strategic and economic interests in Central Asia will take a heavy beating if it were to ignore what is happening in Afghanistan. India needs to act on its own. The manner in which the United States and NATO are approaching the Afghan issue is fraught with dangers for India.

Weighed down as it is by its economic woes, clearly the United States does not have the will to take this war on terror to its logical end. The compromise that it now seeks with the evil, can lead to a much greater damage to its interests in the long run. Irrespective of this, it seems that the Obama administration may be looking for some quick fix solution to pull out of Afghanistan. Call it by any name; it would only be surrender.

India has to face the challenge. It should be able to persuade the Obama administration to pause and see the situation with clarity. Surrender by the Obama administration will plunge this region, including Central Asia, into huge turmoil and Pakistan may go the Taliban way. This must not be allowed to happen. By Prem Prakash (ANI)

‘Pak more sensitive than Afghanistan’

Brussels, Mar 24 (ANI): European Union diplomats are deeply concerned about the happenings in Pakistan and consider it more sensitive than Afghanistan.

They put Pakistan at the heart of efforts to beat the Taliban, who are backed by al-Qaeda fighters, drug runners and criminal gangs.

“Richard Holbrooke asked the commission to increase its economic aid to Pakistan,” an EU diplomat said, after Holbrooke held a series of “highly classified discussions” with officials, including members of the EU’s Executive Commission.

“We are all very concerned about what is happening in Pakistan. It is a major security issue for everybody, a problem of political stability. It’s a zone that’s even more sensitive than Afghanistan,” the diplomat added.

Holbrooke urged the EU on Monday to boost aid to Pakistan to help beat the Afghan insurgency, as President Barack Obama seeks a way to end more than seven years of fighting.

Holbrooke was in Brussels to brief NATO and European Union officials on a new US strategy for Afghanistan.

The EU Commission has already made plans to send a team to Afghanistan next month to assess whether security is ripe for an observer mission to monitor potentially pivotal elections in August, The News reported.

The polls are seen as a litmus test of international efforts to stabilise Afghanistan and foster democracy and reconstruction, seven years after the former Taliban regime was ousted by a US-led coalition.

“The commission indicated that it was planning to commit 50 to 60 million (euros) for the Afghan elections,” the diplomat said.

The EU is already providing Afghanistan with some eight billion euros over the 2001-2010 period. (ANI)

Afghan lawmaker among five killed in roadside bomb blast

Kabul – An Afghan member of parliament, a local police commander and three bodyguards were killed in a roadside bomb explosion in southern province of Helmand on Thursday, officials said.

“Amer Dad Mohammad Khan, a member of parliament, and Abdul Samad Khaksar, a local police commander were killed when a roadside bomb blew up their vehicle today,” said Daoud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor of Helmand.

He said the blast also caused several other casualties , but could not provide any exact figures.

However, Wali Khan Sabari, another Helmand lawmaker said that the bomb also killed three bodyguards.

The blast occurred in the Wazir Manda area of Gerishk district when Khan was en route from the neighbouring province of Kandahar to Lashkargah, the provincial capital of Helmand, Sabari said.

Khan was an influential figure in Helmand, where Taliban-led insurgents are the most active. He served as an intelligence chief after the fall of the Taliban regime until 2005, when he was elected to the lower house of parliament.

No one immediately took responsibility for Thursday’s attack. Taliban militants rely heavily on the use of roadside and suicide attacks as part of their insurgency.

Mir Wali Hemat, another member of parliament also confirmed the incident and blamed Taliban militants for the attack.

“Of course it was the work of the Taliban and they will kill anyone if they can,” he said.

The militants have carried out thousands of roadside bombings since the ouster of their regime in a US-led military invasion in late 2001. (dpa)

Karzai warns allies to stay away from Afghan internal affairs

Kabul – President Hamid Karzai said Wednesday that Afghanistan was no puppet state and warned the international community to stay away from its internal affairs as the country faces a political crisis due to a postponement of presidential polls.

“The Afghan nation is now the owner of its soil and no one can interfere in that,” Karzai told reporters in a joint press conference with visiting NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.

Neither would Afghanistan be allowed to become a tribal state nor a “puppet,” Karzai said.

“Afghanistan is not like the rind of a melon fallen on the ground so anyone can pick it up and do whatever one wants,” he said.

Karzai, who has ruled the country since the ouster of the Taliban regime in late 2001, has been under fire from the international community for his inefficiency to tackle corruption and the drug trade.

Some officials in US President Barack Obama’s administration have suggested focusing their support on local and provincial governments to reverse the country’s downward spiral after finding the central government unable to extend its writ beyond major cities.

The international community was welcome to help fighting terrorism and for reconstruction, but Afghanistan’s government was the “the job of the Afghan people.”

“Afghanistan should be treated with honor and respect and Afghanistan will treat its international partners and friends in that respectful way,” he said.

Karzai is under pressure from political opponents and parts of the international community to respect the constitution and hand over government to a provisional administration after his term expires in two months.

The Afghan election commission postponed the presidential polls from spring to August 20, because of bad weather, bad security in some parts of the country and logistical problems.

According to the constitution, Karzai’s five-year-term ends on May 22 and a number of political parties have warned that they would not recognize him as a legitimate president after that point, a move designed to lead the country into political crisis.

“We are interested in continuity, stability and legitimacy in the period between the formal end of President Karzai’s mandate on May 22 until August 20,” Scheffer told reporters in a separate press briefing.

“But I add hastily that this is not something for the international community to intervene or to involve itself. This is a question for the Afghan body politics, for the president, for the government, and for the parliament, but it is important to see continuity and legitimacy,” he said.

While Afghanistan expects more Taliban-led violence during spring and summer – the traditional fighting seasons – the question who should rule after May remains a top challenge for the young democracy.

Analysts believe that it would be in the interest of NATO countries to stay clear of internal politics and let Afghan politicians find a solution for the upcoming crisis.

“I believe it will be good for the NATO countries to limit their role in this political crisis to giving advice, but if they directly interfere, the Afghan public will see them as invaders,” said Ahmad Jawid, an Afghan journalist and political analyst. (dpa)

Iraq-style troop surge not a solution for Afghanistan: Petraeus

Washington, Mar 14 (ANI): The commander of the U.S. Central Command has said that an Iraq-style increase in troops cannot be a solution to the problems in Afghanistan.

Speaking before about 800 people at an event sponsored by the World Affairs Council, General David Petraeus acknowledged that the situation in Afghanistan has been spiraling downward and is likely to get worse before it gets better.

Petraeus said more resources are needed in Afghanistan, both military and especially civil to help build a stable government there.

“The Secretary of Defense and I are among the biggest champions with members of Congress for increasing the resource for the State Department and the Agency for International Development,” FOX News quoted him, as saying.

The US-led invasion of Afghanistan ousted the Islamist Taliban regime in 2001, but the militant movement has regained control of large swaths of the country. US and NATO forces have been unable to reverse the gains.

Petraeus blamed the problems on a resilient “syndicate of extremists,” financing from the drug trade, safe havens in Pakistan and frustration with the slow development of the country’s fledgling government.

“We must help our Afghan partners create the breathing space that’ll allow the people to stand up for themselves as the Iraqi people did during the awakening movements there,” he said.

“That also will allow the government to begin working for its people and begin providing essential services, instead of just struggling to survive,” he added.

Last month, President Barack Obama ordered 17,000 more US troops to bolster the record 38,000 American forces already in Afghanistan, a likely down payment on the request by ground commanders to double the US force to 60,000. (ANI)

Canadian soldier, ten Taliban militants killed in Afghanistan

Kabul – A Canadian soldier and ten Taliban insurgents were killed in separate blasts and clashes in southern Afghanistan, officials said Monday.

The Canadian soldier was killed and four others were wounded in a roadside bomb blast in Shah Walikot district of southern Kandahar province, Canadian defence ministry and the NATO military alliance said in statements.

The soldiers were conducting security operations in the area on Sunday when the explosion occurred, the military said.

Meanwhile, Afghan army soldiers killed eight suspected Taliban fighters in a clash in Garmsir district of southern Helmand province on Sunday, Shir Mohammad Zazai, an army commander in southern region said.

One other insurgent was arrested by Afghan troops after hours-long gun battle, he said, adding that there were no casualties among their forces.

Separately, two militants were killed in southern province of Ghazni on Sunday when the bomb they were planting on a road exploded prematurely, Mohammad Zaman, provincial police chief said.

The Taliban-led insurgency is on the rise in Afghanistan despite the presence of more than 70,000 international forces deployed to the country from 41 nations. The US government is sending 17,000 additional soldiers by the middle of this year.

Violence was at its worst level in 2008 since the ouster of Taliban regime in late 2001. Both Taliban and pro-government military officials have claimed to be in better position for a renewed fight in spring and summer, the two traditional fighting seasons in Afghanistan.

Afghan and NATO military officials have admitted that their forces were facing a “tougher fight” this year. (dpa)

Pak Taliban video claims attacks on FIA, ISI offices

Peshawar, Jan 19 (ANI): The Tehrik -i-Taliban Pakistan has released a rare video containing statements from suicide bombers who have intentions to carry out strikes inside Pakistan.

The 40-minute tape shows men and youths, some apparently in their teens, addressing the camera about their intention to carry out suicide attacks to background music of Urdu militant anthems.

Militant commander Qari Hussain, who is based in South Waziristan, handed out the video to journalists in Peshawar, the Dawn reported.

Hussain is also known as “Ustad-i-Fidayeen” or teacher of suicide bombers. All those featured on the video spoke in Pashto.

The two biggest attacks claimed on the video were a double truck bombing last March against the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) building in Lahore and bombing an office of the Inter-Services Intelligence in 2007.

At least 87 people, including government and security personnel, were killed in the attacks.

“I’m going to do this suicide bombing with Islamic sentiments,” says someone who gave his name only as Masood and looked to be in his teens, to a backdrop of footage from the FIA attack.

“Suicide bombers are the atomic weapons of Muslims because Muslims do not have the latest weapons to fight enemies who are committing atrocities against Muslims in Kashmir, Palestine, Afghanistan and Iraq,” Masood said.

Another voice demanded that the Pakistani government call an immediate halt to military operations in tribal areas, release arrested militants and lift a ban on an extremist group.

Pakistan has been wracked by violence since hundreds of Taliban and Al Qaeda militants sought refuge in the north-western region after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan toppled the Taliban regime in late 2001. (ANI)

Pak Govt. to use all its powers to reopen girls’ school in Swat

Karachi, Jan 19 (ANI): Pakistan Information Minister Sherry Rehman has said the government will use all its powers to ensure that the girls’ schools affected by the Taliban in Swat are reopened by March 1.

The militants’ efforts to deter girls from attending school in Pakistan are darkly reminiscent of the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan, which banned education for girls and forced most working women to return to their homes, the Dawn reported.

Speaking to reporters in Karachi, Rehman said all efforts would be made to ensure that classes in the Swat Valley resume in March following the winter break.

“We will try our best to reopen girls’ schools and we will try to give the girls confidence. We have to show them a ray of hope,” Rehman said.

Reopening the schools will be largely contingent on restoring security in the valley, which lies just outside Pakistan’s tribally governed belt along the Afghan border. The west is concerned that al-Qaeda leaders have found refuge in the area.

Taliban guerrillas have been waging a bloody war against security forces in the valley for more than a year, prompting local police and government authorities to flee.

In recent months, militants have blown up or burned down some 170 schools, most of them for girls, and demanded in December that all schools for girls be closed by January 15.

An association representing 400 private schools has said they would remain closed after the winter break because of the threat.

Since their 2001 ouster, the Taliban movement’s followers have been blamed for scores of arson attacks on schools in Afghanistan, many of them built with western aid. (ANI)