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September
29, 2005
This Week in Afghanistan Watch:
"I didn't know any
of them . . . But people told me, 'For the sake of God, put a check
somewhere!' so I chose one man and one woman. I don't know their
names, but I liked their pictures."
Esmatullah Lalzada, 65, who voted using the seven-page Kabul
province ballot (U.S. News)
"It is obvious that
right now our currency is being propped up by foreign aid and drug
money . . . But one will end, and one we're fighting to end."
Noorullah Delawari, governor, Afghanistan Central Bank
"I think there is
one window of opportunity and this window will be closed in a year
or so."
Emmanuel Reinert, executive director of the Paris-based The
Senlis Council
Afghan
Interior Minister Quits After Complaining of Graft
Afghanistan will miss Jalali, a principled and honest leader who
has done his best with a daunting portfolio. Jalali fought, unsuccessfully,
to keep militant commanders out of the government and to staunch
the flow of opium-related corruption. He seems to have finally lost
his patience with Karzai's non-confrontational stylewhich
is perhaps both his greatest asset and greatest liability.
KABUL, Sept 27 (Washington
Post) by N.C. AizenmanThe top crime-fighting official in President
Hamid Karzai's cabinet announced his resignation Tuesday after complaining
publicly for months about corruption in the government. Interior
Minister Ali Ahmad Jalali, 63, a former journalist, said in an interview
with Tolo television that he was stepping down to pursue a career
in academia.
Close friends of Jalali,
however, said he had expressed frustration with Karzai's decisions
to keep powerful factional leaders, including some linked to Afghanistan's
burgeoning drug trade, in appointive government posts . . . Jalali,
the former interior minister, was widely considered a committed
leader in the government's effort to pacify the country, which has
been racked by increased political violence since last spring. He
was first appointed in January 2003, then renamed to a cabinet that
had been largely purged of warlords and was dominated by Western-oriented
technocrats after Karzai's electoral victory in October.
Aides to Karzai denied
any rift between the two men, who are related by marriage. "Jalali
has had the full confidence of the president," said Khaleeq
Ahmad, a presidential spokesman. "He has done an excellent
job. . . . He was probably one of the closest advisers to the president."
However, in the television interview aired Tuesday, Jalali hinted
that his power to fire governors and provincial police officials
had sometimes been curtailed. In general, he said, "the Interior
Ministry would recommend people and the president would approve
them. But sometimes, for political reasons, the decision on which
governor to appoint was made by the national security council."
Among the moves that
Jalali privately decried, a close friend and former colleague said,
was the transfer of Gul Agha Shirzai, a controversial former militia
leader, from one governorship to another.
"He was not happy
with the president's interference in his work," the friend
said.
During news conferences,
Jalali had hinted he might make public the names of government officials
implicated in Afghanistan's opium trade, which now accounts for
nearly 90 percent of the world's heroin supply.
Reuters
reports that Jalali "has been at odds with Karzai over
the president's appointments to important provincial posts because
of concerns they would pursue factional interests. Jalali has also
openly complained that some officials are involved in Afghanistan's
massive narcotics trade, which analysts describe as the biggest
obstacle to long-term security."
Building
an Afghan Army and Learning a Lesson in Patience
Eric Schmitt's article is an excellent assessment of the technical
progress in the effort to develop an Afghan National Army. But the
real question is not why there are so few Afghan forces after four
years of training, but why there are so many. The model for the
new Afghan forces envisions a professional, highly trained force
of 70,000a much larger and
better paid army than what Afghanistan can sustainably afford. A
force this large makes Afghanistan dependent on U.S. military aid
for the foreseeable future. The U.S. has spent "$2.5 billion
in the past two years on training, equipping and paying Afghan security
forces," but don't expect this investment to continue indefinitely.
And armed men, however professionally they are trained, only provide
security so long as they are drawing a paycheck.
As international donors begin to negotiate
the next successor agreement to the Bonn accord, they should examine
Afghanistan's security needs and adopt a more sustainable military
model.
JALALABAD, Sept 25
(New York Times) by Eric SchmittAmerican and international
efforts to train Afghanistan's security forces began in 2002, about
a year before a similar program for Iraqi soldiers and police officers.
Yet the Afghan model seems to have lagged behind the troubled Iraqi
program.
The reasonslike
having to rebuild the Afghan Army from scratch and differing allied
priorities related to developing a national Afghan police corpssay
much about the very different circumstances each program has confronted,
as well as how American trainers in both countries are trying to
learn from one another's mistakes and successes, senior Army commanders
said . . .
Worries about persistent
problems with logistics and other support for Afghan Army units
in the field recently prompted General Eikenberry to slow the creation
of new battalions, from about two a month to one. "One of the
main vulnerabilities of the Afghan national army is their logistics
system," said Maj. Gen. Jason K. Kamiya, the American commander
of daily tactical operations here . . .
Another program to
have American military trainers live with and work alongside Afghan
soldiers is more developed here than a similar one in Iraq. About
650 American military advisers now live and train with Afghan Army
units. About three times that number of advisers are in Iraqi units,
but the program did not become widespread in Iraq until a retired
four-star Army general recommended it earlier this year to Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.
Of greater concern
to the Americans are the police forces, which suffer shortages of
vehicles, radios and even basic weapons. Until early September,
many police recruits were training with wooden rifles. "It's
more or less a hollow force," said Maj. Gen. John T. Brennan
of the Air Force, who oversees the police development effort. He
said that the United States would spend $860 million this year to
train and equip the police but that it would not be until late 2009
that the force was fully trained. . . . Over all, the United States
has spent more than $2.5 billion in the past two years on training,
equipping and paying Afghan security forces.
Afghan
parliamentary candidate shot dead in north
Before the elections, many observers commented on the so-called
"assassination clause"an
election law that says if a winning candidate dies, his seat passes
to the next highest vote getter. Who the heck wrote that clause?
MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan,
Sept 27 (Reuters)A candidate for a parliamentary seat in Afghanistan's
legislative elections was shot dead along with one of his bodyguards
in northern Afghanistan on Tuesday, police said.
National assembly candidate
Mohammad Ashraf Ramazan was driving through the city of Mazar-i-Sharif
when his car was attacked by unknown gunmen, police spokesman Sher
Jan said. Ramazan was the first candidate killed since the Sept.
18 elections, which Taliban guerrillas vowed but failed to disrupt.
According to election commission figures, with 12 percent of the
vote counted, Ramazan had been running in fifth place for one of
11 assembly seats in Balkh province, of which Mazar is the capital.
A
Work in Progress
An excellent glimpse at some of the inefficiencies, and undesired
repercussions, of the international approach to giving aid.
Sept 25 (U.S. News) by Bay FangCoordinating all the foreign
aid projects has proven difficult--another source of Afghans' frustration.
"There's a lack of a coherent approach from the international
community," says a senior western adviser to the Karzai government.
"There's overlapping structure after structure, and the ministers
who speak the best English get the most money." Part of the
problem is the division of authority among the donors that was laid
out in the agreement signed by the various Afghan factions four
years ago. The document laid out timetables and processes for developing
a sovereign Afghanistan, but it was hardly a road map. Italy, for
example, was supposed to take the lead in creating a new legal system
but had only $6 million for the effort. Washington, by contrast,
is spending $800 million for a new police force. Since the justice
system affects so many other sectors of Afghan life, other donor
countries have begun putting money into their own justice projectswithout
consulting with each other. The result, predictably enough, has
been chaotic.
That same confusion exists between the Afghan government and the
donors. Abdul Sitar Murad is the governor of Kapisa province. "Sometimes
I see bridges being built, and I will stop and say, 'Who are you?'
" he says. "They say, 'I am from USAID.' Sometimes it
annoys me; sometimes I'm just astonished. I'm the governor, but
I don't know what's going on."
Not surprisingly, many here believe much of the foreign aid money
is being wasted. "The average cost of building a road in Afghanistan
is half a million dollars per kilometer," says a senior diplomat
in Kabul. "You start out with a certain amount, and by the
time the contractor pays a consultant $1,000 a day to write a project
report, pays for security and offices and cars, then subcontracts
it out to an NGO, only about 20 percent goes into the project itself."
Afghanistan
has brief chance to turn opium from heroin to medicine
Afghanistan only has a small window of opportunity to divert its
billion-dollar production of opium away from heroin and towards
the manufacture of legal painkillers, the head of a drugs think-tank
says. But the fragile country needs to act fast, with drugs cartels
poised to take root, Emmanuel Reinert, executive director of the
Paris-based The Senlis Council, told AFP on Sunday.
KABUL, Sept 25 (AFP)"I
think there is one window of opportunity and this window will be
closed in a year or so," he said.
The group will on Monday
present the findings of a study into legalizing Afghanistan's opium
production and using it to make medicine at a conference in Kabul
expected to draw government and farmers' representatives among other
groups . . . Reinert admitted however that the Afghanistan government
was cautious. This was because it did not want to alienate the international
donors on which the country relies, with Britain yet to endorse
the idea, he said . . .
"There is an incredible shortage of morphine and coedine in
a number of countries, including neigbouring countries, and so you
have a huge possibility and I think a number of countries are starting
to see that," he said. According to the International Narcotics
Control Board, six of the world's richest countries consume 80 percent
of the world's morphine and coedine, which are also made from opium,
while 80 percent of the world has access to only six percent.
"There is obviously
an incredibly large amount of unmet need for painkillers, for treatment
of cancer, HIV/ AIDS treatment," Reinert said. "Millions
of people in Latin America, in Africa, in Russia, in China are dying
in pain because they don't have access to these medicines and because
the system is overregulated right now."
In response to
the Senlis proposal, Reuters
reports that Counter Narcotics Minister Habibullah Qaderi was
glad Senlis did the study, but it was too early to consider. "As
far as the licensing at this moment is concerned, I am saying no,"
he said. "I'm not in favor because it jeopardizes the whole
of our effort . . . There would be anarchy in this country now.
It would create a lot of problems."
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has also rejected
the Senlis Council proposal, "saying
it risked creating confusion among farmers and raising false expectations."
Senlis claims there is only a brief window of opportunity, suggesting
an implementation timeline that will likely strike donors and agencies
as too aggressive.
Janus-faced
counter-terrorism
Sept 21 (Asia Times) by Amir MirWhile
Islamabad strongly denies Taliban and al-Qaeda infiltration into
Afghanistan from the Pakistani side, the Karzai government insists
that the infiltration is actually being orchestrated from the Pakistani
border area.
Not long ago, it was
the South Waziristan Tribal Agency that used to hog the media limelight
on account of the military operation there against local and foreign
militants. . . . The Pakistan army has now shifted the focus of
its anti-terrorist operations from Wana in South Waziristan to Miranshah
in North Waziristan. Despite official claims to have largely contained
insurgents in the two tribal agencies, the North Waziristan area
continues to pose a serious challenge, and has become a stronger
base for al-Qaeda and Taliban militants on the run, due to presence
of a large number of religious seminaries in the area and because
an estimated 70% of the local population supports the jihadis .
. .
With these details
in mind, the Taliban resistance is expected to gain further strength
until and unless the Pakistani establishment, which wants to keep
the Taliban alive in the hope of using them to retrieve Islamabad's
lost influence in Afghanistan, eventually decides otherwise.
First
results trickle in from Afghanistan's landmark election
KABUL, Sep 25 (AFP)Nearly a fifth of
the ballots cast in Afghanistan's first parliamentary election for
three decades have been counted, with the final results expected
late next month, the election chief said
Erben said the election
body, run by Afghan and UN officials, had also slightly raised its
estimate for the turnout of the poll to 54 percent, or 6.8 million
voters, after analysing nearly all the voting records
.Political
observers say the future parliament will be dominated by two blocksthe
former commanders and representatives of Karzai's dominant Pashtun
ethnic groupwith a minority of independents and communists
squeezing in.
'Taliban'
storm Afghanistan jail
Sept 24 (BBC)Taleban insurgents have
stormed a prison and police HQ near the eastern Afghan city of Khost,
leaving one inmate dead, Afghan officials say. . . . Provincial
police chief, Mohammad Auyub, told the BBC some of the attackers
spoke Arabic and Urdu. Afghanistan says Pakistan does not do enough
to stop rebels crossing the border, an accusation Pakistan denies.
The insurgents attacked with gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades.
An arms depot inside the prison was blown up before the rebels fled
across the border with Pakistan, Mr Auyub said.
The
Message Of Lower Voter Turnout
Sept 25 (RFE/RL) by Amin TarziRoughly
half of Afghans exercised their democratic right by saying that
they are not content with many of the people campaigning to represent
them.
Afghanistan's Joint
Electoral Management Body (JEMB) on 22 September officially announced
that 53 percent of Afghanistan's voters cast their ballots in the
parliamentary and provincial council elections on 18 September.
Voter participation in Kabul was just 36 percentlower than
in many far-off provinces . . .
Lower participation
by voters in the southern and eastern provinces of the country where
neo-Taliban and other insurgencies are most active could be attributed
to security concerns. But then why did around two-thirds of Kabul's
voters, where security is relatively well-established, stay away
from the polls?
The answer to the lower
voter turnout must be found in other factors beyond security concerns.
Two broad issues seem
to have led to the general voter malaise. First, voters were turned
off by the presence on the list of candidates of former or current
warlords and notorious human rights abusersincluding known
former communist and Taliban strongmen and people with little or
no public recognition. The last point was made worst by the short
campaign period which prevented the unknown candidates to reach
out to voters. Second, as a 22-year-old Kabul resident told RFE/RL,
many of the people's expectations following the presidential election
remain largely unmet and this has led to a frustration which made
people react differently to the 18 September elections compared
to last year's presidential vote."
Before the 18 September
elections, when confronted with the question that many people with
very murky backgrounds were standing as candidates, Afghan President
Hamid Karzai stated that the Afghans would choose the right candidates
to represent them.
With the burden of Afghanistan's march to
democracy placed squarely on the shoulders of the Afghan people,
roughly half of them exercised their democratic right by saying
that they are not content with many of the people campaigning to
represent them in parliament or, perhaps, with the speed at which
their country is progressing. If Afghanistan's democracy is to move
forward in deeds and not just in words, this message by many Afghans
must be heeded and steps taken to regain their confidence.
*********
Afghanistan Watch is prepared by Carl
Robichaud, a program officer at The Century Foundation.
*********
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