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Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peace. Show all posts

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Diplomat: Brahimi will retreat as peace envoy to Syria


Dia ingin mengundurkan diri karena dia merasa Liga Arab telah berjalan sendiri yang berbeda dari PBB."
PBB (News and Us) - Utusan perdamaian Suriah Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa-Liga Arab Lakhdar Brahimi berada di ambang pengunduran diri karena frustrasi atas usaha-usaha internasional yang buntu untuk mengakhiri konflik yang memburuk itu, kata sejumlah diplomat Rabu.

Brahimi, yang menggantikan peran mantan pemimpin PBB Kofi Annan pada Agustus tahun lalu, sudah "tak tahan dan berniat mundur tetapi dibujuk untuk bertahan untuk selama beberapa hari lagi," kata satu diplomat Dewan Keamanan PBB, lapor AFP.


"Dia menyampaikan keinginannya kepada tiap orang bahwa dia ingin mundur karena sedikit harapan kalau dia akan tetap pada perannya," kata seorang diplomat Arab di PBB kepada AFP.


Seperti Annan, Brahimi frustrasi oleh perbedaan internasional atas masalah Suriah. Rusia mendukung Presiden Bashar al-Assad sementara negara-negara Barat dan Teluk memberikan peningkatan dukungan kepada oposisi Suriah.


Perang saudara di negara itu telah merenggut lebih 70.000 jiwa sejak pergolakan menentang Bashar meletus pada Maret 2011 dan kedua pihak telah makin kukuh pada pendirian masing-masing.


Brahimi, 79 tahun, telah dikritik oleh oposisi Suriah dan pemerintahan Bashar mengatakan pekan lalu pihaknya tak akan lagi bekerja sama dengan dia.


Tapi keputusan Liga Arab untuk mengakui Koalisi Nasional Suriah yang beroposisi sebagai pemerintah sah Suriah merupakan keputusasaan terakhir bagi Brahimi, kata beberapa diplomat.


"Dia ingin mengundurkan diri karena dia merasa Liga Arab telah berjalan sendiri yang berbeda dari PBB," kata diplomat DK PBB itu.


Sekretaris Jenderal PBB Ban Ki-moon dan mitranya dari Liga Arab Nabil al-Arabi mengadakan pembicaraan baru tentang konflik Suriah pada Selasa, kata beberapa pejabat.


Brahimi, mantan menteri luar negeri Aljazair dan utusan PBB di Afghanistan dan Irak, mengakui ketika dia mengambil peran itu bahwa dia menghadapi pertempuran berat.


Rusia dan China memveto tiga resolusi dewan itu yang berupaya menekan Bashar. Negara-negara Arab, Amerika Serikat, Inggris dan Prancis malah meningkatkan bantuan bagi kelompok-kelompok oposisi dalam beberapa bulan terakhir.


Ban, al-Arabi dan semua lima anggota DK PBB -- Amerika Serikat, Inggris, Prancis, China dan Rusia -- menginginkan Brahimi tetap pada posisinya, kata beberapa diplomat.


Utusan itu pada Senin di Washington bertemu dengan Menteri mLuar Negeri AS John Kerry, yang berusaha meyakinkan dia jangan mundur, kata diplomat-diplomat. Tapi tak jelas apakah Kerry membuat janji mengenai usaha-usaha politik baru untuk mengakhiri konflik itu. (M016)




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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Karzai will discuss peace with Taliban in Qatar

Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai (INTERMEDIATE/REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

The visit of the President was made at the invitation of the Emir of Qatar and will include a discussion of reciprocal cooperation and the peace process (the Taliban). "
Kabul (Reuters)-Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai will go to Qatar in recent days to discuss the peace negotiations with the Taliban, Afghanistan Foreign Ministry announced Sunday.

That step was taken when scaled up efforts to seek a settlement of the war in Afghanistan is now the 12th year, Reuters reports.

The departure of Karzai to Qatar will be the first visit of the President of Afghanistan to discuss the peace process in that country, the Taliban and is done after negotiating jams for years with the u.s., Pakistan and the Taliban.

The visit will include talks on the formation of a political office of the Taliban in Doha, capital of Qatar.

"The President's Visit was made at the invitation of the Emir of Qatar and will include a discussion of reciprocal cooperation and the peace process (the Taliban)," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai at a news conference Sunday.

Karzai is expected to go to Qatar in a week, said a senior official of Afghanistan told Reuters.

Increased efforts to seek a settlement of the war in Afghanistan terunding that has been going on for more than a decade.

Karzai, who will quit his post after the elections of April 2014, before accusing the UNITED STATES negotiating with the Taliban Government of Afghanistan without involving. The charges were disputed by the u.s. and its allies.

The President of Afghanistan were known to throw the usual spontaneous statements said critics often cause tension.

Karzai and his supporters in Western countries have agreed that all foreign combat forces will return to their country by the end of 2014, but the West promised to provide support which continued after this time in the form of funds and training for Afghanistan's security forces.

NATO aims to train soldiers and police by the end of Afghanistan by the end of 2014 to ensure stability in that country, but challenges still ahead of us in the process of transition.

Desertions, the assignment is bad and low morale among major problems that complicate the commanders of NATO and Afghanistan.

In October 2011, the Taliban promised to fight until all foreign forces leave Afghanistan.

The Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan since 1996, waged a rebellion since it was ousted from power in the country by U.S.-led invasion in 2001 because of the Al Qaida leader refused to hand over Osama bin Laden, who is accused of responsibility for the attack in the region that killed 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001.

About 130,000 members of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) led by NATO that comes from dozens of countries sent to Afghanistan to help the Kabul Government battle the insurgency of the Taliban and its allies.

Taliban guerrillas rely heavily on the use of roadside bombs and suicide attacks against Afghanistan's Government and foreign troops stationed in the country.

Assembled bomb, known as an IED (improvised-explosive) resulted in 70-80 percent of the foreign forces casualties in Afghanistan, according to the military. (M014)



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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

African leaders sign the peace agreement, Congo

Illustration. Rebel forces withdrawal forces M23 runs near the town of Sake, about 35 miles west of Goma. (REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic)

That's just the beginning of a broad approach that will require continuous attachment
Addis Ababa (Reuters)-African leaders on Sunday, signing a deal that aims to halt the conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

"My hope is that peace plan will be able to bring an era of peace and stability for the people of Democratic Republic of Congo and the region," said UN Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, who attended the signing of the agreement in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.

AFP reported that agreement could lead to the formation of a special intervention brigade of the UN in Eastern DRC to combat rebel groups as well as the new political efforts.

The Eastern DRC is rich in minerals, is engulfed in a conflict that involves a lot of armed groups in the two decades later, with the new rebel movements emerged and some of them had the support of neighboring countries.

The last violent action happening in 2012 and culminated in an uprising movement March 23 (M23), which had captured the important city of Goma in November last year.

Leaders or representatives from 11 regional countries signed the document, after the first attempt to reach the peace agreement signed last month suspended at the last moment.

(H-RN)



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Saturday, March 2, 2013

The signing of a peace agreement in Congo postponed

United Nations (Reuters)-the United Nations on Saturday said a U.N. brokered peace agreement to end decades of conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, which, according to the plan signed in Ethiopia on 24 February, was postponed.

African leaders failed to sign the Treaty in the past month due to concerns of some countries with regard to who will lead the force, which will be deployed in Congo's eastern regions and deal with armed groups in conflict-prone areas.

It would be intervention Brigade of the UN peacekeeping force in Drc, known as MONUSCO.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is sending the invitation Friday to the treaty signings Friday February 24, will visit Ethiopia and intends to attend the show, said the spokesman, Martin Nesirky interlocutor. "All the Presidents who were invited had promised would attend or send representatives at that event," said Nesirky.

The representative of Rwanda to the United Nations Ambassador Olivier Nduhungirehe sent a message on Twitter that "the African Union, the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region, the leaders of the South Africa development community, as well as 10 heads of State of the region will be present in the signing ceremony."

The messengers told us that one of the main reasons that agreement could not be signed by the three countries in January is a regional development community bloc, South Africa-South Africa, Tanzania and Mozambique-felt they did not have enough information about the executing brigade.

The brigade formation was executing in the UN peacekeeping mission is new to the UNITED NATIONS, said the officials at the world body. The Mission of executing the peace was permitted to use deadly weapons in a combat situation is serious, while the operation was aimed at supporting peace and pmeliharaan to monitor the ceasefire, said diplomats and UN officials.

A new Security Council resolution was needed to approve the Union's intervention is likely to be supported by a Council composed of 15 countries, the delegates said.

The head of the UN peacekeeping force Herve Ladsous reiterated that the brigade will fight under Ensign MONUSCO, which meant that troops were under the command of the same as regular troops, MONUSCO, which will conduct patrols and supported the Congolese security forces.

But diplomats said South Africa, Tanzania and Mozambique, who are likely candidates for mmasok thousands of soldiers for the brigade.

The rebels seized the area east of the M23 begins a vast mineral-rich early last year, accusing the Government of not honoring the peace agreement by 2009.

The peace agreement ended the insurgency and set the integration of rebels into the national army. They then came out of the military and the rebels.

Congolese troops failed to quell the insurgency, 10 months of dragging back the M23 East Congo into wars, UN experts said. M23 rebel cross-border support from Rwanda and Uganda. Uganda and Rwanda denied allegations it was hard.
(RN/B002)



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Friday, September 23, 2011

Afghan peace negotiator is killed

Burhanuddin Rabbani, attends a ceremony with local officials as more than 100 members of the Taliban surrender themselves to the Afghan Government, on August 26, 2011 in Badakhshan. Mr Rabbani (centre) had been overseeing efforts to persuade the Taliban to give up arms


20 September 2011 Last updated at 19:17 GMT Hamid Karzai spoke with Barack Obama about Burhanuddin Rabbani's death
The chairman of the Afghan High Peace Council, Burhanuddin Rabbani, has been killed with several other people in a bomb attack in Kabul, officials say.
Mr Rabbani was killed at his home by a suicide attacker who officials believe had concealed a bomb in his turban.
He was meeting members of the Taliban at the time. The council leads Afghan efforts to negotiate with the Taliban.
Mr Rabbani is a former president of Afghanistan and also led the main political opposition in the country.
A senior adviser to the peace council, Masoom Stanakzai, is also thought to have been seriously wounded in the attack.
On hearing the news Afghan President Hamid Karzai decided to cut short his visit to the US but briefly met President Barack Obama, who condemned the killing as a "tragic loss". Both men reinforced their determination to continue the quest for peace.
President Karzai said: "This is a sad day for us in Afghanistan but a day of unity and day of continuity for our efforts."
Abdullah Abdullah, the leader of the opposition in the Afghan parliament, said Mr Rabbani's killing was "a big loss for all the people of Afghanistan", describing the former president as a man who "strove until his last breath to bring peace".
Nato and the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) condemned the attack, with Isaf commander Gen John R Allen saying that "the face of the peace initiative has been attacked".
'Special message' Continue reading the main story image of Bilal Sarwary Bilal Sarwary BBC News, Kabul
Mr Rabbani will be a hard man for President Karzai to replace.
Although he was an ethnic Tajik leader from the north, Mr Rabbani had support in Pashtun areas in the south and east. He was seen as one of Afghanistan's cleverest and most influential politicians.
And he had some of the tightest security of any Afghan leader. His convoys were always heavily protected and included several identical vehicles with blacked-out windows to confuse potential attackers.
The best guess is that he was killed by Taliban who did not support the talks initiative he led. Karzai supporters see his death as a blow to peace efforts, but how much he achieved is unclear.
His peace council is credited with bringing over hundreds of Taliban field commanders, but to date Mr Rabbani had failed to woo any senior figures away from the insurgency.
Mr Rabbani's residence is in a prosperous district of Kabul, on the edge of a high security area close to the US embassy and the district where the Taliban launched a 20-hour attack last week, leaving 25 dead.
The attack is likely to fuel concerns over security in the capital. Security forces have closed off a number of streets in the district and the police are out in force, reports say.
Speaking to the BBC's Bilal Sarwary in Kabul, counter-terrorism officials described the sequence of events leading up to the killing.
They said two Taliban commanders had arrived with Mr Stanakzai in a red Corolla to meet Mr Rabbani.
The commanders told household staff that they had special messages from the Taliban for Mr Rabbani.
The officials added that as guards approached to search the men, Mr Stanakzai shouted: "We know them. They are our own people."
As one of the Taliban commanders went to embrace the former president, he detonated explosives concealed in his turban.
"No-one was checked. Shortly after that we heard an explosion. Everyone started shouting: 'They killed Ustaad Ustaad [a term of respect]'," a member of Mr Rabbani's household said.
''One of the attackers' heads is missing. The second attacker is arrested but he is injured. The driver was arrested before he could flee," intelligence sources told the BBC.
Our correspondent adds that Tuesday's meeting with the Taliban commanders had been kept secret, with some of Mr Rabbani's aides being informed about it just a few hours before it had begun.
He says Mr Rabbani had returned to Afghanistan from abroad a few days ago specifically for the meeting.
When the High Peace Council was set up in October 2010, Mr Karzai described it as the greatest hope for the Afghan people and called on the Taliban to seize the opportunity and help bring peace.
But many members of the council are former warlords who spent years fighting the Taliban and their inclusion led to doubts as to whether it could succeed in its mission.
Mr Rabbani was ousted as president by the Taliban in 1996. After that he became the nominal head of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance, made of mostly non-Pashtun ethnic groups.
When they swept back into Kabul, backed by US forces, and toppled the Taliban in 2001, he was still recognised by the UN as the official president of Afghanistan.
Series of assassinations
But he was a controversial figure who had many enemies, including the Taliban, the BBC's David Loyn in Kabul says. Many were surprised when Mr Rabbani was put in charge of peace talks.
Continue reading the main story Senior figure in the mujahideen who fought against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980sPresident of Afghanistan from 1992 to 1996 and then again in 2001Senior member of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance from 1996 to 2001Made leader of Peace Council constituted by Afghan President Hamid Karzai tasked with negotiating with the TalibanIn the 1970s it was Mr Rabbani who founded the parties that ended up becoming the Afghan mujahideen who took on the Soviets, and many blame him and his friends for the death and destruction of the civil war days.
Although people will mourn his violent death, there are also many who will celebrate it, our correspondent adds.
However, analysts say, his death will not necessarily prevent peace talks from continuing.
The killing is the latest in a series of assassinations of senior politicians and security commanders across the country.
In July, President Karzai's half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai was killed at his home in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan, by his own head of security. Two months earlier, Gen Daud Daud, the top police commander in northern Afghanistan was killed in a suicide bomb attack.
The Taliban have claimed responsibility for most of these killings.


Monday, September 19, 2011

Let There Be Peace: Ron Artest Officially Changes Name to 'Metta World Peace'

Mark J. Terrill / AP The newly-minted Metta World Peace, formerly known as Ron Artest.
Mark J. Terrill / AP
Time to upgrade your #15 Lakers jersey – it's not the number that's out of date, it's the name “Artest.”
After a slight delay thanks to some unpaid parking tickets, the Los Angeles Lakers forward formerly known as Ron Artest has officially become Metta World Peace.
The three-week holdup was settled Friday, the parking tickets were paid, and after a short court hearing, Mr. World Peace was well on his way to promoting the ideals behind his new name. "Changing my name was meant to inspire and bring youth together all around the world," World Peace said. His first name, Metta, is based on a Buddhist term meaning love and kindness to all.
(LIST: Top 10 Dubious Name Changes)
It's a meaning that could be seen as ironic for some fans, though. That's because the former Ron Artest, as a former Indiana Pacer, is best known for sparking the NBA's most notorious brawl when he jumped into the stands and attacked a Detroit Pistons fan after he was hit with a drink.
But promoting peace in his name perhaps speaks to a larger ideology shift for the basketball star. He's become a recent proponent of mental health legislation and will appear on this season of Dancing with the Stars. And the desire for World Peace is spreading fast. His 8-year-old daughter is reportedly seeking to change her last name to World Peace, as well.
Metta World Peace will go by his new name both personally and professionally – will players and fans be able to take him seriously, though?
Nick Carbone is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @nickcarbone. You can also continue the discussion on TIME's Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.