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Showing posts with label Taliban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taliban. Show all posts

Friday, May 3, 2013

Afghanistanian are killed in bomb attack

Kandahar, Afghanistan (News and Us)-a roadside bomb Blast that was installed the Taliban killed a senior member of the Peace Council, Afghanistan, Wednesday, officials said.

Shah Wali Khan, Chairman of the Peace Council (HPC) in the province of Helmand, the southern region, was killed along with two police bodyguards when the explosion hit the vehicle, reports AFP.


HPC is a government agency formed in 2010 to open negotiations with the Taliban, but the guerrilla group refused to negotiate with the envoys of President Hamid Karzai'S U.S.-backed.


Helmand provincial government said in a statement, Khan was traveling in the Gereshk area as part of the handover of security responsibility from the NATO-led troops to Afghanistan security forces.


The Taliban "to take advantage of opportunities to benefit our official envoys had done it" and detonated a bomb assembled under the vehicle, the statement said.


In the past the Taliban attacked the leaders of the HPC. In 2011, a suicide bomb attack killed the Council Chairman, Burhanuddin Rabbani.


Upcoming peace talks faced many obstacles, including chaos about who will represent the Taliban and Karzai's demands that his envoy should be a core part of the negotiations.


Search for a political solution is the priority when violence flared up in the South and East and combat international troops prepare withdraw from Afghanistan.


Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai and his Western nations have agreed that all foreign combat forces will return to their country by the end of 2014, but the West pledged to support 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 the country, but challenges still ahead of us in the process of transition.


Desertion, poor assignments 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 from 1996, waged a rebellion since 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 United States which killed around 3,000 people on September 11, 2001.


About 130,000 members of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) led by NATO that come 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.


Bomb assemblies known as IED (improvised explosives) resulted in 70-80 percent of the casualties to foreign troops in Afghanistan, according to the military. (M014)




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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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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Pakistani Taliban forbid the sale of vulgar movies and viagra

Peshawar (Reuters)-Pakistani Taliban have warned a number of shop owners in a popular market in order to stop the sale of "obscene films" and strong male drug, Viagra.

Shopkeeper said Monday that they found handwritten pamphlet which contains warnings on Saturday, in a market on the outskirts of Karkhano Northwest of Peshawar.

"Selling sex drugs, vulgar and obscene movie films against Sharia law," said a copy of the pamphlet that was distributed under the name Tehreek-e-Taliban Khyber.

"They are all involved in this business are warned to stop this job and start a business lawful or face the consequences," he said, as reported by AFP.

Those who received a letter of threat talk in anonymous condition for fear of Taliban retaliation.

Scores of shops openly sell Karkhano pornographic films and powerful medicine man, according to witnesses.

The markets were located Khyber tribal district border, where fighting has recently increased in prolonged operation against the Taliban and the Pakistani military with other guerrillas on the border of Afghanistan.

Keepers of shops selling music and movies throughout the Northwest are routinely threatened, where hundreds of DVD and CD shops have been bombed in the past by militants who consider their business is not Islamic.

At least 10 people were killed and 26 injured Thursday when a bomb exploded near a store in the DVD as Kalaya, the main town of tribal district of Orakzai.

(G003/H-AK)



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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Pemimpin oposisi Pakistan desak pemerintah berunding dengan taliban

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Need to respond to an offer of talks with the Taliban seriously because people want peace Followed
Islamabad (Reuters)-Pakistan's main opposition leader Nawaz Sharif urged immediate talks with the Taliban and called on the Government to respond to serious peace offer from a group of guerrillas was conditional.

Parent faction Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) increased attacks in recent months, raising fears that violence could tarnish the election, according to the plan will be held mid next May.

In a video message that was given to reporters Thursday, TTP spokesman said Ehsanullah Ehsan, Taliban proposes talks with Islamabad as long as politicians-politicians, including Sharif, acting as guarantor.

Sharif welcomed the proposal but refused the peace was becoming a guarantor.

"Need to respond to an offer of talks with the Taliban is serious because it Followed people want peace," said Sharif in a statement broadcast by local newspapers Friday and confirmed by his spokesman Siddiqul Farooq.

"I am asking the Government initiated peace talks with the Taliban successfully without being postponed," added Sharif, who refused to be a guarantor by reason of the Government have the credibility to that issue.

In December, the leader of Hakimullah Mehsud, the TTP head appreciated 5 million u.s. dollars by the United States, said he was ready to conduct peace negotiations but refused to disarm the petempurnya.

Critics accuse authorities do not attempt initiated a peace with the TTP in the past, accusing such agreements give time to gather a group of guerrillas that strength back before further attacks.

The election on time would constitute the first democratic transition of power in the history of Pakistan. Local Media recently favor Sharif will most likely win in the election.
(RN/M016)



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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Pakistan denies Taliban support

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27 October 2011 Last updated at 19:50 GMT Taliban fighters The US has long suspected Pakistan, or elements within the ISI, of supporting militant groups The Pakistan army has strongly denied claims made in a BBC documentary that the Pakistani security services are supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Pakistani army spokesman Major Gen Athar Abbas described the allegations made by US and Afghan officials as "baseless and malicious".

He claimed that the US and Afghanistan were trying to blame Pakistan for their own failures.

The first part of the documentary Secret Pakistan aired on Wednesday.

The programme accuses Pakistan of playing a double game, acting as America's ally in public while secretly training and arming its enemy in Afghanistan.

'Miserable performance'

Gen Abbas said the ISI (Pakistani secret service) had itself suffered at the hands of al-Qaeda and its affiliates, saying about 300 officials had died in attacks.

"You think it is sane for any intelligence operator to harbour people who'll attack its own men?" he said.

He also claimed that Pakistan was being used as a scapegoat for the situation in Afghanistan.

"The performance of all intelligence agencies in Afghanistan has been miserable. That's why they want to dump this on Pakistan and the ISI," he said.

"We have the right to take legal action and legal response against the BBC," he added.

BBC spokeswoman Helen Deller said the documentary was made in line with BBC editorial guidelines and did "not attempt to take sides".

"Secret Pakistan was made in accordance with the BBC's editorial guidelines, information we gained was checked with multiple sources and the programme strove to be fair and accurate."

"The Pakistani position and official response to the allegations made not only by Western officials and Taliban fighters but also Pakistani representatives is carried throughout by several different voices."

The US has long suspected Pakistan, or elements within the ISI, of supporting militant groups in order to increase its influence in Afghanistan.

Similar claims in the past have been repeatedly denied by Pakistan.



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Thursday, October 6, 2011

The Taliban secret of success

5. October 2011 booth 02: 28 GMT by M Ilyas Khan BBC News, Islamabad Defecting Taliban fighters drive through the front line in the village of Amirabad, northern Afghanistan, Saturday Nov. 24, 2001. (AP Photo/Dusan Vranic) the Taliban hit back with a vengeance after the US-led invasion in 2001 Taliban fighters to thousands a decade ago abandoned makes, fled their military posts and melted into the countryside, so that to capture Western-led Afghanistan troops without a fight.

This colorful mixed militia has today developed into a sophisticated guerrilla force, taken recently by several high-quality objectives and all but derailed American plans for a smooth and successful use of troops.

Clearly, they have achieved this despite the lack of a charismatic leader, a single chain of command and a political and economic vision.

How did they do it?

Until three years after their Government in October 2001 by coalition forces ousted was there was little activity of the Taliban in Afghanistan.

"Taliban were initially welcomed by the Afghan people to bring civil war, but when they began to implement their strict Islamic code for four years long, the people got fed up," Brig says Mehmood Shah, a former head of security for North West Pakistan tribal areas (in retirement).

"People welcomed the Americans as they saw it as their liberators." "There was no place for the Taliban immediately to stage a comeback."

Until 2006, the Taliban had infiltrated however large parts of the South - in particular the provinces of Zabul, Kandahar and Helmand.

Until 2008 were from the direction North to Kabul spreading.

Brig Shah says, that the Americans made two errors, wasted the advantage.

"she are focused on military targets rather than stabilisation and development." "And she soon went renunciation of the war of the need that had brought them to Afghanistan choice against a war in the Iraq."

The lack of reconstruction and rampant corruption among government officials at a time when the millions of refugees from Iran and Pakistan were again, led to widespread disappointment and operated uprising, he says.

Sanctuary in Pakistan

But you many analysts also point to the role of Pakistan, from where the Taliban emerged in 1994 and where most of them fled in 2001.

Many believe that the current Afghan rebels in the tribal Pakistani Waziristan was born.

While the rest of Afghanistan quietly, they say was Waziristan lived with Taliban activity, which then made banner headlines around the world.

Pakistan Army troops prepare to leave for patrolling during a curfew in Bannu, a town on the edge of Pakistan's lawless tribal belt Waziristan, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2009.Sent but not replace Pakistan troops at the border the militant

In the year 2002 and 2004 there were skirmishes between the Taliban and Pakistani troops, followed by a series of peace deals with the army were, which the Taliban virtually control over most of Pakistan's tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan.

Most analysts agree - whether public or private, that Pakistan's security establishment the Taliban to Waziristan in a militant sanctuary, although the ability to remove them.

"I think the military in question was divided." It tolerated it, and also helped, "says Dr. Hasan Askari Rizvi, a defense analyst."

Coalition forces suffered her earliest casualties in South Eastern Afghanistan, shortly behind the border of Waziristan.

Pakistan-Afghan border map

It was the fighting in the South-East and later in the North-East - province in Afghanistan Kunar, the Pakistani tribal districts of Bajaur and Abdul Ahad Mohmand - which took most of their attention during 2002-06 next to.

The concentration of Taliban fighters in Pakistan's southwestern province of Baluchistan, to infiltrate the quiet Zabul, Kandahar and Helmand provinces of Toba Kakar, Chaman, Quetta and Chaghai obscured these developments.

This development remained unattended by both the Pakistani armed forces and coalition troops in Afghanistan.

The results were predictable enough.

Western officials admit that until 2008-09, Coalition forces were in the not in a position to hold that the areas, the Helmand important for the Taliban - like large parts of Central Kandahar and southern were, where the Taliban bomb factories, arms caches, and defensive positions - and set up at the same time, protect their own lines of communication.

'Punjabi Taliban'

Since the "troop surge" announced by President Obama in 2010 troops could evict the Taliban from their fixed positions in Kandahar and Helmand.

Read the main story emerged in Afghanistan in 1994Mainly, which is supported by ethnic PashtunsToppled, after the United States-led invasion of Afghanistan 2001Fugitive wanted leader Mullah Omar, residence UnknownBut has spread the insurgent areas around the capital Kabul, and even the formerly quiet province of Nord-Afghanistan now wider.

The Taliban now seems more on suicide bombings will leave, and spectacular weapon and bombings, to meet the objectives of the psychological cheapest.

And there is an endless supply of neuen-and better trained - fighter, the Afghanistan from Pakistani areas, in particular the Waziristan in.

Credible sources the BBC say that these mainly Pakistanis, the Punjabi Taliban fighters are called, which specialized in gun and bomb attacks and form a large part of the Haqqani Waziristan-based network.

According to these sources, these fighters have been for 2009 to the border in Pakistani military vehicles, probably migrating rocket to avoid strikes by CIA operated drone.

Pakistan's military source in the region is cooperation with these fighters.

Spokesman of the army, Maj Gen Athar Abbas, rejects this as "malicious and manufactured".

"Nothing is further from the truth," he wrote in a current text message me back.

But since the recent accusations by US officials, who ordered several attacks in Kabul of Pakistani ISI intelligence service, questions about the military are actual role in the Afghan insurgents now trigger in various quarters in Pakistan.

Many in the West fixed long that is the key to peace in Afghanistan with the Pakistani forces.

The coming months will show if this really is the case, and whether Pakistan agrees, the demands of the international community to comply with.



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Sunday, October 2, 2011

The American Taliban, 10 years

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29 September 2011 Last updated at 02:51 GMT By Steve Swann and Gordon Corera BBC News John Lindh's father wants presidential clemency for his son

The television images of the bedraggled and bewildered young American detained in Afghanistan months after 9/11 were beamed across the world. They were seared into the consciousness of the country which quickly came to know him as the "American Taliban".

On a quiet suburban street in Mill Valley, a prosperous town a few miles north of San Francisco, the Islamic Centre is slowly emptying after holding Friday prayers.

Once the crowds have gone, Abdullah Nana recounts how over a decade ago a white teenager turned up, confused and looking for answers. "He was at a crossroads at that time. He was unsure of his direction in this world. It seemed that Islam and religion was a way for him to spiritually fulfil himself."

Mr Nana says he quickly became friends with the 16-year-old, who converted to Islam and soon set himself the daunting task of learning Arabic and memorising the Koran.

Continue reading the main story John Walker Lindh Currently serving 20-year sentenceBorn in 1981, he converted to Islam in 1997Went to Afghanistan in May 2001 to fight with TalibanArrested in November 2001; sentenced in October 2002That boy was John Lindh, also known as John Walker Lindh, who grew up in a middle-class Catholic family, and is now a prisoner in the "special communications unit" in Terre Haute, Indiana, halfway through a 20-year sentence.

His family argue that it is time to look again at the case of "Detainee 001", the first terror suspect picked up in the "war on terror" which President Bush declared 10 years ago.

According to his father Frank, he is housed in a special wing at the west end of the building which had originally been used as death row. It is here that Lindh, who is enrolled on a correspondence course with Indiana University, has completed the task of memorising the Koran.

Adventure

At the age of 17 he had got his parents' permission to travel to Yemen to study Arabic. He briefly returned to California but couldn't settle so he headed back to Yemen from where he wrote to ask his father if he could go to Pakistan to continue his studies. Frank Lindh replied: "I trust your judgment and hope you have a wonderful adventure."

Frank and John Lindh Father and son on family holiday in New York

Once there, Lindh enrolled at a religious school in the village of Bannu in the North West Frontier Province where it seems his views hardened. Without his parents knowing, in June 2001 he slipped over the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan.

Once there, with the assistance of a militant group, he received two months of military training at the al-Farouq training camp which was financed by Osama Bin Laden. Twice that summer he met the al-Qaeda leader but Frank Lindh denies his son had anything to do with terrorism, claiming he "was one of thousands of young Muslims who over the years volunteered their services in Afghanistan against the Russian-backed warlords" of the Northern Alliance.

But Michael Chertoff, who was assistant attorney general at the time, says Lindh "went to fight for a regime that was hostile to the United States and that supported the 9/11 attacks. So in my book, that's pretty serious. It's not quite treason but it's what I would call a kissing cousin to treason".

Pivotal moment

The original indictment against him shows that Lindh was approached by al-Qaeda to carry out an attack in the United States or Israel but he refused. By early September he was serving in a corps of 75 non-Afghan soldiers in the Takhar region of north-eastern Afghanistan. It was then that everything changed, according to Frank Lindh.

"There was a pivotal moment in history. 9/11 occurred and then the American government made a decision to change our policy very abruptly and invade Afghanistan and topple the Taliban government."

Shortly after the aerial bombardment of the country began, Lindh's unit was forced to retreat, walking through the desert to Kunduz where they surrendered to the Northern Alliance. They were transported to the Qala-i-Jangi fortress on the outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif which was under the control of the warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum.

When a battle erupted within the fortress, a CIA officer and 100 prisoners were killed. Lindh was shot in the leg. For the following week, he and other survivors huddled in a basement. He claims that Dostum's forces lobbed grenades down air ducts, killing more prisoners, and then pumped in freezing water to try to drown them.

With shrapnel wounds and hypothermia, Lindh managed to get above ground and on 1 December 2001 was handed over to US custody.

Anger

John Walker Lindh blindfolded Lindh, after his capture, photographed by a US soldier

It was then, after hearing nothing for seven months and growing increasingly frantic, that Lindh's parents discovered what had happened to him. They saw an online news article which contained a grainy photograph of what they immediately recognised was their son.

Frank Lindh is angry about what happened next. His son was flown to a marine base at Camp Rhino where he claims they "left him in an unheated metal shipping container completely naked for two days and two nights in the desert in Afghanistan" with his "wounds untreated".

There then began what Lindh's mother, Marilyn Walker, describes as an unstoppable "tidal wave" of negative media coverage. Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that Lindh was "an al-Qaeda-trained terrorist who conspired with the Taliban to kill his fellow citizens".

"That image was sealed in the minds of people when they were emotionally distraught and in grief after 9/11," says Frank Lindh.

It was into this atmosphere in January 2002 that Lindh was flown back to the United States, but in a last-minute plea bargain the authorities dropped the terrorism and al-Qaeda charges in return for Lindh pleading guilty to supporting the Taliban and dropping his claims of mistreatment.

Appearing in court, John Lindh acknowledged: "I made a mistake by joining the Taliban… I want the American people to know that had I realised then what I know now about the Taliban, I would never have joined them."

Wrong place

The 20-year sentence was, according to his father, the best he could hope for since "the well was poisoned against my son in the United States".

Michael Chertoff defends the outcome. "He pleaded guilty, the judge imposed what seemed an appropriate sentence and I assume he'll serve it out." Reacting to the claim that Lindh was in the wrong place at the wrong time, Mr Chertoff says: "The prisons are full of people who say they were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

So the visits continue to Terre Haute where, separated by glass, Lindh speaks to his family over a telephone which is monitored.

Marilyn Walker, Lindh's mother Marilyn Walker, Lindh's mother

Lindh never shows a sign of self-pity, his father says, and never complains, but had once told him that this was a deliberate tactic. "He feels that complaining would yield something to the authorities who are imprisoning him," says Frank Lindh.

Lindh's parents try to chip away at what they see as a false public image of the "American Taliban".

Marilyn Walker says: "It's critical for John's life at whatever point he gets out of prison that he is able to live without having to look over his shoulder for someone that wants to do him harm".

Though his parents hope the president will one day grant clemency to allow an early release, they recognise the prospect is unlikely.



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