Afghanistan | |
Afghan strongmen form 'united front' | |
2007-04-03 | |
Strongmen from Afghanistan's war-filled past, some of them once staunch enemies, launched a new political coalition Tuesday saying they wanted to build unity in the divided country. About 300 people, many of them key players in the country's turbulent past, gathered at a ceremony to launch the United National Front with former president Burhanuddin Rabbani as its leader. The new coalition is perhaps the most significant political group to emerge since the fall of the extremist Taliban government in 2001 set the country on an internationally agreed path to democracy. Coalition member Prince Mustafa Zahir, grandson of ailing former king Mohammad Zahir Shah, said the front would promote unity. "It's important to bring different people and factions together for peace in the shattered country," he said at the event attended by heavyweights like ex-defence minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim and parliamentary speaker Yonous Qanooni. Among its goals is to change the 2003 constitution to allow for political parties to stand for proportional representation in parliament and for the appointment of a prime minister, Rabbani said. The 2005 parliamentary election, the first to be fully democratic, used the "single non-transferable vote" system in which ballots are cast for an individual and not political parties. The next legislative vote is due in 2010. The president is elected separately. "We are in favour of a parliamentary system under which both individuals and parties could be candidates for election," Rabbani said. The new front also wanted governors of the 34 provinces to be elected by direct vote rather than appointed by the president, said Rabbani, a parliamentarian. It would "not work against the government. It will work besides the government for the betterment of the nation," he said. The front is mainly made up of various leaders of the armed resistance to the 1979-1989 Soviet occupation who turned on each other in a 1992-1996 civil war that was fought along ethnic lines. It includes former communists. Many of the men in the new alliance were behind a rally of up to 25,000 people in Kabul late February that backed parliamentarians' demands for an amnesty for crimes and abuses committed in wars and conflict since 1979. Karzai later agreed to allow amnesty for groups but said individuals still had the right seek redress for atrocities.
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Afghanistan |
Afghanistan: Former King Ill |
2007-01-03 |
![]() The king's family spokesman, Popal, said the Zahir Shah had recently travelled to a Gulf country for a medical check-up. Zahir Shah became king in 1933 after his father was assassinated by a deranged student. He was overthrow in a bloodless leftist coup led by a cousin in 1973. |
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Afghan royalists form movement to restore monarchy | |||
2003-08-10 | |||
Supporters of former king Mohammad Zahir Shah announced the formation of a movement to press for the restoration of the Afghan monarchy on Saturday, hours after their 88-year-old champion returned from medical treatment abroad.
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Afghanistan |
Padsha Khan Zadran loses his radio station... |
2002-05-13 |
Afghan troops backed by US soldiers seized control of a local radio station from supporters of a warlord in Khost. The troops transferred the staff and equipment to new premises established near Khost city's airport on Saturday. Control of the radio station had been in the hands of Kamal Khan [aka Mini-Me], a brother of warlord Padsha Khan Zadran [aka Ike Clanton], and had been airing anti-government propaganda. Bad move Padsha. The official residence of the local governor was still in the hands of Khan's sympathisers. A spokesman for governor Hakeem Tanewal as saying that Afghan forces plan to take it soon. Paktia's governor Taj Mohammad Wardak last week accepted an offer made by a mediation team sent by ex-king Mohammad Zahir Shah to try to resolve differences with Khan through negotiations. Wardak had earlier issued an ultimatum to Khan to either surrender or face a military operation. After they get done with the yap-yap they're still gonna have to kill him, 'cause he's a homicidal maniac. Why not just get it over with? |
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Afghanistan | |
ABC interview with Abdul Haq | |
2001-10-05 | |
In the 1980s when Afghans were fighting to push the Soviets out of their country, Abdul Haq was one of the heroes. A commander of the Kabul front, he led his Mujahideen fighters in the first attacks on the Soviet-held capital. Today, at age 43, he is a big man with a gray beard and 16 war wounds, including a missing foot, blown off by a Soviet land mine. "I stepped on it because I was in the frontline," he said. "There was this tremendous explosion, no pain, and I didn't know what had happened until I saw my boot flying through the air with my leg in it." Now, more than a decade into retirement, Haq is preparing for another fight. Last week, after seeing the attacks in New York and Washington, he returned to Pakistan from self-exile in Dubai to gather his former, fellow commanders against the Taliban whom he says he now despises. "They don't give people rights," he said. "There's no human rights, there's no job, there's no food, there's no medicine, there's no activity and the only people that have rights is Talib." To defeat the Taliban, he says he has recruited tribal elders inside Afghanistan who are willing to fight with him, even some commanders in the Taliban army, he says, have promised to defect. Because he is Pashtun, the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan, he thinks most fighters will come over to his side instead of the Northern Alliance, which is dominated by ethnic Uzbeks and Tajiks. "There are many people or commanders who are fighting with the Taliban not because they like the Taliban [but] because they are afraid of the Northern Alliance taking over," he says. "If they see another alternative coming then they will have no reason to stay fighting with the Taliban."
Haq is not alone in his desire to remove the Taliban from power in Afghanistan. Pakistan's border cities seem to be filled with former fighters hoping to return to fight with or against the Taliban. Haq is the best-known former commander to emerge yet and he has the blessing of the exiled king. The biggest obstacle Haq says would be an American attack. "If they just go bomb, kill, shoot these people that have nothing to do with that, this will make many people upset," he said. "And you will create thousands of bin Ladens. My advice to the U.S. government is let the Afghans to do it." For Haq the fight is partly personal. Two years ago while he was working to create a more moderate government in Afghanistan, professional assassins climbed over the wall around his house and killed his wife and 11-year-old son. The police never caught the killers. "Only one thing I can say; it was done through professional people because they cut off the electricity," he said. "They cut off the telephone systems and they went in within a few minutes, and they fired this silencer or used silencer weapons, and the way it was done it was through very professional people." Although he will not speculate on who sent the assassins, a 1999 U.S. State Department report suggests it was probably the Taliban, as part of a widespread campaign to silence dissident voices. "My wife and my son are probably one of the one million, one-and-half-million people who died in this country. Whatever I do, of course I care, I love my family, but more than anything my country and my people are important because if I make my country safe, everybody will be safe." Haq admits he was much more comfortable living far from Afghanistan with his children in Dubai. "But psychologically something was missing," he said. He dreams of the day he takes back Kabul again. The last time he did that the country erupted into war. This time he says it will be different. | |
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