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Afghanistan
Taliban and Haqqani network planned attacks from Pakistan safe havens: US
2017-07-21
[Khaama (Afghanistan)] The United States Department of States released its latest reports regarding on terrorism for 2016 providing an overall report regarding the terrorism related upheavals during the year.

The new report by the State Department further strengthens the claims made by the Afghan officials regarding the presence of the safe havens of the Taliban
...the Pashtun equivalent of men...
and Haqqani terrorist network inside the Pak territory.

"Afghanistan, in particular, continued to experience aggressive and coordinated attacks by the Afghan Taliban, including the affiliated Haqqani Network (HQN) and other holy warrior and terrorist groups," the report stated.

The Department of State also added that a number of these attacks were planned and launched from safe havens in Pakistain.

"Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) retained full responsibility for security in Afghanistan, and prevented the Taliban from capturing a bustling provincial capital in 2016, although it suffered an unprecedented number of casualties in an intense fighting season," the report said, adding that the ANDSF and Coalition Forces, in partnership, took aggressive action against terrorist elements across Afghanistan. A peace agreement between Hizb-e Islami Gulbuddin and the Afghan government in September was the first signed by an holy warrior group since the 2001 fall of the Taliban.

According to the State Department, the Pak military and security forces undertook operations against groups that conducted attacks within Pakistain such as Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistain. Pakistain did not take substantial action against the Afghan Taliban or Haqqani terrorist network, or substantially limit their ability to threaten U.S. interests in Afghanistan, although Pakistain supported efforts to bring both groups into an Afghan-led grinding of the peace processor.

The State Department also added that Pakistain did not take sufficient action against other externally focused groups, such as Lashkar e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad
...literally Army of Mohammad, a Pak-based Deobandi terror group founded by Maulana Masood Azhar in 2000, after he split with the Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin. In 2002 the government of Pervez Musharraf banned the group, which changed its name to Khaddam ul-Islam and continued doing what it had been doing before without missing a beat...
(JeM) in 2016, which continued to operate, train, organize, and fundraise in Pakistain.

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Afghanistan
Hizb-e-Islami Mediates Between the Candidates
2014-08-05
[Tolo News] Officials of the Hizb-e Islami party have confirmed that the party has engaged in talks with the presidential candidates and exchanged letters with their electoral teams to mediate the two camps in hopes of pushing the election process forward.

The word of Hizb-e-Islami's interaction to mediate between the candidates has now reached the United Nations
...a formerly good idea gone bad...
Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and the U.S. Secretary of State John F. I was in Vietnam, you know Kerry
Former Senator-for-Life from Massachussetts, self-defined war hero, speaker of French, owner of a lucky hat, conqueror of Cambodia, and current Secretary of State...

Ghairat Baheer, who is in charge of the political committee of the party, stated that since the prolongation of the electoral process is not in the interest of the country, Hizb-e-Islami's leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
... who used to be known in intelligence circles as The Most Evil Man in the World but who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil...
tried to mediate between the candidates to settle the disagreements.

"We are in regular contact with the two electoral teams and our delegation has gone to Afghanistan on the principle stance to persuade the two candidates to halt brawls," Baheer said. "They must not protest and claim fraud if they lose or claim transparency if they win; that could push the country toward a crisis."

In addition, in his interview with TOLOnews, Baheer said that people's votes must be respected and the election process must be led by Afghans themselves.

"Those responsible for the brawls will pay the price," Baheer added. "The good thing about democracy is that it is a matter of majority and minority. Those who gain the majority votes will have the right to form the next government."

Ahsraf Ghani-Ahmadzai's team has expressed optimism about Hizb-e-Islami's recent statements.

"Five parts of Hizb-e-Islami have already endorsed the charter of the 'Convergence and Continuity' team. They—including one of their candidates—have announced their support for us," member of Ghani-Ahmadzai's electoral camp, Moeen Marastyal, said. "Now if they accept the charter of our team, there would not be any problems in their participation in the 'national unity government."

This is while Hizb-e-Islami's authorities as well as motives have been questioned in its attempts to mediate the electoral situation. Currently, the party does not have an official political presence in the country and majority of its members live outside the country, particularly in Pakistain.

Hizb-e-Islami had talked about negotiations with the Afghan government in the past too. However,
the hip bone's connected to the leg bone...
the government remained skeptical, claiming that the party had attacked the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) on several occasions.
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Afghanistan
Hikmatyar Calls On Supporters To Cast Ballots In 2014 Poll
2014-01-14
[Tolo News] The leader of Aghanistan's Islamist party Hizb-e Islami, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
... who used to be known in intelligence circles as The Most Evil Man in the World but who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil...
, reversed his previous boycotts of Afghan elections and asked his supporters on Monday to participate in the upcoming polls.

The move was welcomed by analysts, who interpreted Hikmatyar's message as a recognition of the political process.The presidential elections are due to be held in April.

Hikmatyar asked his supporters to compete with Hizb-e Islami's rivals, though he did not name any particular candidate or party.

"This is a good decision taken by Hikmatyar and other opposition parties should do the same thing," political analyst Maulana Farid said.

"Hikmatyar should have participated in the previous elections as well, this is a wise decision, he should ask other forces of Evil to avoid further violence," political analyst Moeen Marastyal added.

Hezb-e-Islami had already said that it will nominate a candidate in the upcoming Afghan presidential election, either from its own ranks or an outsider.
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Afghanistan
Hekmatyar Dispatches Peace Brokers to Kabul
2010-03-23
[Quqnoos] A delegation representing Hizb-e Islami of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar is in Kabul for peace talks with the Afghan government, an official said

A peace deal between Kabul and Hizb-e Islami, Afghansitan's second-largest insurgent group, possibly mark the biggest split in insurgent ranks since 2001.

The five-member delegation of Hezb-i-Islami, a movement led by warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, has already arrived in Kabul, said the group's spokesman Haroon Zarghoon, who is based in Pakistan.

The delegates plan to meet President Hamid Karzai, US officials and others "to discuss Hezb-i-Islami's agenda on how to bring durable peace to Afghanistan," Zarghoon told The Wall Street Journal.

The delegation was headed by Qutbuddin Helal, a former prime minister and deputy to the group's leader, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the official told WSJ.

Hezb-e Islami of Gulbuddin has carried out hunderds of attacks on Afghan and foreing troops over the past eight years from its strongholds in east and northern Afghaistan.
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Afghanistan
Afghan Rebel Leader Reportedly Declares Cease-Fire
2007-07-19
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a wanted rebel leader in Afghanistan, has reportedly declared a cease-fire in fighting against the Afghan government. In a statement reportedly signed by Hekmatyar and aired by a private television station, the rebel leader says members of his group are refraining from violence and have "assumed political activity."

Hekmatyar who still can't throw a grenade has not appeared in public to confirm the statement's authenticity.

Hekmatyar served briefly as Afghan prime minister in the mid-1990s and participated in many of Afghanistan's internecine conflicts. His faction, Hizb-e Islami, helped end the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Hekmatyar later became allied with the Taliban regime, but the Taliban chased him out of Kabul in 1996. In 2006, Hekmatyar appeared in a video aired on the Arabic language Al-Jazeera television station and declared he wanted his forces to fight alongside Al-Qaeda.

On July 15, the Afghan Defense Ministry announced that 30 fighters aligned with Hizb-e Islami had laid down their weapons and agreed to cooperate with the government.
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Afghanistan
The batttle for Kunar province
2005-12-22
As the US military's battle to subdue the Taleban and other rebel groups in Afghanistan moves into its fifth year, one eastern province bordering Pakistan has increasingly become a symbol of its difficulties. Despite several major American offensives in Kunar over the past year, the militants keep re-grouping - many of them foreign fighters with al-Qaeda backing. The trouble it has had in this area has led US forces to use psychological operations, or 'psy-ops' tactics, that one US human rights group alleges could have broken the Geneva conventions governing armed conflict. US troops have been broadcasting messages which Human Rights Watch says implicitly threatens "collective punishment" for people of the valley. It was in Kunar that US forces suffered their worst single loss of life in Afghanistan since they first invaded in 2001 in response to the 9/11 attacks. One of their helicopters was shot down in late June, killing all 16 special forces and crew on board. The situation there bears comparison with that facing US troops in western Iraq battling Sunni rebels and al-Qaeda militants - although casualties there are far higher. Every time they try to clear an area, the insurgents move elsewhere and then return when the Americans have gone. That is what militant groups have been doing all year in Kunar, according to local officials and residents of the province who spoke to the BBC. The difficult, high altitude terrain is on their side. So too, say these officials, is the presence of a nearby safe haven - the tribal areas of neighbouring Pakistan. They say many militants fled there after the most recent nine-day American offensive in late November.

In a press release about Operation 'Sorkh Khar' - which translates as Operation Red Donkey - the US military described it as a "success" in dominating "the enemy in what has been a staging area in Kunar." But residents and officials in the province - who asked not to be named because of security concerns - said many insurgents had now returned. The stronghold of these groups - and the focus of many US operations - has been the steep, forested Korengal valley, to the north-west of the provincial capital, Asadabad. It was here that the US Chinook helicopter was shot down on 28 June, after being sent in to rescue a special forces unit on the ground whose mission had been compromised. Three members of that four-man team were also killed. The valley has become a kind of meeting place for anti-American militants of all shades. "Enemy central" in the words of one US soldier who's been there. Local officials have said for some time that supporters of the Taleban and al-Qaeda have been increasingly working together there.

They also co-operate with militants from Hizb-e Islami Gulbuddin, a group led by hardline Islamist former mujahideen commander and one time Afghan prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. His whereabouts are unknown, but he is one of the key targets of US forces in the region. So too is the man said to be al-Qaeda's leader in Kunar, an Arab called Abu Ikhlas al-Misri, who fought the Russians in the region during the 1980s and has lived there ever since, marrying locally. In turn, he is believed to work closely with a Taleban commander known as Ahmad Shah, who US commanders believe was involved in bringing down the helicopter. Add to this difficult mix "criminal activity", according to Lt-Col Jerry O'Hara, chief spokesman at the US military's main operational base Bagram - with many people involved in smuggling "drugs, timber and gems". But the US is not losing in Kunar or its Korengal valley in particular, he insists. "We're not letting go of that area." But in the long term, he says, "the solution there is not going to be a military one. It's about the Afghan government and security forces taking over."

One tactic US forces have recently tried is to broadcast messages on local radio in the name of Kunar's governor calling on Korengal residents to expel "enemy fighters living in their areas". It's all part of an approach used nationwide by the US-led coalition, to try to undermine support for militants in these areas. And despite the intense militant activity in Kunar, Afghan officials say many people there only provide support under pressure. The BBC obtained a copy of one broadcast from officials in the province who requested anonymity. They said they had been given the message by American personnel from a local base and believed that is where it had been written, even though it was in the name of the governor and his deputy.

This is how it ends: "if they 125the people of Korengal.375 are not going to comply with the demands of expelling the enemy from their villages then we will be forced to continue to pursue the enemy relentlessly until the elders either force them to leave or the hand of our national security troops force them out.

The people of Korengal are either with the people of Kunar or against them." However, when asked about the message, the US military said it was not their work. "I am told we did not write this document; that it was written by the governor," said Lt Colonel Laurent Fox, a spokesman at its headquarters in Kabul, in an e-mailed response. However, his statement confirmed that US troops had put it out. "I was told that CJTF-76 (the operational name of the US-led coalition force in Afghanistan) did transcribe it after it came out and ran some messages based on this letter on Peace radio in that area." But according to Human Rights Watch, regardless of the document's original authorship, broadcasting the message to the people of Korengal could break international conventions.

"It contains a barely veiled threat of collective punishment," said Sam Zarifi, its research director for Asia. "Making such a threat is a violation of the Geneva conventions and other laws of war." Lt Colonel Laurent Fox said the aim of transmitting the message was to use "non-lethal means against anti-government personnel." However, some Afghan officials involved in disseminating the broadcast said they were not happy about the language, which they described as "how the foreigners speak". "It will make things worse," another warned.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Taliban internal debate settled, new offensive planned
2005-09-26
An internal debate within the Taliban - whether to launch increasingly aggressive attacks against the US-led coalition or to allow the insurgency to bleed the Afghan government over time - has been settled this year, according to a rebel commander and Afghan security officials.

In the most violent year of their insurgency to date, the Taliban have gone on the offensive, launching more pitched battles in an effort to persuade the international community and Afghans that this remains very much a nation at war, says Mullah Gul Mohammad, a front-line commander for Jaish-e Muslimeen, a recently reconciled Taliban splinter group.

"For the past many days we [the Taliban and the Jaish] have been fighting together against our common enemies," says Mullah Mohammad, who says he traveled from Afghanistan to Chaman, Pakistan, for an interview. The insurgents are flush with new weapons - including surface-to-air missiles - and cash, he says, and are pausing only to see if the US military decides to draw down forces following the Sept. 18 parliamentary elections. "If they stay, we would launch our attacks anew."

In the four years since the fall of the Taliban government, there have been many moments when it appeared that the Taliban insurgency had breathed its last breath. But this year was different. The Taliban have launched a series of attacks that has raised this year's death toll - 1,200 civilians and military personnel so far - to a wartime high. Their attacks show increasing sophistication, US and Afghan officials say, and a UN report now warns that the Taliban may be receiving tactical training from jihadists returning from Iraq.

With an apparently revitalized Taliban insurgency, the American military and its NATO allies must now decide whether their strategy needs retooling, and American diplomats could have increasing difficulty convincing NATO allies to take over leadership of the Afghan counterinsurgency campaign. It could be a hard sell, indeed. Even US military commanders say it is too soon to count the Taliban out.

"I'm not ready to sign up to the fact that Taliban are crumbling," said Gen. Jason Kamiya, operational commander for the US-led Combined Forces Command, at a recent press conference at Bagram Airbase. "There still will be an enemy insurgency next spring."

At first glance, the Taliban appear to be a weak force. US military estimates suggest there may be only 800 Taliban fighters left, many of them holding out in villages along the Afghan-Pakistan border, and in rugged mountainous regions of south and central Afghanistan. One clear sign of Taliban weakness was seen on election day, where no significant incidents of violence disrupted voting, despite a call for a boycott by Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi.

Yet, US and Afghan intelligence sources suggest that the Taliban have shown recent signs of confidence - or desperation. Roadside bombings have increased 40 percent this year over last year, according to a report by the UN. These bombings have become increasingly effective, using "shaped" explosives used by Iraqi militants against US forces there, set off by sophisticated remote-control devices.

Perhaps more important, the Taliban are sticking around to fight US forces after they detonate roadside bombs, using heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, and Kalashnikovs to pin down US troops and increase casualties.

When they are captured, the Taliban often carry high-tech radio equipment, and are even wearing new sneakers, all signs that the insurgents have found new financial support.

"They are updating their technology," says Gov. Mirajuddin Pathan, governor of Khost Province, which shares a 110-mile border with Pakistan's tumultuous Waziristan district. "They have new remote-control devices, new explosives. They never stay quiet. But now, we have better intelligence of what they are planning."

Just last week, national intelligence police swept through the dormitories of Khost University and arrested eight people. The leader appears to have been a third-year engineering student from Afghanistan's central Wardak Province. He and the other suspects were captured with 200 pounds of explosives and two sophisticated remote-control systems.

The simplest of the two was designed to set off one land mine in an urban area to attract a crowd. Once a sufficient crowd had gathered, and police officers had arrived to investigate, a second larger explosion would detonate, inflicting a heavy death toll.

"This has become rather ordinary technique," says a senior officer for the National Directorate of Security, Afghanistan's intelligence agency, based in Khost.

He picks up a black box of circuit boards, wires, and a battery. "The technique is very old, it belongs to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar," he says, referring to the commander of Hizb-e Islami, a radical Islamist party that fought against the Soviets. "The technology is new, from Japan and China. The training is Al Qaeda."

Pakistan, which many Afghan officials believe is continuing to support the Taliban movement, says that it has killed 353 militants in its border tribal areas since March 2004. Some 175 of these militants have been foreigners such as Uzbeks, Tajiks, Turkmens, Chechens, and a few Arabs.

This month, Pakistani authorities also announced a major haul of explosives and weaponry after an early September raid of a madrassah near the Waziristan town of Miranshah. The madrassah, run by a relative of Taliban commander Jalaluddin Haqqani, had become a storage depot for weapons. Twenty-one suspects, 11 of them foreigners, were arrested.

Among the items found at the madrassah was a small battery-operated remote-control plane with a wide-angle camera lens, apparently used to track US military troop movements inside Afghanistan.

US military commanders admit that 2005 has been the bloodiest year yet in the Afghan campaign - with 82 US military fatalities this year. But they insist that the higher death toll comes from a more aggressive US strategy to take the war to the enemy.

Taliban commanders and their allies say that it is their own strategy that has changed, and they boast that they now have the finances, equipment, and motivation to fight on for years, or even decades.

"Both the Taliban and Jaish have weapons and arsenal which were being piled up in the past several decades; we have enough for centuries to come," says Gul Mohammad, one of a few top commanders for Jaish-e Muslimeen. He is on Pakistan's most wanted list.

Mohammad says the Jaish, with help from Hizb-e Islami, have recently uncovered a large cache of old weapons, including American shoulder-fired rockets that are capable of shooting down US military planes and helicopters.

In 2002, US forces found an old cache of 30 such rockets as part of a wider effort to collect any US-made Stinger missiles leftover from the anti-Soviet jihad. Over 2,000 Stingers were sent to Afghanistan via Pakistan in the 1980s, and the weapons proved extremely effective against Soviet airpower. As of early this year, no US aircraft has been shot down by a Stinger.

"We have found a new depot of weapons in Afghanistan and we can now strike down American aircraft and helicopters," Gul Mohammad declared enthusiastically. A US Chinook helicopter crashed Sunday in southern Afghanistan, killing all five crew members. The Taliban claim to have shot it down, but the US military said that did not appear to be the case. The crash remains under investigation.

Aside from weapons, Gul Mohammad says the broader insurgent movement is now adequately funded through zakat, the traditional tithe that Muslims pay to their mosques as charity for the poor and disadvantaged.

Khost officials such as Governor Pathan say that the peaceful elections are a sign that the Taliban are disorganized, weak, and on the run. It is certainly true that the Taliban have had an ongoing debate about how aggressively they should fight against the US, whose airpower killed hundreds if not thousands of Taliban fighters with high-flying B-52 bombers in October 2001.

But while the Jaish recently broke with the Taliban in Oct. 2004 - with its brazen kidnapping of three UN election workers in the middle of a Kabul traffic jam - Gul Mohammad says that these differences have been settled for now.

"Our differences were based on some principles, but even those were just for a temporary phase," Gul Mohammad says. "We are fighting a common enemy."
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Afghanistan/South Asia
US Transfers Detainees to Afghan Government After Riot
2005-07-29
From Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Police in Afghanistan said the U.S. military has handed over a group of Afghans detained following a 26 July protest outside the main U.S. base at Bagram in Parwan Province, north of Kabul... At least 1,000 Afghans demonstrated to demand the release of the locals, whom the U.S. military said were arrested in an anti-insurgency operation. The U.S. military claimed that improvised bombs of the sort used by Taliban and allied Islamist insurgents against U.S. and government forces were discovered during the raids.

Parwan police chief Abdul Rahman Sayyedkhayl said all of the detained men were handed over to Afghan police custody, while U.S. authorities promised not to search houses without government approval. According to initial reports, Afghan forces accompanied their U.S. counterparts during the arrests, which included a local commander formerly associated with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's radical Hizb-e Islami.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Freed Guantanamo prisoner says he wasn't tortured
2005-04-24
An Afghan man freed from the U.S. detention center for terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay said Saturday he was stripped naked and photographed the day he arrived, but was not tortured during three years at the camp.
"Jones! Take a picture of his pee-pee! I need it for my collection!"
He said his interrogators asked over and over: "Do you know Osama?"
What were they supposed to ask him? "Do you like root beer?"
Abdul Rahim Muslim Dost, 42, told The Associated Press that he and his brother were arrested at their home on Nov. 17, 2001, by Pakistani intelligence agents and eventually taken to the U.S. military facility at Bagram, north of the Afghan capital, Kabul.
He was arrested at the same time as the siege of Konduz. Presumably he was sent to Bagram from Pakland later than that, since we didn't control the place when he was arrested.
After about 11 weeks there, he was flown to Guantanamo. "First I was questioned by Pakistani security men. Then American men and women also started to interrogate me. They had only one question: Do you know Osama?" Dost said, referring to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden. "I told them that you have made Osama so popular that even children and mad people know him very well," he said.
That was a witty answer. I'd guess that might have had something to do with his Caribbean vacation.
The same line of questioning continued at Guantanamo Bay, with American interrogators also asking him whether he had anything to do with Taliban leaders. "I told them I had nothing to do with Osama or the Taliban," Dost insisted from the home he shares with his wife and eight children in this frontier city.
"I'm just a simple but very well armed shepherd. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a wife and eight children to feed. They haven't eaten in four years, y'know..."
Relatives stopped by to send their congratulations, and his children scurried around him.
"Eat! Eat! Daddy! Can we have something to eat?"
It was Dost's first interview since he and 16 other Afghan men were set free in neighboring Afghanistan on Tuesday. The next day he traveled by road to this city in northwestern Pakistan, where he and his family have lived for the past 30 years. Dost said before his arrest he had worked for three Afghan magazines, "Ahsan" (Justice), "Zeray" (Good News) and "Dawat" (Invitation), which were all sympathetic to the Taliban. He said he had once been a member of Afghan rebel leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hizb-e Islami party, but had severed ties to the group.
"When was that?"
"Shortly after I got arrested."
"I committed no crime against the Americans or anyone else," Dost said.
"That's assuming you have a fluid definition of 'crime,' of course."
Dost's brother, Badrul Zaman Badr, who was freed from Guantanamo in December 2004, sat at his side as he recounted his experiences at the prison. Dost said on the day he arrived his American jailers forced him to take off his clothes, then photographed him. After that he was taken to a doctor and then given an orange prison jump suit. "I was never tortured," Dost said. "But I was kept in solitary confinement and that was worse than torture."
"Oh, much worse than torture! You can't see 'em, but I have solitary confinement scars all over my body!"
None of the other Afghans freed Tuesday have been interviewed. But one claimed during impromptu comments at a news conference held in Kabul to mark their release that he had been abused. "There was a lot of bad treatment against us, but this is not the time to tell you," Abdul Rahman said before being whisked away by Afghan security agents. "Everybody in the world knows what kind of jail it is. I can't talk about it now."
"I'll think of something, though!"
Dost said he had heard stories of sexual humiliation, including an American female guard who allegedly threw menstrual blood at an inmate, and male and female guards having sex in front of an Arab detainee. Other former inmates have told stories with similar details. But Dost and his brother said nothing like that happened to them. After 14 months of daily interrogation, Dost says he was moved to a cage alongside other inmates who were no longer wanted for questioning.
That'd be Small Fry Row...
Finally he was taken to a courtroom at the prison where three people "who looked like judges" briefly heard his case. A few weeks later he was freed without an apology.
"Get the hell out and don't come back!"
"Does that mean you ain't gonna apologize?"
"Jones! Take another picture of his doinker!"
"I'm goin'! I'm goin'!"
The releases lowered the number of detainees classified as "enemy combatants" at the U.S. Navy base on the tip of Cuba to about 520 from about 40 countries. Dost said he was considering filing a lawsuit to seek compensation for his years behind bars, and that he was thinking of writing a book. "My business suffered because of my arrest, and my family suffered as well to have two members taken there. My mother is so depressed that she still thinks one day the Americans will come and arrest us again."
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Taliban Attack Voting-Registration Centers
2004-07-07
From Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
The voter-registration center in the Tolkan area of Panjwai District of Kandahar Province was attacked on 5 July, Hindukosh News Agency reported the next day. According to the report, a group of suspected neo-Taliban attacked the center for about an hour, during which one person trying to obtain a voter-registration card was wounded. ....

Unknown assailants attacked two vote-registration centers in Logar Province on 5 July, Afghanistan Television reported the next day. According to the report, "opponents" attacked a center located in a secondary school in Hesarak village and blew up a second center. There were no casualties reported in the attacks. Afghanistan Television reported that loyalists of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the radical leader of Hizb-e Islami, and members of Al-Qaeda have threatened to disrupt the elections.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Many Members of Hekmatyar’s Gang Now Say They Will Participate in Elections
2004-05-13
Mohammad Kaleq Faruqi, chairman of the decision-making council of Hizb-e Islami, and other members of the council on 11 May obtained voter-registration cards for the upcoming presidential and parliamentary elections, Afghanistan Television reported. Faruqi said that all members of Hizb-e Islami in all provinces of Afghanistan will take part in the elections scheduled for September. The United States has labeled Hizb-e Islami leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar a terrorist. Recently, however, Faruqi and other members of the radical party have held talks with Afghan Transitional Administration Chairman Hamid Karzai and other Afghan leaders.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Update on Amanullah: U.S. Says It Is Holding Hekmatyar Ally
2004-04-05
The U.S. military said Monday it is holding a senior ally of renegade warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and suspects the man was involved in helping organize two suicide bomb attacks that killed a British and a Canadian peacekeeper earlier this year. The March 31 arrest of Amanullah had been announced previously, but the military had given no details of what he was suspected of doing. Military spokesman Lt. Col. Bryan Hilferty said Amanullah harbored militant leaders and helped protect the men who carried out the back-to-back suicide bombings in Kabul in January that killed one Canadian and one British soldier. Both attacks were claimed by the Taliban. Amanullah "provided safe haven perhaps for the bombers or for people who facilitated the bombers," Hilferty said, adding that he was being questioned at an undisclosed location. He said the man was also suspected of involvement in other bombings in Kabul, but declined to give details. "We do suspect him, though, of harboring anti-coalition leaders," Hilferty added.

Hilferty said bomb-making materials and weapons, including grenades and a machine gun, were found by U.S. and Afghan troops when they seized Amanullah on Wednesday at a compound in Mayden Shahr, the capital of Wardak province, about 25 miles west of Kabul. The U.S. military has said it is confident of trapping fugitives including al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, Taliban chief Mullah Omar and Hekmatyar this year. Amanullah, who like many Afghans uses only one name, was a commander in central Wardak province for Hekmatyar’s Hizb-e Islami faction during the U.S.-backed war against Afghanistan’s Soviet occupiers in the 1980s. Hilferty said he was still a "senior commander" for the group, which has joined the Taliban in vowing to drive foreign troops out of the country and oust President Hamid Karzai.
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