India-Pakistan |
Karzai: Pakistan trying to make 'slaves' of Afghans |
2006-12-13 |
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday lashed out at Pakistan for the third time this week, accusing the neighboring country of trying to make "slaves" of the Afghan people. Karzai's rhetorical barrage against Pakistan started in a tearful speech Sunday, when he said terrorists from Pakistan are killing Afghan children. He ratcheted up his criticism Tuesday, directly charging the Pakistan government with supporting the Taliban. On Wednesday, he again took direct aim at Afghanistan's eastern neighbor. "Pakistan hopes to make slaves out of us, but we will not surrender," Karzai said in a school courtyard, in a 90-minute speech punctuated by frequent applause from several hundred students. He said Afghan students may aspire to lofty career goals, but that "Pakistan wants you to be a gatekeeper at the hotel in Karachi." Afghan and Western officials have long blamed Pakistan for not doing enough to stop terrorists from training on its soil and then crossing the border to attack in Afghanistan. Several suspects recently arrested for allegedly planning suicide bomb attacks have come from Pakistan. Pakistan's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Tasnim Aslam, said the Taliban are operating well inside Afghanistan, and reiterated that Islamabad is standing up to the problem. "Pakistan is doing whatever is needed to counter extremism and terrorism and not to allow its territory to be used for militant activities in Afghanistan. We have deployed 80,000 troops. We are taking military action," she said. NATO's International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan has to do more, Aslam said. If Afghan refugees living in Pakistan return to their home country, "this would remove the presence of Afghans close to the border, which appear to prompt the allegation from Kabul," she said. Pakistan Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri said Karzai was misinformed and was merely looking for a scapegoat. "To those who say this, I would like to say that it is a common human reaction when you have difficulties, you find somebody else to blame. I am not talking about President Karzai," Kasuri said Wednesday in Islamabad. "People who are well-informed ... they know better. They know what Pakistan is doing, they know the price that Pakistan is paying," Kasuri said. According to a tally by The Associated Press based on reports from Afghan, NATO and coalition officials, nearly 4,000 people have died in violence during 2006 mostly militants but also including about 300 civilians. |
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India-Pakistan |
Mumbai train bombers are enemies of peace process: Kasuri |
2006-07-17 |
![]() Kasuri, however, did not speculate on the identities or origins of any suspects in Tuesday's eight bomb blasts on commuter trains in Mumbai. The coordinated bombings killed 182 people and injured more than 800. "Well, one thing I know, that these people do not wish Pakistan and India's peace process well. They are the enemies of the peace process, and we condemn this unequivocally," Kasuri told CNN when asked who he thought was responsible for the attacks. In the interview, aired on Sunday night, Kasuri condemned the blasts as a "dastardly act." Some Indian officials have blamed the bombings on Islamic militants, which New Delhi alleges are aided by Pakistan, a charge Pakistan denies. |
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Afghanistan |
Afghanistan says Pakistan dishonest for calling terror data outdated |
2006-03-08 |
![]() The war of words reflects increasing bitterness between these two key U.S. allies as militant violence escalates on both sides and Islamabad proposed fencing or mining the rugged frontier. A spokesman for President Hamid Karzai, Karim Rahimi, said that Kabul will present Islamabad with further intelligence about the militants' suspected whereabouts inside Pakistan and that it was "hopeful that measures will be taken." Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri said, "We will definitely investigate," but he reiterated Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf's assertion that the intelligence has been "out of date." During a visit to Islamabad last month, Mr. Karzai gave a list to Gen. Musharraf of Taliban and al Qaeda fugitives who he said were hiding in Pakistan. Afghan and Pakistani officials said that the list included Taliban supreme leader Mullah Mohammed Omar and top associates, and that Afghanistan also shared the locations of suspected terrorist training camps. "Afghanistan provided very strong and accurate intelligence," Mr. Rahimi told reporters in response to Gen. Musharraf's assertion in an interview Sunday on CNN that the information was old. Pakistan has accused Afghanistan of leaking the list to the press because Kabul did not trust Islamabad to act on it. "I'll make a suggestion to our Afghan brothers: 'Don't talk to us through the media. It doesn't help,'" Mr. Kasuri said in Islamabad. He said the two nations instead should use diplomatic and intelligence channels. "When President Karzai was here, he said, 'Pakistan and Afghanistan are like twins,'" Mr. Kasuri said. "The twins should not kick each other." One of the key disputes between the neighbors involves the flow of militants across the nations' 1,470-mile-long border. Afghanistan has long demanded that Pakistan do more to crack down on militants based on its side. Islamabad repeatedly has said it's doing all it can, pointing to the 80,000 Pakistani troops in the region. Mr. Kasuri reiterated a Pakistani proposal that the entire border be fenced or mined to stop the infiltration of militants into either country. But Afghanistan says that it is not feasible to fence the frontier, which cuts its way through rugged mountains and across a desert, and that mining the area would split families that live on both sides of the unmarked border. |
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India-Pakistan |
US still unsure as to al-Zawahiri's fate |
2006-01-17 |
U.S. intelligence officials said Monday they were trying to determine whether Osama bin Laden's top lieutenant was at a dinner in a remote Pakistani village and whether he was one of the people killed by a CIA airstrike. The U.S. officials said they had solid intelligence that a number of senior al Qaeda personnel were killed in Friday's attack, which targeted houses in Damadola, Pakistan. The officials said Ayman al-Zawahiri, al Qaeda's No. 2 man, was invited to the Damadola dinner celebrating the end of the Muslim holiday of Eid. But only some of al-Zawahiri's aides were there, Pakistani intelligence officials said Sunday, according to The Associated Press. A U.S. counterterrorism official told CNN, "I cannot confirm at this point whether he [al-Zawahiri] showed up or not." The remains of about 12 bodies, including as many as eight foreigners, were quickly retrieved by a group of men after the airstrike and buried elsewhere, sources said. U.S. officials declined to comment on that report. Pakistani officials said Sunday that 18 civilians died in the attack, including five children, five women and eight men. One Pakistani intelligence official said al-Zawahiri was not among the dead and it was not known whether he had been in the area. Pakistan Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri said that "as far as the reports that we've got so far, he wasn't there." In an interview with CNN, Kasuri expressed outrage Monday that Pakistani forces had not been included. "This is terrible -- 18 people have died -- innocent people, women and children apart from some men," he said. Though U.S. and Pakistani forces have long shared intelligence, "any operations, if and when requested, will be conducted by the Pakistani army, to prevent just the sort of occurrence that happened," he said. Kasuri declined to say whether Pakistani authorities had been informed of the strike beforehand. "The important thing is not whether we knew or not," he said. "The important thing is a question of our sovereignty, a violation of our sovereignty." The U.S. ambassador to Pakistan has been "called in," he said, adding that he is prepared to take his complaint higher. "If required, I'll talk to Dr. Rice," he said, referring to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. "Actions of this nature strengthen the hands of those who oppose this kind of cooperation." CNN analyst John McLaughlin, a former CIA deputy director, said that if al-Zawahiri is alive "there is a reasonable chance we will know sometime within the week" -- either because al Qaeda will put out a new tape to capitalize on the U.S. failure to get him or from "other intelligence sources or possibly forensics." If al-Zawahiri is dead, it could take longer to verify, McLaughlin said. U.S. officials confirmed that the FBI has a DNA sample from al-Zawahiri's brother that could be used for forensic identification purposes, but they declined to say whether forensic work was under way to identify those killed. FBI Special Agent Richard Kolko said while the bureau often does DNA work for the Defense Department and other agencies, "no request has been received for assistance at this time; however, we remain available if asked." The killings sparked demonstrations across the country Sunday, with tens of thousands of people marching against Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and the United States. Demonstrations took place in Lahore, Islamabad, Peshawar and Karachi. In Bajour agency, the district including Damadola, tribal leaders vowed to continue their protest for three days, and shops in the district will be closed. On Sunday, U.S. politicians expressed regret over the deaths caused by the attack but said the airstrike was justified. "It's terrible when innocent people are killed; we regret that," Sen. John McCain told CBS' "Face the Nation." "But we have to do what we think is necessary to take out al Qaeda, particularly the top operatives. This guy has been more visible than Osama bin Laden lately," the Arizona Republican said. Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Indiana, told CNN's "Late Edition With Wolf Blitzer" that the Pakistani government is unable to control that part of the country, where sympathetic residents were believed to be harboring al Qaeda leaders. "Now, it's a regrettable situation, but what else are we supposed to do?" Bayh asked rhetorically. "It's like the Wild, Wild West out there. The Pakistani border [with Afghanistan is] a real problem." |
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Afghanistan-Pak-India |
India to Send Relief Material to Pakistan |
2005-10-11 |
India and Pakistan set aside their often-bitter rivalry Monday when Islamabad accepted an offer of aid for earthquake victims an outpouring of sympathy with vast political implications in easing mistrust between the nuclear neighbors. India is dispatching a planeload of about 25 tons of food, tents, medicine and other supplies for possible delivery by Tuesday. Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri said there was no problem accepting aid from its rival. "When it is a question of tragedy of this magnitude, it's not a question of one-upmanship," Kasuri said in an interview with India's New Delhi Television. "That is why the president of Pakistan has gone on record as having said that we aren't going to stand on ceremony." |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Osama bin Laden is still alive: Pakistan |
2005-05-20 |
Osama bin Laden, the world's most wanted fugitive, is alive and on the run with a small group of fighters, Pakistan's foreign minister says. "Osama bin Laden is alive and moving around from place to place, but not with a large group of people," a news report quoted Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri as saying. Kasuri wouldn't say whether Pakistan possessed specific information on the whereabouts of Osama. Kasuri said Pakistan's army had "paralysed al-Qaeda's communication network," and vastly reduced its capability to strike, according to the English-language newspaper The News. Pakistan's intelligence service captured Abu Farraj al-Libbi, reputed to be al-Qaeda's No 3 leader, on May 2. Al-Libbi - who remains in Pakistan's custody - was wanted for allegedly masterminding two December 2003 assassination attempts against President General Pervez Musharraf, who escaped unharmed. Seventeen other people were killed, however. Pakistan, a key ally of the United States in its war on terror, has handed over more than 700 al-Qaeda suspects to US officials, including al-Qaeda's then-No 3 Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who was arrested in March 2003 during a raid near Islamabad. Two other alleged al-Qaeda leaders, Ramzi Binalshibh and Abu Zubaydah, were also arrested in Pakistan. |
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