Afghanistan |
Top Woman Official Shot Dead |
2006-09-25 |
![]() Reports say that Jan served as the head of the women's affairs department in Kandahar since the hardline Taliban regime was ousted in 2001 by the US-led forces. An investigation has been launched into the attack. Earlier in September, the Taliban claimed responsibility for an attack which killed Abdul Hakim Taniwal - the governor of the eastern Paktia province - the highest ranking official to die in the insurgency. |
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Afghanistan | |
Suicide blast at governor's funeral kills five | |
2006-09-11 | |
![]() The blast took place in the Tanayee district, the native town of the late governor, said the official, adding, the dead included four policemen. The governor and two of his colleagues were killed in Paktia province on Sunday in a suicide attack outside his office.
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Afghanistan |
Suicide bomber kills Afghani governor |
2006-09-10 |
A SUICIDE bomber assassinated an Afghani provincial governor, as NATO said it killed almost 100 more Taliban fighters in its biggest offensive against the resurgent Islamist group. Governor Hakim Taniwal, a former mines minister who once lectured in an Australian university, is the first provincial chief killed since the Taliban fell five years ago, although there have been many assassinations attempts around the country. His driver also died when the bomber threw himself on the governor of Paktia province, bordering Pakistan, as he was entering his car, police said. The killing came as NATO said its forces and Afghani soldiers killed 94 Taliban insurgents in a battle in the southern province of Kandahar, the Taliban's heartland, in its biggest offensive against the rejuvenated Islamist movement. Backed by close air support, the militants were killed in two areas of Kandahar in four encounters that started on Saturday, NATO said in a statement. NATO did not say if there were any casualties among NATO or Afghani forces in the fighting in Zari and Panjwai districts. NATO has encountered heavier-than-expected fighting since taking over southern Afghanistan from US-led troops on July 31 to allow Washington to reduce its forces. If true, the latest casualties would bring to more than 400 the number of Taliban killed since NATO launched Operation Medusa just over a week ago. |
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Afghanistan-Pak-India |
Belmont Club: Dead Man Laughing |
2005-10-13 |
Oxblog points to a Washington Post article by Peter Baker, who has been covering Afghanistan since the US ousted the Taliban. Sometime back he met a Hakim Taniwal, an Afghan who had formerly been a sociology professor in Australia, seemingly bent on a suicide mission. Taniwal had a commission in his pocket from President Karzai appointing him governor of a province. Unfortunately the governor's mansion was occupied by a warlord whose retainers were armed to the teeth. Taniwal was nevertheless determined to take possession and Baker never expected to see him alive again. "Dead man walking". It didn't quite turn out that way.When I saw him again here two weeks ago, he was sitting in the provincial governor's office and the warlord was somewhere in the countryside, out of power, his militia largely disbanded. I reminded Taniwal of our first meeting, when he could not even get into the governor's house because it was occupied by the warlord's family and dozens of his thuggish guerrillas, bristling with Kalashnikovs and grenade launchers. Taniwal looked at me and smiled. "Things have changed," he said with satisfaction.In Indian Country, the smaller the tactical unit, the more forward deployed it is, and the more autonomy it enjoys from the chain of command, the more that can be accomplished. It simply isn't enough for units to be out all day in Iraqi towns and villages engaged in presence patrols and civil-affairs projects: A successful forward operating base is a nearly empty one, in which most units are living beyond the base perimeters among the indigenous population for days or weeks at a time. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Update: Khost Provincial Reconstruction Team |
2004-03-26 |
EFL The U.S. military inaugurated a project on Thursday that is supposed to speed reconstruction and win over skeptical Afghans in a former al-Qaida stronghold that is still on the front line of Americaâs war on terrorism. Military and Afghan officials cut a ribbon across the entrance to the office of the Khost provincial reconstruction team, the 12th of its kind and a symbol of Americaâs changing strategy in the face of a stubborn Taliban-led insurgency. "Combat has been necessary in the past to defeat the terrorist threat, which is our common enemy," Maj. Gen. Lloyd Austin, the U.S. second-in-command in Afghanistan, told dozens of Afghan elders and officials at the ceremony. "But our concern now is the future. Our emphasis must remain on setting the conditions for reconstruction and development," Austin said. Commanders claim that Taliban and al-Qaida holdouts are now so weakened that they can be finished off by bringing long-delayed relief and reconstruction aid to their former strongholds in the south and east. Yet attacks on aid workers and military targets continue, and the number of mainly U.S. soldiers here has risen some 2,000 -- to 13,500 in all -- in recent months as the military seeks to capture al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar. The reconstruction team in Khost, and others like it, is key to victory, commanders said. A squat concrete building, its walls still wet and its windows yet to be glazed, will house a small group of American soldiers with orders to catalyze reconstruction and aid work. Austin said the team would build schools, wells and clinics to bolster local services. Streets in Khost city are also to be repaved. All the projects are intended to pour money into the local economy. Top U.S. commanders at Wednesdayâs ceremony were not available to speak to reporters covering the event, embellished with national anthems and flags and a bout of traditional Afghan music and dance. Bearded American soldiers in civilian clothes moved in and out of the heavily guarded base in dust-caked Humvees and pickup trucks, betraying how the war continues. Does that rankle and AP guy or what? Why wonât they talk to me? Canât they see that Iâm the Press? Instead, it was left to a reservist physician at a small clinic in the barren, rock-strewn base to defend the reconstruction effort in what is still a combat zone. "There is a âhearts-and-mindsâ aspect and you canât overestimate that," said Capt. Steve Travis, a native of Guthrie, Okla. But weâre really making a difference," Travis said, pointing to more than 9,000 mostly female patients treated since November. "Itâs not eyewash." At the ceremony, Khost Gov. Hakim Taniwal pleaded for international aid groups and the United Nations to return to his province. Fat chance with the Paki fight going on. But officials acknowledge that aid workers spooked by the deadly shootings of mine clearers and well-diggers still donât believe the border areas are safe. I wonder if giving the press the ice cold shoulder is payback for the slanted coverage. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | |
Pakistani cordon now 60 kilometers | |
2004-03-21 | |
Commanders say they have trapped the fighters in a 60 kilometer (37 mile) circumference cordon around two villages in the semi-autonomous northwest tribal region, within 20 kilometers of the Afghan border.
Afghan commanders in southeast border provinces of Paktia, Paktika and Khost, facing Pakistan's South Waziristan and North Waziristan, said US forces had stepped up activities in recent days. "There is increased activity by American forces in Paktika province and along the Afghan-Pakistan border," border commander Zakim Khan told AFP. "The Americans have increased their activities in Khost recently," Khost governor Hakim Taniwal said. | |
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Afghanistan | |
US planes bomb Afghan house after Taleban attack | |
2003-05-10 | |
US war planes attacked a house in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday after a government militiaman was killed and a US soldier wounded in an ambush by suspected Taleban fighters. The ambush happened on Friday about five kilometres west of Khost where several hundred US-led troops are based, said Hayatullah, a security officer for Khost governor, Hakim Taniwal. At least one of the attackers was killed in a one-hour clash that followed the ambush. Government reinforcements surrounded a house where others suspected Taleban fighters had taken refuge. âIn the morning American planes came and badly destroyed it,â Hayatullah said. It was not clear how many of the occupants were killed or wounded, he said. It was the first time US aircraft had conducted an attack in Afghanistan in about six weeks.
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Afghanistan |
Key road in the east reopens |
2003-03-04 |
A key road in the volatile eastern region of Afghanistan that was blocked for five days by gunmen loyal to a warlord has reopened following successful negotiations. "The road is open since Monday morning and people can move freely," Hakim Taniwal, the governor of eastern Khowst Province told IRIN. âWe are happy that the issue was resolved through negotiations rather than force.â Why? You bored? It'll be back again... Zakamdad Sarmalim, a senior official in Khowst, told IRIN that the road had been closed last week by the Dari Khel subclan of the Zadran, who were allied to the renegade warlord, Badshah Khan Zadran. âThey used to snatch vehicles and harass our people. But when we arrested them, they closed the road,â he said. Maybe you should have arrested those guys, too... An ethnic Pashtun commander, Zadran, was appointed governor of Paktia Province after the fall of the Taliban in late 2001. However, the tribes in the region refused to recognise his authority. He then moved to neighbouring Khowst Province and set up an administration parallel to that of Taniwal, the provinceâs anthropologist-turned-politician administrator appointed by President Hamid Karzai. In August, Badshah was forced to leave Khowst and retreated to his mountainous native village in Paktia Province. Since then, he and his men have been linked to the harassment and robbery of travellers and traders on the road between Khowst and Gardez, where his armed supporters had established many checkpoints. I keep forgetting the difference between a warlord and a bandit. I'm sure it'll come to me... |
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Afghanistan |
Afghan Nomads Battle Rival Tribe |
2002-11-17 |
Afghan troops were dispatched to end a land dispute between nomads and a rival tribe who battled each other with mortars and rocket launchers in eastern Afghanistan. Nomadic Kuchis fought members of the Piran tribe in Piran village, five miles south of Khost on Saturday night, said Mohammad Khan Gorbuz, a spokesman for the province's governor.Gorbuz said Gov. Hakim Taniwal sent a delegation and a unit of Afghan soldiers to the village, which was reported quiet on Sunday. This isn't unrest directed against the government. This is sweet normality among the turban and automatic weapons set who live in the area. |
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Afghanistan |
Zadran forces shoot it out with Taniwal's men... |
2002-10-17 |
Fighting erupted Wednesday in the troubled eastern province of Khost when militiamen backing renegade warlord Bacha Khan Zadran attacked several checkpoints manned by men loyal to Gov. Hakim Taniwal, according to Taniwal's spokesman, Mohammad Khan Gorbuz. The fighting at Nadir Shahkot district, about 10 miles west of Khost town, was continuing Thursday. Taniwal's forces, numbering 800, had surrounded Zadran's positions in Nadir Shahkot. Advancing Thursday, they found three bodies of Zadran's fighters. Damn. Only three? Guess every little bit helps. I'll sure be glad when Zadran and his immediate family are decomposing. So will Karzai. He'll probably be gladder than I am, for that matter... |
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Afghanistan |
Two Killed As Zadran Ambushes Officials |
2002-10-09 |
Two Afghan government soldiers were killed in the southeast of the country when a convoy carrying provincial officials was ambushed by the forces of a renegade warlord. Hakim Taniwal, governor of Khost province, told Reuters the soldiers were killed when they returned small-arms fire on the convoy from fighters loyal to his rival, Padshah Khan Zadran, in the Nadir Shah Kot area, 15 km (10 miles) west of Khost city on Monday afternoon. He said there were about 12 local government officials in the convoy who survived the ambush unscathed. Zadran, reached by satellite phone, confirmed the ambush, but said he was too busy to discuss details. "Yeah. We ambushed 'em. Wiped 'em out. They're all dead. Can't talk now, though — I'm late for a meeting..." The attack on the convoy came weeks after Taniwal's forces drove Zadran's out of Khost. Zadran has since vowed to retake Khost. 'Course, he also vowed he wouldn't leave it... Taniwal said the provincial officials had been heading to neighbouring Paktia province on official business. "The council members all managed to escape the scene of the fighting," he said. "We lost two people and some were wounded and I think there may be have been casualties on Zadran's side too." Unless the government guys were shooting in the air until they were waxed... Taniwal said his forces had captured eleven of Zadran's fighters during Monday's clash, including one Pakistani military officer from northwestern Pakistan. "He was fighting alongside Zadran when he was seized. We don't know how or why he came here. We will investigate." Now that would be significant. If the Paks are Great Gaming in this mess, the question is, is it the gummint, or is it ISI working on its own? Mr Pak Military officer should be pretty unhappy right about now — he would be if I was running things, anyway. |
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Afghanistan |
Khost breathes a little easier with no Zadran... |
2002-10-03 |
The battle began in late afternoon. By the time residents of Khost woke up the following morning Padshah Khan Zadran had fled into hiding and the run-down and dusty eastern Afghan town breathed a collective sigh of relief. The burly, moustachioed warlord who waltzed into town with a gang of hustlers and strongmen and took it over in May was hardly missed. Zadran was sent packing on September 8 by troops loyal to the central government of President Hamid Karzai, after defying Karzai's authority for months. Getting rid of this guy was in the same category as wart removal... It was a rare but welcome victory for Kabul over the warlords who still threaten his country's fragile stability. Overnight, the buildings Zadran once occupied were set on fire, the four-wheel drive cars he once drove were confiscated by the state and the power he once wielded was gone. Nothing but a lingering odor... "He had about 80 men around him that were the real opportunists and were out for their personal gain," said Haji Khair Mohammad, brother of Khost's provincial governor Hakim Taniwal. "He will never be able to sleep in our province," said Khair Mohammad. "Now people realise that with the security in their town, they can have a decent life without fear," he said, calling Zadran's men "loafers and bandits". If Khost stops being Dodge City on a Saturday night, that'll calm a good part of the Pak border area. 'Bout time Zadran moved on to join the Talibs and the other losers... |
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