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Afghanistan
Ex-prince wants Taliban brought into Afghan govt
2008-05-08
Afghanistan should set-up a transitional government that includes members of the Taliban once President Hamid Karzai's term ends late next year if it is to escape unending crisis, a grandson of the late former king said on Wednesday.

Once a prince, Mostafa Zaher now heads a department overseeing conservation issues in Karzai's government, and while the royal family lacks a political powerbase it is often looked on as a symbol of national unity.

Like many Afghans, Zaher despairs that there is no end in sight to the Taliban insurgency, and conflict that has gripped the country since the late 1970s. "We are in the middle of a crisis at this very second, and the situation is getting worse," the balding former prince told journalists, adding that decisiveness and vision were needed.

Zaher, 44, has spent three decades living in exile in the West, and has degrees in political science and economics from Canada.
So he's not really an Afghan any more ...
His grandfather, the late King Mohammed Zahir Shah, returned to his homeland in 2002, months after U.S.-backed forces drove the Taliban from power. After returning to Afghanistan, Shah renounced his throne, and in return was accorded the honorary title of "father of the nation". He died last year.

Despite the presence of more than 55,000 foreign troops, attacks by the Taliban have dramatically jumped since 2006 in Afghanistan, prompting some Western politicians to warn recently that the country may slide back into anarchy.
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-Obits-
Last king of Afghanistan dead at 92
2007-07-23
Afghanistan's last king, Mohammed Zahir Shah, died in Kabul on Monday aged 92, mourned by the war-torn country where he had spent his final years after returning from three decades of exile. President Hamid Karzai declared three days of mourning for the "Father of the Nation," whose 40-year rule until 1973 is remembered as a time of peace and stability in the Central Asian country before its descent into chaos.

Afghan flags flew at half mast and state-run and private television channels alike replaced scheduled programmmes with recitations of the Koran and sombre religious chanting.

Zahir Shah ended Afghanistan's centuries-old monarchy when he abdicated while on holiday in Italy in 1973, after hearing his former premier Mohammad Daud, who was also his cousin, had staged a coup. He stayed in exile during the 1979-89 Soviet occupation and ensuing civil war but returned home months after the 2001 collapse of the ultra-Islamist Taliban regime brought by the US-led invasion after the 9/11 attacks.

Karzai announced the king's death in the presidential palace, saying: "I want to inform all my compatriots that his majesty, the Father of the Nation, Mohammed Zahir Shah, passed away today at 5:45 am." The former king died in his Kabul residence after a long illness, he said.

"We announce three days of national mourning over the death of the father of the nation, and the Afghan flag will be at half mast for three days," Karzai added. "Prayer ceremonies will be held across the country, in the capital, in the provinces, by Afghan refugees overseas and in Afghan embassies."

Prayers for the late king will be held on Wednesday, and the funeral will take place the following day to allow time for foreign guests, including prime ministers and foreign ministers, to attend, a government official told AFP.

Zahir Shah was awarded the title "Father of the Nation" at a constitutional assembly after his return home from exile. Despite pressure from tribal leaders and fellow Pashtuns, Zahir Shah repeatedly said he had no desire to again lead his country.

He was in poor health for the last years of his life.

His wife Homaira, whom he married in 1931, died as preparations were under way for her to return to Afghanistan to join her husband in 2002. The couple had five sons and two daughters.

Born on October 15, 1914, Zahir Shah took the throne at age 19 after being at the side of his father, king Nadir Shah, when he was shot dead in 1933 by a teenager at a school awards ceremony on the lawns of a Kabul palace.

Under his reign, a 1964 constitution turned Afghanistan into a modern democracy with free elections, a parliament and civil rights. However there were underlying problems, as the king was considered weak, there was widespread nepotism and a faltering economy. The tensions boiled over into the 1973 coup.

From Europe, Zahir Shah watched his country unravel, wracked by the Soviet occupation, an ensuing civil war and the hardline rule of the Taliban.

The Taliban paid tribute to the king's earlier years but said that he was used by the United States to serve its own interests after his return -- a five-year period that has seen the militants intensify a bloody insurgency. "The father of the nation was a known figure in the history of Afghanistan and enjoyed a lot of credibility," Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP in a telephone call from an unknown location. "Unfortunately, recently the Americans used him for their interests -- from his return to Afghanistan until the day he died, he served US interests and became a stooge in recent years," Ahmadi said.
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Afghanistan
Karzai proposes Father of Nation title for Zahir Shah
2002-06-11
Afghanistan's interim leader Hamid Karzai on Tuesday proposed that former king Mohammed Zahir Shah be formally titled "Father of the Nation" and given a series of important ceremonial responsibilities. "We would like to give him the title of 'Father of the Nation' but this has to be approved by the Loya Jirga," he said at the opening of the traditional gathering which will select a new transitional government for Afghanistan.

Karzai, who is expected to be appointed head of state in the new administration, proposed seven jobs for the popular 87-year-old former monarch, who returned to his homeland in April after nearly 30 years in exile in Italy. The first three are for him to inaugurate the Loya Jirga, the National Council -- or parliament -- and the drafting of the constitution. The fourth is his participation at the "highest level" on national days, meaning that events mandated under state protocol, like inspecting the national guard, will be presided over by the ex-king. The fifth and sixth are that he acts as "the upholder of peace" in the nation, and be responsible for the conferring of state titles and medals. Finally, Karzai proposed that after the week-long Loya Jirga, Zahir Shah again take up residence at the presidential palace where he lived for 60 years before his ouster.
Uh, Hamid? It sounds like you've just described what a constitutional monarch does. Only difference is that he won't be head of state...
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Afghanistan
Congress team to meet former king
2001-09-30
Washington Times
A bipartisan delegation from Congress will meet former Afghan King Mohammed Zahir Shah today to demonstrate Washington's support for efforts to build a post-Taliban government. The delegation of 11 members includes Reps. Dana Rohrabacher, California Republican and vice chairman of the House International Relations Committee's East Asia and Pacific subcommittee; Curt Weldon, Pennsylvania Republican and chairman of the Armed Services military readiness subcommittee; the subcommittee's ranking Democrat, Solomon Ortiz of Texas; Silvestre Reyes, Texas Democrat; and Republicans Nick Smith of Michigan and Roscoe G. Bartlett of Maryland. "Ultimately our goal is to show support for the unity of the Afghan people. It's not a matter of eliminating [Osama] bin Laden. It's a matter of [eliminating] the whole terrorist network in Afghanistan. And the foundation of that network is the Taliban," said Al Santoli, national security adviser to Congress.

Afghan elders and military commanders met the former king of Afghanistan yesterday. King Zahir Shah, 86, who has lived in exile in Italy since 1973, has become the focal point of diplomatic activity to find an alternative to the Taliban regime in Kabul following the terrorist attacks on the United States. The former king wants to convene a grand council of elders, a so-called Loya Jirga, to try to rally Afghanistan's fractious tribes behind a government of national unity.
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Afghanistan
Afghan king to urge anti-Taliban uprising
2001-09-30
Washington Times
Afghanistan's former king Mohammed Zahir Shah is expected to urge the Afghan people to rise up against their Taliban rulers in a message to be released within the next 48 hours, his grandson Prince Musatapha Zahir Shah indicated to ABC television Sunday. The king expects to return to the country he left 27 years ago as a constitutional monarch with the help of the United States and anti-Taliban rebels, his grandson said. "The king will be making a very important statement in the next 48 hours," said Shah when asked if the deposed monarch was to make a formal declaration that the Afghan people should rise up and remove the Taliban from power. King Zahir, who ruled Afghanistan for 40 years, has been living outside Rome since 1973 when his cousin Mohammed Dawood ousted him. In a brief message in Afghanistan's Dari language, the former king said "disunity has caused a lot of problems in Afghanistan and we have to unite and cooperate with each other in order to take our country forward."
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Afghanistan
Zahir Shah ready to accept role as head of state
2002-05-28
Former Afghan king Mohammed Zahir Shah told AFP that he would accept a nomination to become the country's head of state at next month's Loya Jirga as he backed Hamid Karzai to continue leading the government. "I will accept the responsibility of head of state if that is what the Loya Jirga demands of me but I have no intention to restore the monarchy," he said. "I do not care about the title of king. The people call me Baba (the Dari for Papa) and I prefer this title. The period of royalty is past."
Since he's 87 years old, this might be considered an interim measure...
The Loya Jirga is due to convene in Kabul from June 10 to select a transitional government to run Afghanistan for up to two years. The 87-year-old also said it was "essential" that interim leader Karzai retained his position as head of government at the assembly. "I think that in this situation that it is essential he remains in his post. It would be very natural if he were to lead the next government," said Zahir Shah.
Dostum or Ismael Khan would probably be a better choice, but neither has the backing of the Pashtuns, who are the problem, not the solution...
Karzai has built up a close relationship with his fellow Pashtun Zahir Shah in the past few months and is known to be a frequent visitor to the ex-king's residence in the Wazir Akbar Khan district of Kabul. "I like him very much," Zahir Shah said of Karzai. "He has many assets. He is honest and a nice man. We are good friends."
In Afghanistan, being "nice" doesn't work well. Being honest doesn't help much, either. But without a national army and/or an internal security force to back him up, being nice and friendly has pretty much been the only tool he's had. We'll see what happens when there's a thicker layer of legitimacy over him and there are more guns available.
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Afghanistan
Snuffies may pose as journalists to kill Afghan ex-king
2002-04-20
  • Terrorists posing as journalists could try to assassinate former Afghan king Mohammed Zahir Shah, a British military spokesman warned following intelligence reports that al-Qaeda extremists were plotting to kill the ex-monarch. "There has been intelligence that an assassination squad posing as media could threaten the king," Lieutenant Colonel Paul Harradine told a press briefing at this base north of Kabul.
    That's the way they finally got Masood.
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    Afghanistan
    Afghan leaders queue up for audience with former king
    2002-04-19
  • Provincial governors and tribal leaders were lining up hoping for an audience with Afghanistan's ageing former king Mohammed Zahir Shah after his return from 29 years in exile. The 87-year-old was not scheduled to make any public appearances on his first full day back in his homeland since he was ousted in a 1973 coup and was expected to remain in his closely-guarded residence for much of the day Friday.
    This is really the only guy in Afghanistan today who has any pretense of legitimacy, so...
    Italy's Deputy Foreign Minister Margharita Boniva, who accompanied Zahir Shah on his return, told reporters here late Thursday that his homecoming had been postponed due to intelligence of an assassination plot. "The threats were not only to his life when he would arrive but during the flight and especially during the landing part of the trip. Quite obviously we could not ignore that sort of intelligence," she said. Asked if the threat was from Taliban and al-Qaeda supporters, Boniva said the intelligence report "did mention terrorist attacks coming possibly from al-Qaeda -- a lot were from abroad".
    The Talibs and al-Qaeda will be jumping through hoops to try and get a few rounds through the old man. So will Hekmatyar, Rasool Sayyaf, and possibly Rabbani. Plus some other fellows who want to be in the same class.
    But other than the heavy security presence around his home here Friday, the only other people outside were regional dignitaries hoping to wish Zahir Shah a warm welcome. Mohammad Ali Jalali, governor of the eastern province of Paktika, was one of a group of senior leaders expecting to speak with the ex-king. "I will not be making any request of him. I just want to welcome him back to his home," Jalali told AFP as he waited patiently under a tree by Zahir Shah's residence in the up-market Wazir Akbar Khan neighbourhood. "He is the one man who can join all the ethnic groups of Afghanistan together again. There is no one else who can fulfill that role.
    It's curious, but when he was in Italy, out of sight, out of mind, there wasn't much to him. Just having him back in the country increases his following. Guess everyone can hope.
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    Afghanistan
    Ex-king calls on Afghans to renounce terrorism
    2001-09-19
  • CANDICE HUGHES Associated Press Writer
    The 87-year-old ex-king of Afghanistan called on his people Wednesday to "rescue themselves" by renouncing terrorism. The United States is pressing Afghanistan to hand over Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect in the terror attacks last week in New York and Washington, and warned it could face military retaliation if it refuses. "My concerns and anxieties for the future of Afghanistan have increased in these precarious moments," former King Mohammed Zahir Shah said in a statement. "I appeal to the Afghan people and to their sense of honor and patriotism to rescue ourselves from this dangerous situation," he said.

    He urged his country to "acknowledge with regret that the presence of foreign, imposed terrorists has causes unrest and danger" for Afghanistan. Bin Laden is a Saudi-born exile living in Afghanistan. "Historically our nation has acted in accordance to the guidance and tenets of Islam, embraced moderation and tolerance, opposed terrorism," he said. An aide said Zahir's message was recorded and broadcast inside Afghanistan but provided no details. An English translation was provided to The Associated Press in Rome, where Zahir has lived since his 1973 overthrow.
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    Afghanistan
    Bombs Aim to Put Heat on Taliban and Pakistan
    2001-10-22
  • Ever since it reluctantly agreed to support American military operations against Afghanistan, Pakistan has been insisting that the Taliban government not be toppled before Pakistan has had time to construct a "broad-based government" capable of taking over. In Afghanistan's turbulent history, whoever controls Kabul usually controls the country, so it has been in Pakistan's interest to see that the Northern Alliance not get the chance to overrun the capital. In deference to Pakistan, American bombing since Oct. 7 has been carefully calibrated to exclude the Taliban's lines north of Kabul. American officials were also dispatched to tell alliance commanders that they should not mount a full-scale offensive on Kabul until Pakistan's maneuvering produced a viable formula for a new government.

    One result has been to put the United States in the contradictory position of striking the Taliban in four other Afghan cities — Jalalabad, Kandahar, Herat and Mazar-i- Sharif — while in effect sparing them from defeat in Kabul. But American officials in Pakistan have grown impatient. According to Pakistani and American officials, Pakistan has been prodding an array of Afghan groups to come up with a formula for a new government with the Northern Alliance, which represents Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara minorities in Afghanistan. The groups have included allegedly moderate elements of the Taliban, representatives of the exiled former Afghan king, Mohammed Zahir Shah, and Pashtun tribal chiefs from southern and eastern Afghanistan.

    But talks between those groups in Islamabad have bogged down, and some American officials suspect that Pakistan's powerful military intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate, of manipulating the talks to ensure that Taliban elements retain a decisive hand. A case in point has been Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani, the Taliban's top army commander, who spent several days last week in Islamabad. While Pakistan has represented Maulvi Haqqani as a moderate, American intelligence officials who have known him since his days as a guerrilla commander against occupying Soviet forces say he is an anti- American Islamic hard-liner who joined the Taliban out of conviction, not expediency. "Haqqani had a reputation as a commander who was brutal even by the standards that characterized that conflict," one senior American intelligence official said. "Haqqani is no moderate."
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    Afghanistan
    Afghan king "shocked and saddened"
    2001-10-07
  • (AFP)
    A top aide to former Afghan monarch Mohammed Zahir Shah said Sunday he was "shocked and saddened" by the US attacks in Afghanistan as he watched them unfold on television. "It's sad. It's of course tragic. You can imagine a person coming from a country, who would feel shocked and saddened by what your country has been led into," the aide, Hedayat Amin Arsala told AFP. "Now my hope is that it stops quickly and that people are not hurt."

    "I really didn't think it was inevitable," Amin Arsala said of the attack, which he said he was watching on television in his Rome hotel. "We had hoped that it could be prevented... I really can't talk," he added.
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    Afghanistan
    Northern Alliance sends delegation to Rome to meet with King
    2001-10-11
  • Peter Baker, Molly Moore and Kamram Khan Washington Post
    Northern Alliance leaders have acknowledged the concerns of the United States, and promised not to seize power only for themselves if the Taliban regime falls, but to try to create a broad interim coalition and then hold elections, perhaps in two years. The alliance sent a delegation to Rome to meet with former king Mohammed Zahir Shah, who was deposed in 1973 and lived in exile ever since, as well as other key leaders of the Afghan diaspora. The king's representatives will participate in the upcoming conference, called a supreme council, involving 120 delegates. The council might call a loya jirga, or grand assembly, to formally resolve the makeup of a future government.
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