Karzai, Ghani offer Fatiha for Wasifi
Transcription
Karzai, Ghani offer Fatiha for Wasifi
Eye on the News . MONDAY MAY 11 . afgtimes@yahoo.com 2015 -Sawr 21, 1394 HS Truthful, Factual and Unbiased www.afghanistantimes.af Vol:IX Issue No:275 Price: Afs.15 www.face book.com/ afghanistantime s www.twitter.com/ afghanistantimes Karzai, Ghani offer Fatiha for Wasifi AT News Report KABUL: The ex-President Hamid Karzai and President Ashraf Ghani offered Fatiha for the departed soul of Azizullah Wasifi at Eidgah mosque in Kabul on Sunday. Hamid Karzai extended his condolences to the bereaved family and prayed to Allah Almighty to rest the soul of the deceased in the eternal peace. According to a state- ment issued by the Presidential Palace, President Ashraf Ghani also attended the praying ceremony. The president expressed his condolences to the bereaved family. Azizullah Wasifi, was a prominent national, political, social and culture figure, who passed away early last week. It is worth mentioning that Karzai also attended the praying ceremony for late Wasifi in Kandahar province last week. AT News Report KABUL: The Croatian President, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic on Sunday called on the Chief Executive Officer, Abdullah Abdullah. According a press statement issued by the CEO office, the Croatian President congratulated Abdullah on formation of the National Unity Government (NUG), and said her country wants enhanced ties with Kabul. “I know Dr. Abdullah for past several years and I am happy that I meet him as the CEO of Afghanistan. I am here to announce support of my country to Afghanistan,” she said. “There are good opportunities ahead for Afghanistan’s improvement and we are ready to help this country in different sectors,” the Croatian President added. She thanked the Croatian troops for their mission in Afghanistan, and said their cooperation will continue. She also said that Mufti of Croatia accompanies her in this trip and Muslims of her country support them in their mission in Afghanistan. The CEO welcomed the Croatian President and lauded the role of Croatian troops in NATO’s Resolute Support mission. “Afghanistan had lost several opportunities in the past. The NUG is committed to use the remaining opportunities and is eager to strengthen its ties with international allies of Afghanistan,” Abdullah said. Hinting at security situation, the CEO said spring offensive of militants has started but the security forces are defending the national sovereignty in different parts of the country. The two sides termed improvement in media as one of the main and biggest achievements of Afghanistan in past 14 years, and stressed that these achievements should be maintained. Abdullah said the NUG is committed to keep the achievements of the past years, particularly freedom of expression, and will support media in this regard. 59.57 58.17 66.5 65.1 This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Kolkata’s Kabuliwalas Ironically, for a place that exudes such tranquility, Istalif has had a violent past. Istalif is a small idyllic village perched in the mountains, around 50 km from Kabul (Source: John Zada of Canada, courtesy: Wikimedia) Kabulis tend to take their leisure seriously, and picnics, in particular, are epic in scale and preparation. So, on most Fridays, which is the weekend in Afghanistan, the road leading north from the capital is likely to be choked with traffic snarls, cars standing bumper-tobumper, families packed in taxis that have large deghs (pots) of food in the boot, along with a pile of toshaks (mattresses) and a few melons. Some head to the former king’s summer capital at Paghman, others to the man-made Qargha lake to escape the dust and noise. Many head to Istalif, a small idyllic village perched in the mountains around 50 km from Kabul. I first visited the spot (packed in the approved fashion with Afghan friends) in 2006, a time of relative peace. It was spring and the arghawan (Judas) trees that mark the season were in bloom. As we drove through the northern, or “Shumali” plains, their fabled vineyards were touched with a tentative green. Orchards of almonds, apricots and cherries were bursting into riotous blossom behind mud walls, and water ran through reconstructed irrigation ditches. In some villages, people had stripped down tanks and jeeps to recast them as bridges across these brooks, or as doors for their new homes. Istalif lies at the edge of the Koh-e-Daman valley. We took the road that climbed up the incline to the Takht, or Throne of Istalif, to take in the view. Istalif’s historical associations begin with its very name. In her book An Historical Guide to Kabul, first published in 1965, historian and writer Nancy Dupree wrote, “Some say it was named by the soldiers of Alexander the Great’s army who camped here in the 4th century BC and that the name Istalif is derived from the Greek word for grape.” Babur, who conquered Kabul before going on to establish the Mughal dynasty in India, was a passionate admirer of the city and its environs. Istalif charmed him so much that he created a garden here in the 16th century, and rode over with friends for drinking sessions that lasted several days. “Few villages match Istalif, with vineyards and orchards on either side of its torrent, its waters cold and pure”, he wrote in his memoirs. But he was unhappy with the irregular path followed by the stream and got it altered to a straight line. Babur also described the Takht-e-Istalif, where “large spreading plane trees spread their shade, making pleasant sitting places beneath.” Standing at the same spot centuries later, it was easy to see why he had been so captivated. The valley spread around us, and below us flowed a river. The water rushed with exuberance over boulders, fed by fresh snow melt from the mountains. There had been rain that morning, and while the ground was muddy, the air was clear and cool, the sunlight dappled on the tender green around us. Ironically, for a place that exudes such tranquillity, Istalif has had a violent past. Its strategic location near Kabul has led to its destruction on several occasions. In 1842, it was destroyed by the British army, in retaliation for its disastrous retreat from the capital. “The British left, the villagers returned, and Istalif rose again,” wrote Dupree. The same pattern repeated itself after the village was on the frontlines of the Taliban’s push towards Kabul in 1996. When they gained control, they forced the residents to leave and razed the buildings. Soon after 2001, the villagers were back, trying to revive a skill embedded in their soil: Istalif’s famous glazed pottery. We walked into the village market, a street that glinted in shades of turquoise and green. Many of the potters, I read later, had buried their tools before fleeing the Taliban. When they returned, they fired up their kilns again. Besides bowls, the potters also make decorative candlestands, cups, saucers and vases, all of which glow with a beautiful glaze. Accounts of how this technique took root in Istalif vary, but the blue notes of the pottery call to the shades found through neighbouring Uzbekistan and further into central Asia. The revival of Istalif’s bazaar is a testimony to the traditional knowledge preserved by the Afghans, despite decades of war and displacement. The shops were beautifully displayed and the owners happy to chat, sharing information about their work, or just exchanging gossip about the go- ings-on in Kabul. At lunchtime, several families headed to the riverside, where there were kabab stalls and space to flop down on their toshaks. But we followed Babur’s example and picnicked under a plane tree, enjoying the stunning view. Behind us, loomed the shell of a large hotel that had been popular with tourists in the 1970s. A short walk from the village, atop a hill, is the shrine of Eshan sahib, which draws large crowds of devotees from among the Friday visitors. Perhaps, because it is so close to Kabul, there weren’t many options for guesthouses in Istalif. On a subsequent trip with a film crew, we slept in a simple chaikhana (teahouse) on the edge of the village. In the evening, we ate outdoors, our meal lit by a glorious, star-studded sky. But on my first visit, I left for Kabul the same afternoon, enraptured by the beauty of the Afghan landscape, and by a glimpse into its complex history and culture. On the drive back, the boot of the car rattled with the empty deghs, and the bowls I had bought in the bazaar. I still have a few, and sometimes their undimmed glaze flashes in my home in Mumbai, sparking the memory of sunlight on a snow-fed river, seen rushing through a gorge far below. A Mumbai-based journalist, the writer has been travelling to Kabul since 2006. She has worked closely with Afghan filmmakers and media persons . (The Indian Express) A travelling photo exhibition on a d istinct trad ing community of Afghanis in Kolkata dwells deep into the com plicated canvas of belonging, memories and identity. HE WORE the loose, soiled clothing of his people, with a tall turban; there was a bag on his back, and he carried boxes of grapes in his hand.” This was how Rabindranath Tagore painted the picture of the Kabuliwala in his iconic short story of the man from the barren mountains of Afghanistan who waded into the multi-layered narrative of Kolkata with a quick wit and a large heart. Many, including the five-yearold Mini—Tagore’s literary bridge with the migrant’s mysterious past in Kabuliwala—believed the bag contained two or three kidnapped children. Unlike the Anglo-Indians, who mixed elegantly with the rest in the great city of the east, the Kabuliwalas didn’t offer much insight into their lives other than the almonds and raisins in the bags on their backs. Published in 1892, Tagore’s poignant story of a Kabuliwala called Abdul Rahman opened the lid into the curious case of a community that came to live in Kolkata nearly two centuries ago. Two films that followed the story and going by the same name Kabuliwala, first by Tapan Sinha in Bengali in 1957 and Hemen Gupta four years later in Hindi with Balraj Sahni, extended the Tagore’s mystic into mass consciousness. Now, an attempt to portray the Kabuliwala of the 21st century has been made more than half a century later by a journalist-media consultant born in Afghanistan and raised in India and a writertranslator who came to live in Kolkata from Bardhaman. Moksa Najib and Nazes Afroz, who took the route of “visual ethnography” to document the lives of the Kabuliwalas in Kolkata, did so by training cameras on them in their homes and in streets, markets and parks. About 50 selected pictures from their two-year-long photography project were first mounted for two weeks in an exhibition at the Afghanistan Centre of the Kabul University until early last month. Titled From Kabul to Kolkata, the travelling exhibition, which has just concluded in Dhaka before a show at the Max Mueller Bhavan in New Delhi, will make its last appearance in Kolkata between May 16 and 29. For Najib and Afroz, the inspiration for documenting the story of the Kabuliwalas of Kolkata was provided by Tagore’s short story. “We were drawing inspiration from an invented story about a community but documenting it as it existed in real life and at a different period in history,” explains Najib, a former BBC producer and correspondent based in London like Afroz. As per Afroz, the Kabuliwalas they met last year were a closelyknit community of people, who gradually opened their doors to the two outsiders wanting to tell their new story to the world. “We held several meetings with the leaders of the community represented by the Kudai Kismat-Ghar-e-Hindi (an organisation of Pasthuns in Kolkata) before we were given access to their homes,” says Afroz. (The Financial Express) Baghlan flood victims want immediate assistance Baghlan-i-Markazi district of northern Baghlan province, where homeless families were in dire need of food and shelter. The flood swept through the area that left one person dead and 10 others wounded, including three children and two women. Naseer Ahmad Kahzad, director of Afghanistan Natural Disaster Management Authority (ANDMA), said the survey was being conducted to assess the losses. He added tents, food items and other assistance would be dispatched to flood affected families. On the other hand, the flood had damaged the Ajmir canal at five locations. Sherin Aqa, a tribal elder, said they demanded the deputy governor to repair the canal. He said if the canal was not repaired crops on 600 acres of land would be destroyed due to lack of water. The elder said recent floods destroyed crops on 5,000 acres of land in the province. (Pajhwok) Boom in unregistered vehicles behind SURGE IN ACCIDENTS FEROZKOH: A boom in the noncustom paid vehicles in Firozkoh City, the provincial capital of western Ghor province, has caused surge in accidents and casualties. The residents complain import of cars without valid documents and lack of driving license are the reasons behind a spike in traffic accidents. Majority of these vehicles are righthanded which are not meant for Afghanistan’s roads. Drivers say these cars are imported with lower prices and if they processed their documents the expenses would go high. Khan Mohammad, 45, a resident of Firozkoh, told Pajhwok Afghan News he had recently lost his sonin-law in a traffic accident while on his way home on a motorcycle. Khan Mohammad claimed his sonin-law had an accident with a truck and after the accident the driver fled the scene and police have yet to nab him. “Drivers’ negligence disobeying of traffic rules on the one hand and damaged and narrow roads on the other hand cause such accidents,” he said, adding lack of proper documents, driving licenses and follow ups of cases by judicial authorities had added to the accidents. Gul Mohammad, another resident, said he lost his child while on a motorcycle and crashing with a speedy right-handed car. He said instead of judicial organs it was the elders who took the matter in their hands and resolved the case with the driver. Another resident, driving a four-runner high model vehicle, wishing not to be named, said he had bought the car from Kandahar’s Wesh city for 700,000 afghanis and if he completed the documents it would cost him more than 750,000 afghanis. He said he also did not own a driving license but after paying 5,000 afghanis to a middleman he got one without going through other formalities. Sayed Ahmad, another driver, said: “I don’t have any document. My car has tinted window and nobody has stopped me yet.” According to the provincial hospital, during in the last two months two people have been killed and 163 wounded in traffic accidents. Dr. Juma Gul Yaqoobi, the hospital director, said last year three people were killed and 1,200 others wounded in road crashes. At least 21 of the wounded were shifted to hospitals outside the province due to their critical condition. Abdul Qayom, an official at traffic department, said majority of the private cars in the province were right-handed and were owned by powerful figures. “We have proper figures because we don’t have power to deal with powerful individuals,” he added. (Pajhwok) This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Blood donation campaign kicks off to support security forces Our troops are ready to eliminate terrorists before reaching their nefarious designs, says Ulumi By Farhad Naibkhel KABUL: In an attempt to honor sacrifices of the security forces in war on terror, a number legislators, civil society members and citizens donated their blood to Afghan troops who have sustained injuries in fight against militants. The blood donation campaign kicked off in Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan Hospital by famous singer and activist Farhad Darya. ‘Your blood our honor soldier’ was the theme of the campaign. The Interior Minister Noor-ulHaq Ulumi, the Interior Ministry spokesman, spokesman for the Defense Ministry, lawmakers and civil society members were participants of the event on Sunday. Lauding the attempt, the Interior Minister told the event that the enemies of Afghans try to kill innocent people and disrupt security in the country but the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) are well capable of defending the country bravely. “The security forces are ready to eliminate terrorists before they target the innocent people,” he assured. Also present at the event, the Ground Forces Commander, General Murad Ali Murad, said the citizens by launching the blood donation campaign delivered the message to the security forces that they have strong support of the leader- Justice Minister presents 100day action plan By Akhtar M. Nikzad inition of friends and foes,” he said. “I hope the government leaders pay serious attention in this regard as the nation is not interested to see their troops sacrificed in a vague war,” he added. Darya said peace will not be achieved through violence; it needs dialogues and negotiations. “We are the nation that has been victorious in war against world powers. But now this is the time to become peace Drone strike kills 13 including Taliban designated DISTRICT CHIEF IN NANGARHAR Four NDS personnel INJURED IN KANDAHAR KABUL: Justice Minister, Dr. Abdul Basir Anwar, on Sunday presented his 100-day action plan to the president. According to a press statement, President Ashraf Ghani assessed the 100-day action plan of the Justice Minister in a meeting at the Presidential Palace. The statement said that main parts of the action plan include legislation, legal services, juvenile affairs and management, which has been drafted in four parts. In the meantime, President Ghani said the plan should contain clear message to the countrymen and the short-term and mid-term results and changes should be obvious in it. He also suggested that brining reforms should be the top priority of the Ministry of Justice and this should be implemented by adopting an inclusive mechanism. The president said any kind of illegal act should be immediately stopped and the laws drafted and assessed by the ministry should meet the necessary requirements in a bid to leave a good legacy for Afghanistan’s future. Based on the statement, the president suggested that a wide mechanism should be implemented on those who have low education about their related fields. KABUL: The Taliban designated district chief for Lalpoora was among 13 killed in the NATO drone strike in eastern Nangarhar province, said an official on Sunday. Hazrat Hussain Mashriqiwal, spokesman for Nangarhar police, said that the drone strike targeted the militants group in Machmegi area of Lalpoora district the other day. “The Taliban designated district chief, Gul Agha, was also among the 13 militants killed in the strike,” he added. Mashriqiwal said that the group of insurgents was involved in subversive activities in the district. According to another report, two policemen sustained minor injuries when their vehicle struck a roadside bomb in Surkhrod district of Nangahar. An official source in eastern Afghanistan recently termed the drone strikes as effective in fight against militants. The source said that the drone strikes don’t let the Taliban militants to roam in large numbers. AT News Report KABUL: The National Directorate of Security (NDS) on Sunday said that four of its personnel were injured in an attack on one of its facilities in Kandahar province. In a press statement issued here, the spy agency said that a group of three suicide attackers targeted a facility of the NDS in Kandahar. In the attack four agents of the agency were injured. According to the press release, the attack began when one of the three suicide attackers rammed his explosives-laden vehicle into front gate of the compound. Soon after the blast, the two attackers armed with rocket-propelled-grenades and AK-47 opened indiscriminate fire in order to make way to the compound. During the retaliation the attackers were killed, the NDS said. 51 militants killed in nationwide operations AT News Report KABUL: At least 51 Taliban militants have been killed in countrywide military offensives conducted by Afghan security forces in the past 24 hours. A press statement issued by the Ministry of Interior (MoI) said that security forces conducted operations in Kunar, Nangarhar, Baghlan, Kunduz, Faryab, Badakhshan, Sar-e-Pul, Jowzjan, Uruzgan, Kandahar, Zabul, Logar, Paktia, Ghazni, Herat and Badghis province. Around 51 militants have been killed and around 15 others wounded, the statement added. The statement said police forces also defused around 23 various types of roadside bombs placed by the insurgents in Kandahar, Ghazni, Uruzgan, Khost and Paktika provinces. Weapons’ supply to Pakistan: US draws IRE OF AFGHANS From P12 “It seems that the United States of America is the real murderer of Afghans as it preferred to support enemies of Afghans. Grandiose promises were made to Afghans, but support was provided to others,” he said. Shamil went on saying that at a time when insurgents have launched large-scale attacks in different parts of the country, it was not suitable for the US to support Islamabad and leave Kabul in lurch. “The US support for Pakistan means stabbing Afghans in the back,” said Nisar Haris, a senator from Kabul. Criticizing the government, he said the authorities should react seriously as Kabul has signed Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) with Washington but it is Islamabad that “enjoys the fruit”. Another senator Haseebullah Kalimzai said the government should broke its silence and ask the Obama administration that why the use weapons were not Paktika elders demand Sharan mayor sacked KABUL/SHAHRAN: More than 50 elders from southeastern Paktika province travelled to Kabul on Sunday to demand sacking of Sharan, the provincial capital’s mayor for what they alleged his involvement in corruption. Ten of the elders visited Pajhwok Afghan News main office in Kabul with documented evidence regarding corrupt practices by Obaidullah Saadat, the Sharana mayor. Mohammad Khalid, an elder, the mayor demanded to vacate 30 villages so that he could implement his strategic master plan. He said people have been living in the area for heroes instead of war heroes,” he added. Representative of civil society organizations, Bari Salam, said the campaign was launched to show that civil society members and the people are standing besides the security forces and are supporting them. “Our troops are defining the country and our soil by fighting. We are defending the country by donating our blood to the soldiers,” he concluded. KABUL: The primary court on Sunday postponed the prosecution of 19 policemen, accused of negligence and failing to rescue Farkhunda when she came under attack by an angry mob in Kabul nearly two months back. Farkhunda was lynched by a mob in Kabul in front of policemen on March 19 for allegedly burning copy of the Holy Qur’an. The primary court announced that it will delay its verdict on 19 policemen due to lack of evidence and incomplete investigation over dossiers of the police officers. The court’s last week decision that sentenced four of the accused to death and 16 others to long-term imprisonment faced criticism by civil society activists and a number of lawyers as they raised their voices through media and said the primary court was quick in its decision. They also said the court has hurried in its verdict on those involved in Farkhunda’s case. Safiullah Mujaddidi, head of the primary court, told newsmen that all decisions of the court were taken according to the law. “We held public trial for Farkhunda’s case, evidences were presented and the accused had their defense attorneys. Nothing injustice has occurred during the trial,” he said. He assured that the primary court will carry on Farkhunda’s case thoroughly and will announce its verdict based on Shari’a and criminal laws. Hinting at a number of remarks on the recent decision of the court, he rejected the remarks by civil society activists, and said the verdict was just as all principals were considered during the trial. Mujaddidi said 18 of the accused were released by the primary court as there was no sufficient evidence that prove their involvement in Farkhunda’s killing. “Analysts and activists should first boost their knowledge about criminal law and authorities of the courts and then make viewpoints about our verdicts, otherwise they will be introduced to judiciary if they interfered in the court’s affairs,” he warned. He said their decision is primary and the defenders have the right to appeal in the appellate court. Farkhunda’s brother, Muhibullah, said he and his family were not happy with the court’s verdict. He said four people were sentenced to death but everyone knows that more than 40 people were involved in killing of his sister. ship and the common masses. “Military operations are ongoing against militants countrywide and our troops are successful in their mission,” he said. On the same occasion, Farhad Darya said giving negative response to the nation, which is ready to achieve peace at the value of their sons’ blood, is against Islam and is unjust. “We have failed to achieve peace because there is no clear def- AT News Report AT News Report Farkhunda’s case: Court delays prosecution of 19 POLICEMEN years. They have agriculture lands which could be impossible for them to vacate. Khalid suggested that the mayor could easily implement his strategic master plan in a plain area in eastern part of the area. Amanullah, another elder, said then president Hamid Karzai issued a decree banning development of townships on agricultural lands. Abdul Qayyum, a businessman, said he paid 3,000,000 afs to the mayor few years back for construction of four markets but since then the mayor had not handed over the markets. The mayor wanted to sell the markets to other busi- nessmen, he added. Banaras Nisar, president of shopkeeper union, said the mayor increased shop fee from 250 afs to 5,000 afs. Sharan municipality had 29 markets in the city and the mayor had given most of the shops to influential instead of poor and deserving.Haji Mohammad Khan, president of unions of gas stations and mosques, said: “The population of the town is less and has over 270 markets where as economic exchange growth is also limited hence there is no need to expend the city to reconstruct township over agricultural land.” (Pajhwok) provided to Afghans. Lailuma Ahmadi, a senator from Panjshir, said that Afghans are questioning importance of the BSA as the law and order situation is deteriorating and the US forces are not playing supportive role. The United States is targeting only those suspected insurgents that are threatening the US interests. The US forces are not taking action against Daesh, though the security agreement signed with Washington says that Kabul would be supported in the war on terror and against external threats, she added. “American forces are living in highly fortified bases and under bunkers, but handed over the weapons to Pakistan which is against the national interests of Afghanistan,” she reacted to the US decision. Abdullah Qarluq, a senator from Kunduz, said that around 10,000 people left their homes in Kunduz province as Afghan security forces resorted to air strikes against the insurgents. He said that result of the operations is still unclear. Chair- man of the Meshrano Jirga, Fazal Hadi Muslimyar, also expressed concern over insecurity and said the security officials should ramp up security to improve law and order situation. He commended the security forces for retaking the Nawa district of Ghazni from the Taliban, but was also saddened by the news of fall of the Jawand district of Badghis province to the insurgents. The chairman asked the security officials to retake the district from militants. Govt, partners join hands to save lives of 35,000 children KABUL: Afghanistan’s Ministry of Public Health, donors and international experts gathered on Sunday to review the country’s progress in maternal and child health, and identify ways to save over 35,000 lives of children with cost-effective, high-impact health interventions by 2020. A statement from the USAID said that the three-day ‘Call to Action’ conference will include the launch of major new studies demonstrating how interventions such as skilled birth attendance at delivery, care of newborns, new vaccines to reduce childhood diarrhea and respiratory infections and improving the nutrition of children can decrease maternal and child deaths in Afghanistan. “During the past decade significant improvement has been made in maternal and child health, which has brought dramatic decrease in maternal mortality ratio from 1,600 to 327 per 100,000 live births and under five mortality rate from 257 to 97 per 1,000 live births,” said Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Abdullah Abdullah in his inaugural speech of the conference. (Pajhwok) Afghan food gaining popularity in capital city of India The Afghan cuisine is gradually acquiring popularity among Delhi’s residents and tourists with the settlement of Afghans in India which was further supported with announcement of liberal visa policy by the government of India allowing the Afghan nationals to stay in the country on a long term basis. India’s home ministry announced last year that the Afghan nationals would be allowed to stay in the country on humanitarian grounds for two years under the new policy. The Afghan refugees have opened many new restaurants in Delhi – the capital city of India, serving Afghan foods including Kabuli and Uzbeki Pulao, kebabs and Mantu are favourites. Food lovers often flock to South Delhi’s Saket area to savor authentic Afghani food, according to a report by Asian News International (ANI). Afghan Delhi Restaurant is among the several operated by the Afghans in Delhi. The restaurant is operated in Saket area by Safimullaha who hails from Kandahar. He ensures that people from his nation do not miss food from home. “Due to the volatile situation in Afghanistan, we have had to come to India. In Afghanistan, there is lot of unemployment and the war-like situation has forced us to come to India to earn our livelihood,” he told ANI news. Safimullah further added “As a lot of Afghanis are in India, we decided to open an Afghan restaurant to serve food to Afghani folk in India.” Mohammed Ali, who visited India for the first time, was overwhelmed to taste the authentic Afghani food. “I like both Indian and Afghani food which includes Kabuli Pulao, Kebabs and Korma,” he said. Afghani food is also popular with Delhiites with an Afghan cook Syed Mohammed saying “Customers from Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq and the West come here to have Afghani food. Indian customers also come here regularly. Everyone likes Afghani food as it is non-spicy and delicious.” Peace process must be one in which Afghans talk to Afghans: UNAMA KABUL: The head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has said on Sunday “war is unaffordable” for Afghanistan and the country won’t survive if there isn’t peace. Nicholas Haysom, who is also the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan said this while speaking during a special interview for the UN’s Department of Political Affairs. “War is unaffordable, and the levels of aid which go on to sustain the security establishment are not going to be forthcoming forever,” a statement quoted Haysom as saying. He added: “It doesn’t have to be at peace immediately, but [Afghanistan] is simply not going to survive if there isn’t peace in the long-term.” The UNAMA received a new mandate from the UN Security Council in March, which says that UNAMA would play a role in promoting peace and stability in Afghanistan and that an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned political process is critical to support reconciliation. “A peace process must be one in which Afghans talk to Afghans, not Afghans talk to the United Nations. As we say in Africa, where I come from, the doctor can’t take medicine on behalf of the patient,” said Haysom, who comes from South Africa. UNAMA also helps ensure coor- dination between the international community, donors and government of Afghanistan. In addition, more than 20 UN agencies work in Afghanistan with many have been in the country for decades. “As the international community draws down, if the UN would precipitously leave Afghanistan, it would be seen as abandonment,” he added. As part of its core mandate, the Mission is also working to try to ensure that women and youth have an equal right to participation in public life. “Why would we put such an emphasis on it?” Haysom said. “Apart from the question of human rights standards, apart from the question of the fact that women constitute 50 per cent of the population, or that youth are the country’s future, what we know is that for effective growth and development, the participation of women in the public and economic life of the nation is critical.” ((Pajhwok)) This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11 , 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES BURNPUR: West Bengal: Prime Minister Narendra Modi today said West Bengal will help to build the spirit of 'Team India' that is needed to take the country forward. "I am saying that without 'Team India', the country cannot progress. To take India forward, this land of Bengal will come to the country's help," Modi said in the presence of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee at the inauguration of a modernised IISCO Steel Plant in Burnpur. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee during the dedication ceremon of the Modernized and expanded IISCO Steel Plant to the nation at Polo Ground in Asansol on Sunday. PTI Prime Minister Narendra Modi and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee during the dedication ceremon of the Modernized and expanded IISCO Steel Plant to the nation at Polo Ground in Asansol on Sunday. PTI To take India forward in steel production, the West Bengal government had made this project successful and that, he said, was an example of the spirit of 'Team India' at work. The prime minister said that had the state government not supported the endeavour to modernise the steel plant, the project would not have been possible. Referring to the recent Land Boundary Agreement with Bangladesh, Modi said he was proud that the states of West Bengal, Assam and Tripura had worked with Delhi in addressing the vexed issue which had been lying unsolved for the past 41 years, since the time of Mujibur Rahman. "Mamata's government from West Bengal, (other governments from) Assam and Tripura, worked shoulder-to-shoulder with Delhi to solve this. For the first time, we can be proud of the fact that Parliament, whether it is Rajya Sabha or Lok Sabha showed no opposition (on the issue)," the prime minister said. "Team India is the Centre and states working together. If there is 'Team India', then we can solve international issues and internal ones very easily". "Earlier, the economic development of India was decided by the progress made in Bengal... Bengal will have to climb the ladder of development in the interest of the nation," the prime minister said. "Bengal will surely bounce bank in the coming days and be- come an important economic power," he averred, adding, "If Bengal and Kolkata cannot become strong, then no part of the country can become strong." Stating that the second Green Revolution can be led by the eastern states, Modi said the idea was to bring the eastern region to be in tandem with the western part of the country. "If we want to make India strong, farmers' welfare has to be ensured and, if we want to feed the country, a second Green Revolution can be started from here and the economic situation can be changed," he said. Bengal, Bihar and the northeastern states have huge potential as they have fertile land and abundant water, he said. "You can see a flurry of economic activity in India's western part, but the eastern region remains neglected... If one part of India is ill, the country cannot become strong and our endeavour is to develop this part of the country," the prime minister said. He also said that the coal-bearing states in the eastern region, including West Bengal, would benefit from the proceeds of the coalblock auctions and a foundation would be created for the welfare of the tribals living in mining areas. Earlier, the West Bengal chief minister said that the Centre and the states will have to work handin-hand for the nation's development. "If we can work together, the country moves ahead. When we divide, the country is doomed. We don't want division among people. Politics will be there and development will also be there. "The federal and central structure will be there and we will work together within the ambit of the Constitution," Banerjee said. The Asansol-Durgapur industrial belt is adjoining to Bihar and Jharkhand and "life" has to be infused in this region, she said. "The workers in the area will only survive if life is infused in this area. That will happen when industry comes," she said. She urged the prime minister to take up the modernisation of the Durgapur steel plant as well by clearing the Rs 20,000 crore project for which the state government had given land. ISLAMABAD: A day after the bodies of Naltar victims were flown to Nur Khan base in Rawalpindi, high-level delegations from Norway, Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines arrived on Sunday to receive the bodies, Express News reported. A delegation from the Philippines headed by the Under Secretary of Philippines Ministry of Foreign Affairs, including the spouse and son of the late ambassador, arrived in Islamabad. The delegation from Malaysia consisting of senior officials and daughter of the Malaysian ambassador also arrived in the federal capital, as well as one from Indonesia. “A forensic team from Norway also arrived in the capital on the request of the government to assist in DNA sampling,” a Foreign Office statement said. The team was accompanied by a delegation to receive the late Norwegian ambassador’s body. However, despite earlier reports of the arrival of the widow of the late Norwegian ambassador, she did not come with the delegation, according to Express News. Norwegian Ambassador Leif H Larsen, Philippines Ambassa- dor Domingo D Lucenario Jr, wives of the Malaysian and Indonesian ambassadors and two pilots – Major Faisal and Major Altamash – as well as a crew member were killed when an Mi-17 helicopter of the Pakistan Army went down shortly before landing in Naltar valley on Friday. Three other envoys – Poland’s Ambassador Andrzej Ananiczolish, Dutch Ambassador Marcel de Vink and the Indonesian ambassador – were also injured in the incident. According to an official, the Pakistan Army on Saturday airlifted the casualties to Rawalpindi in helicopters and a C-130 aircraft. “Dutch Ambassador Marcel de Vink will receive further treatment in his country and an air ambulance will arrive soon to transport him back,” the statement added. De Vink suffered major burn injuries in the crash. On Saturday, the prime minister’s office said in a statement that top government officials would accompany the bodies to their countries, “The ministers will take the bodies on special flights as a gesture of respect and to show the importance Pakistan attaches [to] its relations with these countries,” it added. Nepali women, girls vulnerable Sri Lanka to begin w ar crimes probe by September TO TRAFFICKERS: NGOS BANGKOK: International organizations and non-government groups in Nepal are warning the devastation caused by the April 25 earthquake has left thousands of girls and young women vulnerable to human traffickers. Anti-trafficking campaigners said there is a need for greater attention to the protection of girls and women. Hundreds of thousands of people in Nepal remain without shelter and possessions, leaving poor women and girls desperate and vulnerable to human traffickers, activists said. Non-government organizations (NGOs) said the criminal networks are especially targeting Nepal’s rural communities, even using the cover of relief efforts to kidnap or lure women away. The United Nations said up to 15,000 girls are trafficked each year from Nepal, forced into sex work as far away as South Korea and South Africa, although the vast majorities are lured to India where thousands work in brothels. Anuradha Koirala, founder of anti-trafficking organization Maiti Nepal, said children are especially vulnerable amid the ongoing attention on relief and rehabilitation. “All the areas which have been affected, these are the areas which have been affected very badly and where 80 percent of the children are trafficked,” Koirala explained. “Very few people are concentrating on this issue. We think these children are most vulnerable, we have to save them and we have to take care of them. We have ourselves have already rescued three children.” The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is calling for the creation of temporary places for learning, noting that almost 1 million children are not able to return to school due to damaged buildings. An estimated 24,000 classrooms were damaged or destroyed in the earthquake, the most severe to hit Nepal in 80 years. UNICEF said in areas such as Gorkha, Sindhupalchok and Nuwakot, over 90 percent of schools were destroyed. In Dhading, 80 percent of school buildings collapsed. Schools in other areas such as Kathmandu and Bhaktopur are being used as emergency shelters for earthquake survivors. Maiti Nepal’s Koirala said rebuilding schools and raising awareness among rural communities to the threat posed by traffickers should be priorities. “Our focus should be on reconstruction; the reconstruction of the schools’ first and education should be free, compulsory. The full international community, we should get together and work on prevention, prevention and protection of girls and children who have been survivors," she said. "We should take prevention programs, awareness programs to the villages because then only people can be aware and I think we can minimize trafficking." UNICEF has expressed fear the recent gains made by Nepal in raising primary school enrollment to 95 percent may be lost due to the consequences of the earthquake. Sri Lanka said it will have a domestic mechanism with foreign technical expertise in place by September to address the reconciliation and accountability issues and investigate the alleged human right violations during the last stages of war against terrorism. Addressing a media briefing at Sirikotha, the United National Party (UNP) headquarters, Sri Lanka's Foreign Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera said that a domestic mechanism to probe into the allegations of war crimes will be in place by the next session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva in September. Foreign Minister's statement comes days after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry urged Sri Lankan leaders to "find truth wherever it may lead." During his brief visit to Colombo last Saturday (May 02) when he was briefed on the steps being taken by the Government to promote reconciliation and address post conflict issues including missing persons, detainees and accountability, the top U.S. official emphasized that Sri Lanka must find its own solutions to national issues. Appreciating the many positive steps that have already been taken by the Government, the Secretary offered US technical assistance for the measures, as required. The Secretary expressed hope that the government will continue to cooperate with the United Nations as it explores the best way to mount a credible domestic investigation into allegations of human rights abuses - an investigation that meets international standards. The Sri Lankan Minister said the government is working according to a timetable and is confident of meeting the timeline. "We promised the people a domestic mechanism to look into human rights violations. There is a timeline for its setting up. We do have a timeline, we are working according to a timetable even now. I think we will be able to meet the timeline," he said. Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena earlier this year as- sured the diplomatic community that his government will not hesitate to punish the offenders of human rights violations said to have taken place during the war after the conduct of a credible domestic inquiry through a judicial process into the allegations. The President reiterated government's commitment to conduct an internal investigation into alleged human rights abuses and to take legal action if anyone is found guilty of violating human rights. However, the President ruled out the need for the UN war crime investigators to get involved in the domestic investigations. India-China friendship will have on impact other nations, says Dalai Lama Cristiano Ronaldo donates £5m to Nepal aid fund after earthquake PALAMPUR: Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama on Saturday said that if Indo-Chinese friendship is based on mutual trust, it will be a "welcome step" and have impact not only on relations between the two nations but many other countries, including Tibet. "If Indo-Chinese friendship is based on mutual trust, it will be a welcome step as this will have impact not only on relations between India and China but also on many other countries including Tibet," he said while replying to a question after inaugurating a mobile portal launched by a Kangra business house, 35 km from here. Earlier, addressing the gathering, the Dalai Lama said that compassion makes a man more humane and can help check spread of violence and wars. He said knowledge gathered from various sources could help an individual have bet- Cristiano Ronaldo, who has been no stranger to charitable acts throughout his career, has donated £5m to the charity Save the Children to help their aid efforts in Nepal after the earthquake which killed more than 8,000 people and injured another 20,000 last month, according to reports in France. The French football magazine So Foot reports that the 30-year-old Real Madrid player made the donation having previously asked his 100m Facebook followers to support the charity. The Portugal striker, who scored in the 2-1 Champions League semi-final first-leg defeat at Juventus last week, is no stranger to such acts. Last year he paid for €60,000 worth of treatments for a 10-month-old boy with cortical dysplasia. He has also worked closely with Unicef and World Vision and in 2004 he flew ter understanding thus, make him wiser. India-China friendship will have on impact other nations, says Dalai Lama AdTech Ad "If IndoChinese friendship is based on mutual trust, it will be a welcome step as this will have impact not only on relations between India and China but also on many other countries including Tibet," Dalai Lama said.#india #china #dalai lama #tibet This will lead to a better world as well as help check environmental problems. The spiritual leader appreciated the efforts and hoped that the mobile portal will help spread information to more people. At the occasion, Himachal Urban Development minister Sudhir Sharma lauded the efforts and hoped that introduction of the new technology for quick spread of information will go a long way in making people aware of problems and help find solutions. to Indonesia having seen a survivor from the tsunami there wearing a shirt with his name on the back. Real Madrid face Valencia in La Liga on Saturday night before entertaining Juve in the second leg of their last four tie on Wednesday. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11 , 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Russian sold iers quit over Ukraine Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri said the Arab League is moving closer to forming a joint Arab military force, pan-Arab newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported Saturday. “Technical teams are already working to develop a vision to establish a joint Arab force, and this will be ready within the next four months,” Shukri said on the sidelines of a state visit to Eritrea. Speaking about Yemen, the FM said: “There can be no doubt that the situation in Yemen requires serious effort in order to find a solution to the deteriorating humanitarian situation and the suffering of the Yemeni people. We need to find a way to return legitimacy and restore stability to Yemen.” “Egypt is continuing its participation in the alliance and is doing everything in its power to stop the escalation,” Shukri said. “We are in contact with our partners to provide assistance and help reach a political framework conducive to securing a ceasefire, returning Yemen’s legitimate government to power and ensuring Yemeni security and stability,” he added. In March, Arab leaders said during an Arab League summit in Egypt that they wish to create a joint military force to help maintain security within the region. The announcement came in the wake of the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen to battle Iranian-backed Houthi militias. Syrian troops battle to free trapped forces Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi said Saturday his country is keen on cooperating with Russia at all levels, the Cairo-based Al Ahram newspaper reported. Sisi, which made the statements during a meeting with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, said that he is aiming for all sorts of collaboration that would benefit both countries. Putin affirmed Russia’s support to Sisi and said that his country will keep on backing the Egyptian leader “for the good of your people and your country.” During the meeting, Sisi also spoke about Russia’s role in World War II and said that Egypt understands the role that Russia has played to combat fascism. Sisi was in Moscow to take part in celebrations marking 70 years since victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. Cairo has sought to strengthen its ties with Moscow against the backdrop of strained ties with long-time ally Washington since the ouster of Islamist president Mohammed Mursi in July 2013. Russia was Sisi’s first visit to a foreign country since he was sworn in as president in June after a landslide victory at the polls. Renewed violence forces 100,000 to flee in South Sudan Fighting has escalated in war-torn South Sudan forcing up to 100,000 people to flee their homes, the United Nations has said. Toby Lanzer, the UN's humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan said up to 100,000 people had been displaced from their homes in Unity State, as clashes intensified between rebels and government troops. South Sudan: Country of Dreams (Part 1) "Since the beginning of May, military activities south of Bentiu in Unity State have forced up to 100,000 people from their homes," Lanzer said in a statement. "People should never be harmed, and certainly not targeted or forced to flee from their homes," he added. Also on Saturday, two global aid agencies evacuated their international staff from part of Unity State fearing clashes. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said they withdrew from the town of Leer, Machar's hometown, over concerns of an "imminent attack". "Today, we withdraw again with a heavy heart, because we know how civilians will suffer when they are cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care," Paul Critchley, head of mission at MSF said. MSF was previously forced to abandon Leer in January last year when fighting over the town made it too dangerous to stay. South Sudan: Country of Dreams (Part 2) When aid workers were able to return four months later they found the hospital burned and looted and vehicles stolen. Franz Rauchenstein, the head of the ICRC in South Sudan, urged the warring sides to respect international law. "At all times, those who do not take part in the hostilities must be spared and the distinction needs to be made between civilian objectives and military objectives," he said. Violence in the world's youngest nation has been characterised by rape, attacks on civilians and medical facilities and ethnic massacres. Tens of thousands of people are believed to have been killed since South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011. Syrian government forces advanced Saturday towards the rebel-held town of Jisr al-Shughur, where around 250 regime force members and their families are trapped in a hospital building, a monitor said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said government troops were now within two kilometers (just over a mile) of where the group has been trapped since rebels seized Jisr al-Shughur in northwestern Idlib province two weeks ago. “Regime forces and allied fighters are now two kilometers from the hospital and desperately want to save the 250 people besieged inside,” said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman. He said there was fierce fighting between rebels and army backed by air strikes as they sought to approach the hospital on Jisr al-Shughur’s southeastern outskirts. Regime forces inside the hospital have been battling rebels to keep them from entering the building. It remains unclear how much food and ammunition is available to those trapped, and how many of the 250 people inside are civilians. A group of rebels including AlQaeda’s Syrian affiliate Al-Nusra Front seized Jisr al-Shughur on April 25, shortly after capturing the provincial capital of Idlib city. The loss of the town, strategically located near the border with rebel-backer Turkey and alongside the regime stronghold of Latakia province, was a new setback for the government. Since then, the regime has also lost one of its remaining military bases in the province. On Wednesday, President Bashar al-Assad pledged that the army would “arrive soon to these heroes trapped in the Jisr al-Shughur hospital”. The same day, government forces began a counteroffensive in the province. Elsewhere on Saturday, official news agency SANA said at least five civilians were killed and 19 others wounded by rebel shelling in northern Aleppo. The deaths occurred in the Salaheddin neighborhood of the government-controlled west of the city. Once Syria’s economic powerhouse, Aleppo has been ravaged by the country’s war and is divided between government control in the west and rebel control in the east. Regime forces regularly carry out air strikes and drop so-called barrel bombs on the rebel side, and opposition fighters often fire rockets into the government side. More than 220,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests that spiraled into a war after a regime crackdown. Saudi-led forces target Saleh’s house in Sanaa Saudi-led forces conducted air strikes at dawn on Sunday in the Yemeni capital Sanaa targeting deposed President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s house, sources in his political party and residents said, according to Reuters news agency. Three loud explosions were heard and plumes of smoke were seen rising from the area where Saleh’s residence is located in the capital. Humanitarian ceasefire A coalition led by Saudi Arabia launched an air war on Yemen on March 26 to prevent the Iranianallied Houthis and militias of the deposed president Saleh from seizing territory. Saudi Arabia had said on Friday a five-day humanitarian ceasefire in Yemen would begin on Tuesday if the Houthi militia it has been fighting agreed to the pause. Iranian-allied Houthi fighters said in a statement they would deal "positively" with any efforts to lift the suffering of the Yemeni people, a sign that they could accept the five-day humanitarian ceasefire proposed by Saudi Arabia. A statement issued by the Houthis also asked for a political dialogue under the auspices of the United Nations to resume in order to resolve the conflict. Over 1,000 flee as typhoon threatens northern Philippines More than 1,000 people were evacuated from their homes as Typhoon Noul approached the northern Philippines, threatening flash floods, landslides and tsunami-like storm surges, government agencies warned on Sunday. The storm's movement has slowed slightly but it has also strengthened to pack gusts of 205 kilometres (127 miles) per hour and is still expected to hit the northern edge of the main island of Luzon by Sunday afternoon or evening, according to Esperanza Cayanan, chief of the government's weather monitoring division. As of Sunday morning, it was about 140 kilometres northeast of the northern province of Cagayan, which is expected to feel the brunt of the typhoon's fury later in the day, she added. Infographic: Typhoon closes in on Philippines Over 1,200 people have already been pre-emptively evacuated from the areas expected to be affected by Noul, said Mina Marasigan, spokeswoman for the government's national disaster monitoring council. "There are areas which can have landslides. There are areas which can have flash floods. There are coastal areas which can be hit by storm surges as high as 1.5 metres (five feet)," she told AFP. Storm surges -- tsunami-like waves generated by powerful typhoons -- have become a major concern during storms. In November 2013 storm surg- es were the main killers as Super Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the central Philippines, leaving more than 7,350 people dead or missing. Several hundred people living in a farming hamlet below the restive Bulusan volcano on Luzon have also been evacuated due to the potential that rain could mix with volcanic ash accumulated on the volcano's slopes to form deadly, fast-moving mudflows that could bury entire houses. The government has already suspended ferry services in the affected areas and some domestic flights have also been cancelled as part of safety measures. About 20 typhoons and storms hit the Philippines each year, many of them deadly. MOSCOW: Some Russian soldiers are quitting the army because of the conflict in Ukraine, several soldiers and human rights activists have told Reuters. Their accounts call into question the Kremlin's continued assertions that no Russian soldiers have been sent to Ukraine, and that any Russians fighting alongside rebels there are volunteers. Evidence for Russians fighting in Ukraine – Russian army equipment found in the country, testimony from soldiers' families and from Ukrainians who say they were captured by Russian paratroopers – is abundant. Associates of Boris Nemtsov, a prominent Kremlin critic killed in February, will soon publish a report which they say will contain new evidence of the Russian military presence in Ukraine. Until now, however, it has been extremely rare to find Russian soldiers who have fought there and are willing to talk. It is even rarer to find soldiers who have quit the army. Five soldiers who recently quit, including two who said they left rather than serve in Ukraine, have told Reuters of their experiences. One of the five, from Moscow, said he was sent on exercises in southern Russia last year but ended up going into Ukraine in an armored convoy. "After we crossed the border, a lieutenant colonel said we could be sent to jail if we didn't fulfil orders. Some soldiers refused to stay there," said the soldier, who served with the elite Russian Kantemirovskaya tank division. He gave Reuters his full name but spoke on condition of anonymity, saying he feared reprisals. He said he knew two soldiers who refused to stay. "They were taken somewhere. The lieutenant colonel said criminal cases were opened against them but in reality – we called them afterwards – they were at home. They just quit." Russia's President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly denied that Moscow has sent any military forces to help rebels in eastern Ukraine, where clashes and casualties persist despite a ceasefire struck in February. Putin's spokesman has derided such allegations by NATO, Western governments and Kiev. Officials say that any Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine are "volunteers," helping the rebels of their own free will. The former Russian soldiers who spoke to Reuters, as well as human rights activists, said some soldiers were fearful of being sent to Ukraine, were pressured into going, or disgruntled at the way they were treated after fighting there. The former tank soldier from Moscow said he would not have gone to Ukraine voluntarily. "No, what for? That's not our war. If our troops were officially there it would be a different story." He said he had been sent to fight in Ukraine last summer and returned to Russia in September when the first peace talks took place. His crew operated a modernized Russian T-72B3 tank, he said. "(Back in Russia) we were lined up and told that everyone would get a daily allowance, extras for fighting and medals," he said. But he said that they did not get the extras they expected. "We decided to quit. There were 14 of us." The names of nine soldiers who quit the Kantemirovskaya division are mentioned in an exchange of letters between Viktor Miskovets, the head of the human resources department of Russia's Western Military District, and Valentina Melnikova, who runs the Alliance of Soldiers' Mothers Committees, a group based in Moscow. In the letters, seen by Reuters, human rights workers asked Miskovets to approve the soldiers' resignations – which one soldier told Reuters the military had been unwilling to do. The letters do not mention service in Ukraine. The soldiers left the service on Dec. 12, according to a letter signed by Miskovets. He and his deputy did not answer calls. Three soldiers from the list, contacted by Reuters, confirmed they had quit the service recently but declined to discuss Ukraine. A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence declined to comment on soldiers quitting the tank unit or being sent to Ukraine. In Russia, all men aged between 18 and 27 have to serve 12 months in the military. By law, these conscripts cannot be sent abroad. But according to human rights activists, military officials have been promising conscripts financial incentives to sign contracts that make them professional soldiers. The officials then push the soldiers into going to Ukraine. Sergei Krivenko, head of a rights group called "Citizen. Army. Rights" and a member of a human rights council created by the Kremlin, has dealt with soldiers' rights since the early 2000s. He said military commanders are trying to find more people who will go to Ukraine voluntarily, "but this is still 'volunteers' in quotation marks, because there is harsh pressure." This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES We a r e a n a t io n a l in st it u t io n a n d n o t t h e v o ice o f a go v t o r a p r iv a t e o r ga n iza t io n AFGHANISTAN TIMES Editor: Abdul Saboor Sarir Phone No: +93-772364666 E-mail: saboorsarir1@gmail.com Email: afgtimes@yahoo.com www.afghanistantimes.af Photojournalist: M. Sadiq Yusufi Advisory editorial board Saduddin Shpoon, Dr. Sharif Fayez, Dr. Sultana Parvanta, Dr. Sharifa Sharif, Dr. Omar Zakhilwal, Setara Delawari, Ahmad Takal Graphic-Designers: Mansoor Faizy and Edriss Akbari Marketing & Advertising: Mohammad Parwiz Arian, 0708954626, 0778894038 Mailing address: P.O. Box: 371, Kabul, Afghanistan Our Bank Accounts: Azizi Bank: 000101100258091 / 000101200895656 Printed at Afghanistan Times Printing Press The constitution says Article 134: Discovery of crimes shall be the duty of police, and investigation and filing the case against the accused in the court shall be the responsibility of the Attorney’s Office, in accordance with the provisions of the law. The Attorney’s Office shall be part of the Executive organ and shall be independent in its performance. The organization, authority as well as method of work of the Attorney’s Office shall be regulated by law. Special law shall regulate discovery and investigation of crimes of duty by the armed forces, police and officials of national security. Editorial Improving healthcare services Ministry of Public Health came up against a lot of criticism in the past for its poor performance. Lack of comprehensive policies vitiated the health sector in the over past decade. However, optimism is gaining ground as the change in leadership at the ministry is proving good omen for the public. In a move to assure the common men of better healthcare services, the ministry has sealed nine private hospitals, cancelled licenses of 159 medicines importers. Twenty-three hospitals got a chance to improve their services; otherwise, would be shut down for not adhering to the regulations. The decision has been highly celebrated by public as private hospitals in the country are busy in fleecing patients under one or the other pretext. Blacklisting of the medicine importers and private hospitals speak volumes about quality of the healthcare services in the country. Recent assessment of the health ministry should be taken as warning sign that means it’s not frivolous to trust the private hospitals trying to catch attention of public through catchy advertisements. Poor healthcare services provided by the private hospitals and unprofessional doctors are an implied threat to public lives. Corruption and nepotism are the major barriers in front of the honest officials to overcome outstanding problems in the health sector. It would not be easy to get rid of the rampant corruption which has permeated so deeply in the system, but without eliminating it, there would be no improvement. It is the culture of graft which allows people with desire to use hospital solely for business purpose rather than serving public to get license and play with people’s lives. Many people having relatives at key positions in the administration and enjoy a kind of impunity because the health teams could not seal hospitals owned by them. The issue not only afflicts honest officials but general public as well. Moreover, the drawn-out legislative procedure is another factor that has tied hands of the authorities to monitor and take action against hospitals that do not adhere to the standards. Flawless laws are essential to deal with the existing challenges in the health sector. Once brief and coherent laws are drafted and approved, officials would be able to ensure public has access to quality health services. Sadly, people having influence get license with flying colors to open hospital. Poor patients banking on the private hospitals are often disappointed when the diseases are not diagnosed despite spending huge amount. Therefore, the government should show no soft corner and clamp down on the enterprises that are importing spurious drugs or the private hospitals that lack professional doctors and facilities but perform surgeries. Besides blacklisting, people involved in import of substandard medicines should be introduced to the Attorney General Office for prosecution. In a nutshell, those who are playing with lives of people should be challenged aggressively by the government. Favoritism should not prevent the authorities from taking action against elements whose sole purpose is to bag money rather than playing a constructive role. The officials should be adamant on standing their ground against such mafias. Subscription Rates Categories Fee Annual Afg: 3600 Six Months Afg: 1800 International Organization $200 per year Afghanistan Times at your door step For fast delivery service Afghanistan Times seeks the names, addresses of your organizations and the number of copies you want. By Aimal Faizi Afghanistan is experiencing an unprecedented level of increased violence and armed conflict by the Taliban and foreign fighters, further deteriorating the alre6ady fragile stability and security of the country. Afghanistan’s National Security Adviser, Hanif Atmar, warned this week that Afghanistan is facing “serious security threats” from foreign terrorist groups such as alQaeda, ISIL, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, East Turkestan Islamic Movement and Ansarullah of Tajikistan. Atmar also said that the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is seeking to “get access to the drugs market in Afghanistan” to finance its activities and infiltrate Central Asia. The sharp degradation of the security situation and the current state and nature of armed conflict in Afghanistan is no doubt preparing the ground for the US to continue its military presence and its unfinished war in the country beyond 2017. Prolonged US presence From Kabul’s perspective, US financial support to the Afghan national security forces and the increasing insecurity and level of threats from “foreign terrorist groups” such as ISIL are the main factors behind the need for a prolonged US military presence in Afghanistan. Since the establishment of the new government in Afghanistan, President Ashraf Ghani and other senior officials have repeatedly expressed their wish to Washington to have more “flexibility” regarding the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan. Atmar recently said that “Afghanistan is satisfied with the security pact” signed with the US. The bestselling argument in defence of the Bilateral Security Agreement - as this senior Afghan official puts it - is that “the US provides $12m to the Afghan security forces on a daily basis”, that’s an annual aid of $4bn. However, it creates a complete state of dependency. The US has intentionally failed to equip Afghan national security forces with modern weapons. The Afghan president and his national security adviser have both stuck to their narrative about the growing threat of “international terrorism”, in particular, the presence of ISIL in Afghanistan. But in Afghanistan, is ISIL a myth or reality? Myth or reality? Ghani has stated on a number of occasions both to a domestic audience and on the international stage that ISIL is worse than alQaeda and poses a serious threat to Afghanistan. In his recent address to a gathering of the country’s political and religious leaders, Ghani said “international terrorism wants to deny Afghanistan a stable future, and is attempting to disrupt the state system in the region, and the world”. Such statements on the escalation of insecurity in the country from the leadership of the National Unity Government are alarming for public opinion, both inside Afghanistan and also in the West. On the other hand, despite the US administration’s statements about the end of its combat mission in Afghanistan, US forces have continued to carry out regular missions against the Taliban and other terrorist groups said to be threate000ning US troops and the Afghan government. US jets and bombers are supporting Afghan national security forces in their combat missions. The ongoing military operations in Kunduz province of Afghanistan are a good example. Since January, there have also been more drone and air strikes as well as operations by special forces as part of the US-led counterterrorism mission named “Freedom Sentinel” in Afghanistan. Furthermore, the US and its NATO allies have not decided on a plausible end date for their ongoing mission in Afghanistan. The wide-ranging goals for the US-led foreign military presence in Afghanistan, as declared, include “stability, fighting terrorism, training Afghan National Security Forces, protecting the population and the country from outside attacks”, etc. Current military strategy None of the above US-NATO goals in Afghanistan seem to be achievable with the current military strategy. With around 9,800 US troops and tens of thousands of military contractors, the US military mission in Afghanistan is going to be an open-ended war for years to come. It is actually much broader and well beyond the scope and nature of what was agreed in the Bilateral Security Agreement between Kabul and Washington. The rapid deterioration of the security situation caused by new and old brands of terrorists groups in Afghanistan and the alarming political messages of the current Afghan leadership are making the ground smoother for the US determination to stay in Afghanistan for its own geopolitical interests. But the National Unity government of Afghanistan must attain a countrywide consensus in this regard. Afghan MPs have already started a series of heated debates in parliament and on TV talkshows criticising the security agreement with the US and demanding Afghan government “reconsider and review” the pact. They stress that ISIL is not an indigenous force in Afghanistan but “an intelligence project”. If the US administration foresees a longer stay, it must find ways to end the growing suspicion about its objectives in Afghanistan among Afghans. Afghans would not oppose an extended US military presence in Afghanistan but only so long as it brings them peace and stability. Peace t alks Danger This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11 , 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Chabahar may prove port of call for Ind ia By David Lepeska Seems like every day we hear about another fatal migrant incident on the Mediterranean. Already this year, nearly 2,000 people have died attempting to cross to Europe, an exponential increase from 2014. The reasons behind the surge are clear. The Norwegian Refugee Council says an average of 30,000 people were forced from their homes every day last year due to conflict, bringing the global total to 38 million. Combined with figures from the United Nations' refugee agency, that means some 55 million people are now living a long way from home - the greatest displacement crisis the world has seen in 70 years. "We are at a dangerous tipping point," Antonio Guterres, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said last week in Kuwait during a humanitarian pledging conference for Syria. We met the Syrian refugees living in Istanbul's ruins Few have responded more admirably than Turkey, which has spent $5.6bn to provide for its Syrian guests. Turkey is not only hosting the most Syrian refugees 1.7 million according to official figures; around 2 million unofficially - it's hosting more refugees than any country in the world. Greece grasps this better than most: It's on pace to double the 33,000 migrants that arrived last year. Ankara's challenges As the desperate continue to stream into Turkey, with many travelling further in search of opportunity, the challenges facing Ankara are of global concern. And they're getting worse. With the lira falling and unemployment and inflation on the rise, Ankara will be hard-pressed in the months ahead to continue its generosity. A mass public brawl involving some 200 people in Sanliurfa last week highlighted the simmering tensions between Syrians snatching up cheap housing and blue-collar jobs and the residents of southeast Turkish cities in which refugees are thick on the ground. And with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) increasing instability across northern Syria and Iraq, the number of refugees in Turkey is set to increase to 2.5 million this year, according to Helen Clark, the administrator of the UN Development Program. With ISIL increasing instability across northern Syria and Iraq, the number of refugees in Turkey is set to increase to 2.5 million this year... Three recent reports take up the issue of Syrian refugees in Turkey. The first, from the main op- By Syed Mudassir Ali Shah INDIA and Iran concluded a longawaited port deal in Tehran on Wednesday, lending a big boost to efforts for promoting regional trade. The Chabahar port near the Iranian border with Balochistan reflects Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s keen interest in forging robust trade links with Central Asia, including landlocked Afghanistan. In 2003, the two sides had agreed to execute the project, bypassing Pakistan, but the venture made slow progress due to Western curbs on Iran over its controversial nuclear programme. The port’s expansion is expected to whittle down transport costs and cut freight time from India to Central Asia and the Persian Gulf. Chabahar provides India an easier land-sea route to Afghanistan, where it has fostered close security cooperation and economic interests over the years. New Delhi has already spent $100 million on building a 220-kilometre road in the Nimroz province of Afghanistan. The road will be extended to Chabahar. Afghanistan is expected to sign By Mir Ayoob Ali Khan position Republican People's Party, argues that the Syria and Iraq policies of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK party) have cost Turkey some $16.5bn in spending on refugees and lost export and tourism revenues. That number may not be far off. Last year, Turkish economist Suleyman Yasar put Turkey's cost for the Syrian war at $12.5bn, while the World Bank estimated the conflict had cost Syria, Iraq, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon some $35bn in total. But blaming the ruling party a month before parliamentary elections seems a bit disingenuous. No AK party policy decision in recent years would have suddenly made southeast Turkey, in the shadow of Syria's civil war, a vacationer's paradise, or transformed war-torn Syria and Iraq into thriving, export-hungry economies. Spending on refugees As I argued a year ago, the one element under Ankara's control spending on refugees - has been one of its few foreign policy bright spots. Everyone from the New York Times to British parliamentarians and UN officials has raved about the conditions of its refugee camps. Finally, the CHP report recommends that Syrians be registered into a national database so a tripartite transit trade agreement on using the port as an alternative route, which could jack up bilateral trade to $3 billion from $700800 million. The project’s strategic nature is illustrated by its location along the coast from the Chinese-funded Gwadar port in Balochistan. Noting the prospect of sanctions on Iran being lifted or eased, India plans to fast-track the plan. Modi’s sense of urgency in concluding trade pacts with Iran and other Persian Gulf nations is apparently driven by Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signing of $46bn energy and infrastructure development agreements with Pakistan last month. During his daylong visit to Tehran, India’s shipping minister inked with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Ahmad Akhoundi a memorandum of understanding on developing the port on the Gulf of Oman. Both sides overruled America’s call for India and other countries not to rush into doing business with Iran. The US has expressed its concern that India is moving too fast and could undermine the sanctions regime. that cities with more refugees receive a greater allocation of government funds. In fact, Turkey began registering Syrian refugees in October, with a new law that also granted free access to healthcare and education. Reports from the Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research (SETA) and the Migration Policy Institute, both DCbased think-tanks, call for Turkey to shift its policy towards integration, as return will not be an option for refugees for a number of years. Since refugees began arriving in mid-2011, Turkey has largely taken a catch-as-catch-can approach, responding generously but haphazardly. Today more than four out of five Syrian refugees in Turkey fend for themselves outside the camps, struggling to find work and housing. A Syrian child living in a refugee camp in Gaziantep, Turkey [Getty] The MPI report urges Turkey to change its 1951 Geneva Convention obligations, which stipulate that only European asylum seekers can be granted refugee status. That October law allowed Syrian refugees to stay until their safe return to Syria can be ensured, but failed to provide full refugee After a commercial accord is reached on implementing the pact, Indian firms will, according to the Indian government, “lease two existing berths at the port and operationalise them as container and multi-purpose cargo terminals”, providing Afghanis-tan with access to the sea and reducing its substantial reliance on Pakistan. The signing ceremony came on the heels of a warning from the US ambassador to India, who said countries engaging with Iran must wait for the outcome of Tehran’s discussions with the P5+1 group — the US, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany. With the next round of talks scheduled for May 12 at Geneva, the European Union and the rest of the partners will join the negotiations three days later. As the negotiators seek to wrap up the process by June 30, there is cautious optimism of a breakthrough. For its part, the Modi administration insists the development of the port in no way violates sanctions and that it is not bound to enforce Washington’s decisions. The port will enable Iran to open up to the Western world once the LETTER TO THE EDITOR Future opportunities Billions of American dollars poured into the country in past 13 years. Several opportunities were created for Afghans to step towards a prosperous future. Freedom of expression, women’s rights, improvement of education, telecommunication services, development of Afghanistan’s ties with the international community and its neighbors are main achievements of the past more than a decade under the ex-President Hamid Karzai’s tenure. People thought that the new government will save the achievements and will use the remaining opportunities for going towards a brighter future. But after formation of the new government, the international aid dwindled and the country’s economy faced a challenging phase. The future opportunities include mineral resources, major trade and economic agreements recently signed between Kabul and other countries, and water resources of Afghanistan. The National Unity Government (NUG) should leave no stone unturned in using the opportunities thoroughly. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Abdullah Abdullah on Sunday said the NUG was committed to maintain past years’ achievements, including freedom of media. He also said that the NUG will make all out efforts to use the existing opportunities for development of Afghanistan in different sectors. Hope these remarks and promises not remain mere-lip service. Jamal Khan Ayubi, Qala-i-Zaman Khan, Kabul Letter to editor will be edited for policy, content and clarity. All letters must have the writer’s name and address. You may send your letters to: afghanistantimes@gmail.com rights. Both reports call for workforce integration. Turkey's parliament will soon consider a bill enabling refugees to work in certain sectors, with quotas. "This plan is to be implemented in a phased manner so as not to disturb the 'social peace' and generate tension," says the SETA report, which acknowledges the June elections seem to be delaying passage of this legislation. The AK party smartly figures that a government decision to give work permits to Syrian refugees and potentially put them on the path to citizenship is unlikely to be well-received by its many working class supporters. Once electoral politicking has past, Turkey needs to give its Syrian visitors work permits. It also needs to look abroad for assistance. "A truly effective and forwardlooking response will require more extensive cooperation and support from the international community," writes Ahmet Icduygu, for MPI. The best solution would be for wealthier states to open their doors to more refugees. New arrivals Recent studies from the European Commission and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development found that migrants have not harmed local workers but have contributed to gov- ernment revenues. New arrivals also tend to be entrepreneurial: In 2014, Syrian refugees started more than a thousand businesses in Turkey. But if they prefer to keep their doors shut, rich countries should at least be willing to increase their aid spending. The US pledged $507m last week in Kuwait, to help Syrians, while the host pledged $500m. But other Gulf states have failed to pull their weight. Riyadh committed $60m at the conference, down from $78m last year. Consider, too, that the US economy is 20 times as large as Turkey's, with a GDP of $16.8 trillion, yet the US has spent about 42 percent less on Syrian aid than Turkey - $3.2bn since the conflict began. Total aid for Syria has held steady over the past year. This might be a result of disaster fatigue, particularly after the devastating earthquake in Nepal. There's also the issue of ISIL. Since last summer, Western leaders looking at Syria have tended to focus on the terror group. But if the moral obligation of helping millions of desperate people provides inadequate motivation, the international community might view the refugee crisis as a security issue. This week in Turkey, the US began training some 15,000 rebels to fight in Syria, part of the USled coalition plan to degrade and destroy ISIL. While it's in the area, coalition advisers would be wise to also help build schools and train teachers to educate some of the 450,000 Syrian refugee children out of school in Turkey. The UN has documented several instances of refugee children joining radical armed groups, with ISIL making child recruitment a key element of its strategy. Refugees from Syria and other conflict zones aren't shoehorning themselves on to listing boats or signing up for jihad out of boredom. They're doing so because they see so little means of providing for their family and building useful, prosperous lives. The less frustration, insecurity, and hopelessness among Syrian refugees in Turkey, the fewer we'll see dying on the high seas and taking up with the likes of ISIL. David Lepeska, a freelance journalist based in Istanbul, has written for The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Guardian, The Financial Times and other outlets. His work focuses on Turkey and the Middle East. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy. sanctions are lifted. India had also expressed its interest in developing a key oilfield, but Iran refused to give it gas marketing rights. INDIA and Iran concluded a long-awaited port deal in Tehran on Wednesday, lending a big boost to efforts for promoting regional trade. The Chabahar port near the Iranian border with Balochistan reflects Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s keen interest in forging robust trade links with Central Asia, including landlocked Afghanistan. In 2003, the two sides had agreed to execute the project, bypassing Pakistan, but the venture made slow progress due to Western curbs on Iran over its controversial nuclear programme. The port’s expansion is expected to whittle down transport costs and cut freight time from India to Central Asia and the Persian Gulf. Chabahar provides India an easier land-sea route to Afghanistan, where it has fostered close security cooperation and economic interests over the years. New Delhi has already spent $100 million on building a 220-kilometre road in the Nimroz province of Afghanistan. The road will be extended to Chabahar. Afghanistan is expected to sign a tripartite transit trade agreement on using the port as an alternative route, which could jack up bilateral trade to $3 billion from $700800 million. The project’s strategic nature is illustrated by its location along the coast from the Chinese-funded Gwadar port in Balochistan. Noting the prospect of sanctions on Iran being lifted or eased, India plans to fast-track the plan. Modi’s sense of urgency in concluding trade pacts with Iran and other Persian Gulf nations is apparently driven by Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signing of $46bn energy and infrastructure development agreements with Pakistan last month. During his daylong visit to Tehran, India’s shipping minister inked with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Ahmad Akhoundi a memorandum of understanding on developing the port on the Gulf of Oman. Both sides overruled America’s call for India and other countries not to rush into doing business with Iran. The US has expressed its concern that India is moving too fast and could undermine the sanctions regime. After a commercial accord is reached on implementing the pact, Indian firms will, according to the Indian government, “lease two existing berths at the port and operationalise them as container and multi-purpose cargo terminals”, providing Afghanis-tan with access to the sea and reducing its substantial reliance on Pakistan. The signing ceremony came on the heels of a warning from the US ambassador to India, who said countries engaging with Iran must wait for the outcome of Tehran’s discussions with the P5+1 group — the US, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany. With the next round of talks scheduled for May 12 at Geneva, the European Union and the rest of the partners will join the negotiations three days later. As the negotiators seek to wrap up the process by June 30, there is cautious optimism of a breakthrough. For its part, the Modi administration insists the development of the port in no way violates sanctions and that it is not bound to enforce Washington’s decisions. The port will enable Iran to open up to the Western world once the sanctions are lifted. India had also expressed its interest in develop- ing a key oilfield, but Iran refused to give it gas marketing rights. During the government of expremier Atal Behari Vajpayee, India slashed oil imports from Iran, a move that left the two countries running into rough weather. The situation worsened in 2014 when Iran hiked import duty on Indian rice from 10pc to 45pc, worrying traders and farmers from Punjab, Haryana and UP. While eyeing a larger role in Wes-tern Asia, Delhi’s regional diplomatic status will see a huge surge with the development of the port. Iran, meanwhile, wants India to help create a free trade zone near Chabahar, some 70km from Gwadar where the Chinese Overseas Ports Holding Company has agreed to help Pakistan establish a free economic zone. Islamabad’s constant refusal to provide a land route for Indian shipments to Afghanistan via Wagah has frustrated Delhi’s efforts to engage with Kabul economically and strategically. India has pledged $100m for laying railway lines connecting Afghanistan with Central Asia. In order to ensure the launch of trade activities at Chabahar, India may enter into discussions with the US for seeking a sanctions waiver. Once the nuclear deal is sealed, New Delhi will invest $85m in the purchase of equipment to set up and run a container terminal and a multi-purpose berth at the port, whose operation is estimated to cost India $22.95m annually. Officially designated as a free trade and industrial zone by the Iranian government, Chabahar has acquired increased significance in terms of an international trade hub. Poised to connect business growth centres in South Asia, the Middle East and Afghanistan, the free trade area is being connected to Iran’s main rail network.— (Dawn) The writer is a Kabulbased Pakistani journalist. Given the unpredictable situation in West Asia, India’s decision to develop Iran’s Chabahar Port could not have come at a more appropriate time. It could prove to be a major turning point in DelhiTehran relations and lead the way for fresh equations and realignments in the Indian sub-continent and West Asia. On May 6, India and Iran broke the 12-year-old jinx by signing a MoU to develop the port, located in the SistanBalochistan province of Iran bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan. Chabahar is a county with a port on Iran’s south-eastern coast. Sistan-Balochistan Province where the Sunni Muslims are in majority is one of the most underdeveloped among the country’s 31 states. It is of strategic importance to India as well as Afghanistan. India has been trying to get sea-land access route to Afghanistan bypassing Pakistan. India has already built a 220 km road worth about $100 million in western Afghanistan, only to create a link with Chabahar Port. The port-county could also provide connectivity to India to Central Asia, the Caucasus and Eastern Europe via railway. With this signing of the MoU, the road is now clear for Indian firms to lease two existing berths at the port and make them operational as container and multi-purpose cargo terminals. The terminals would provide Afghanistan alternate access to the sea port, which in turn will earn connectivity to the regional global market. Chabahar Port will also help India export more to the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). It should also be noted that Chabahar is along the coast from Gwadar port in Pakistan that is being developed with help from China. The MoU is timely because experts from Iran and the P5+1 group of countries (the US, Russia, Germany, France, Britain and China) are working out a draft agreement over the controversial nuclear programme of Iran. According to reports, an agreement over the most ticklish issue plaguing the region for long could become a reality by end of June. Though the nuclear deal is almost a reality, the US has been warning countries, including India, against rushing to Iran and signing agreements. India of course, hasn’t paid any heed as it has sensed, and rightly so, that the signing of the nuclear deal could draw would-be global investors to grab the market in Iran that has been reeling under international sanctions for years. In such a scenario, it would be unwise on India’s part to not sign the MoU. Also, India is aware that China has warmed up to Pakistan. In fact, during his recent visit to Islamabad, President Xi Jinping signed energy and infrastructure agreements worth $46 billion with that country. Incidentally, Chabahar is just along the coast from Gwadar port in Pakistan that is being developed with China’s help. With West Asia on the verge of another round of flaring up of old disputes, India has to give priority to its national interest. West Asia, led by Saudi Arabia, is the biggest supplier of oil to India. But in recent times, India has begun to import more oil from Iran. However, Iran remains the seventh biggest supplier of oil to India. Iraq, where Iran is playing a crucial role, has not recovered from the US invasion and the debacle of Saddam Hussain. Iraq’s neighbour Syria is embroiled in an insurgency that is refusing to die down for over three years. The instability in Iraq and Syria has led to the creation of the ISIS that is growing by the day and choosing its targets far and beyond. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has got nvolved in an immensely avoidable war with Yemen. The war there has taken a Sunni-Shia colour with Iran reportedly backing Shia Houthi rebels who have gained an upper hand in Sanaa. Though Pakistan has withstood Saudi pressure for now to send its troops to the war zone, the question is, how long will this prevail? India which has significantly improved its relations with Saudi Arabia in the recent past is nervously watching what’s unfolding in Yemen. It soon has to take a stand there. Meanwhile, India has no intentions of backing out from Afghanistan. It would like to consolidate its relations with Kabul mainly through developmental activity. But it has to watch its back as Pakistan becomes more edgy over New Delhi’s role in Kabul. Against this backdrop of commotion in the region, Iran could prove to be a dependable friend. Tehran is extending a hand of friendship and offering to open its market to India. Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in the articles are those of the author(s) and do not reflect the views or opinions of the Afghanistan Times. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Turkey, US to start training, equipping Syrian rebels Opposition critics say May 24 elections w ill not be free and fair, but the government praises the democratic climate. Registration complaints According to Ethiopia's National Electoral Board, 47 parties and 5,819 candidates are contesting the ballot for the national parliament and the regional councils. The ruling party has fielded 501 candidates for the 547-seat parliament, followed by the Ethiopia Federal Democratic Union Form (MEDREK) and the Blue Party with 270 and 139 candidates, respectively. Opposition members complain that navigating the political landscape ahead of the election has proven difficult. "We are more consolidated and better positioned compared to previous elections, but the space is more closed," Professor Beyene Petros, chair of the centre-left MEDREK, told Al Jazeera. Both MEDREK and the Blue Party have also cited difficulties registering candidates. Blue Party chairman Yilkal Getent [Simona Foltyn/Al Jazeera] The Blue Party's chairman said more than half of the party's 380 registered candidates were removed from the party list in February on administrative grounds. "This is politically motivated to hinder Blue Party activities. The electoral board is not independent," Yilkal Getent told Al Jazeera. The cancellation of candidates, Getent said, has thwarted the party's ability to mobilise voters through ongoing political debates aired on state media, as time allocations are determined based on the number of candidates. The Blue Party considers itself centre-right and wants to appeal to the country's young electorate, but government officials dismiss it as a far-right movement. The government also accused the Blue Party of inciting violence last month at a government-organised rally in Addis Ababa following the killing of Ethiopian migrants in Libya by ISIL - allegations the party's leaders dismissed. 'Dilute the vote' Despite the large number of parties registered, the opposition alleges many are allied with the ruling party. "No more than two to three parties are real opposition parties. The others don't run to win, their role is to dilute the vote for the opposition," Merera Gudina, associate professor of political sci- ence at Addis Ababa University and a leading opposition figure, told Al Jazeera. Merera Gudina [Simona Foltyn] Some also criticised the voter registration process that ended in February, allegedly covering more than 80 percent of the eligible electorate. Selam Gebrehiwot, a 19-yearold philosophy student, said the government is pressuring voters by tying registration to government services. "The officials came to my house to give me the registration card although I didn't ask for it. I was scared, so I took the card." The deputy chairman of the National Election Board, Addisu Gebreigzabhier, denied such allegations. "We are just doing civic education," Gebreigzabhier said. "The high voter registration is a result of the electorate's desire to exercise their democratic rights." The pre-election process, he added, has been professionally run according to the country's electoral laws and has been "to the satisfaction of all parties". Development first, democracy later Yohannis Getachew, a 32- year-old taxi driver in Addis Ababa, has been following the ongoing political debates on the radio. He said the opposition has failed to present a convincing alternative. "At least the government is building roads and railways. I think that's good. I don't know what the opposition would do," said Getachew. Addisu Gebreigzabhier [Simona Foltyn] The ruling party's growth and transformation plan has resulted in double-digit economic growth over the past five years. Government officials often cite EPRDF's economic track record as its main source of voter support. "It's very difficult for any party to come up with an idea that can match an 11 percent growth rate," said Ganenu Asefa, a political adviser at the Government Office for Communication Affairs. Opposition parties, however, say that growth has benefited only a small elite aligned with the ruling party. "The so-called growth agenda has been impressing the foreigners, not the citizens," Professor Gudina, whose Oromo Federalist Congress party runs under MEDREK's ticket, told Al Jazeera. "Development without democracy is very difficult to sustain," he added. The government Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) - characterised by state intervention in the economy as well as massive public investments in infrastructure - aims to turn Ethiopia into a middle-income country by 2025. International institutions have largely praised the EPRDF's growth agenda. "The targets they set in the GTP were very ambitious, and even if they achieve 75 percent of those targets, it will be a tremendous achievement for a country coming from such a low base," said the World Bank's country director for Ethiopia, Guang Z Chen. Chen said in order to sustain strong growth going forward, the government will need to make policy adjustments so as to stimulate the industrial sector, which currently contributes only 12 percent to the GDP. With urbanisation advancing at twice the rate of overall population growth, job creation for Ethiopia's idle urban youth is another priority. Analysts say although the government has recognised the need for structural reform, corruption and insufficient technical capacity could hamper its ability to manage the process. (AL JAZEERA) Addis Ababa: If Ethiopians ever possessed a strong desire to express their political views through the ballot, that sentiment seems to have dwindled in the run-up to national elections on May 24. One 28-year-old student, who requested anonymity fearing reprisals, shrugged at the thought of the upcoming vote. "To say we have elections, there have to be real alternatives," he said. "This election is just so we can tell Western governments we are a democratic country," the finance and accounting master's degree student told Al Jazeera at Addis Ababa University's Siddist Kilo campus. Such views are not uncommon among the electorate and opposition members in the capital, many of whom have dismissed the upcoming vote as a formality. The results of the 2010 election left the opposition with a single seat in the 547-seat parliament, and afterwards the EU said Ethiopia's electoral process failed to create "a level playing field for political parties". It wasn't always this way. In 2005, the then high-school student took part in political ral- lies in support of the Oromo National Congress Party running under one of the main opposition coalitions, the United Ethiopian Democratic Front. Back then, he said, the opposition was strong and united, and people thought supporting it would bear fruit. In the election that year - preceded by a relatively open political climate - the opposition surprised the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) by taking 31 percent of parliamentary seats. Professor Beyene Beyene Petros [Simona Foltyn/Al Jazeera] However, the aftermath of the vote was marked by mass arrests of student protesters and opposition leaders. The student told Al Jazeera he was detained for months, a fate he shared with thousands of students who took to the streets. The country's controversial 2009 anti-terrorism proclamation has been criticised for its broad application to journalists and opposition members in the run-up to this year's vote, including six "Zone9" bloggers currently on trial for terrorism-related charges. “I want to see the whole world take action in the conflict in Syria. All of the world: Europe, Africa and the U.S. against Bashar Assad,” said Ahdorf, a Syrian refugee and restaurant owner in the Zaatari refugee camp in the Jordanian desert. The 39-year-old refugee expressed that he can make no distinction between the bombings of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria and the actions of extremist terrorist organization, ISIS. “They are the same thing. They both kill and do the same things. There is no difference between them. I won’t forget that Europe and America did nothing. During the revolution in Libya, Europe and America got involved and even in Egypt – but in Syria, nothing like that. When ISIS was created Europe and America directly got together with NATO and entered into Syria. But for three years Assad massacred his people. And no one moved. Why?” Ahdorf told the UK’s The Independent. “No one in Syria will forget this fact, because no one helped the Syrians, they’ve only helped Assad,” Ahdorf said. Syria has been in crisis for over four years forcing 3.8 million people to flee the country, and leaving over 220,000 dead. This week the United Nations is meeting to further discuss international efforts and hopefully find a diplomatic solution to the Syrian conflict. Refugees in the Zaatari camp told The Independent that they want their message to reach the international community, and that they are in desperate need of aid against Assad so that they can return to their home country. “Please finish the war in Syria and please finish Assad. He is the reason for everything that has gone wrong in this part of the world. If this man is finished, everything will be better,” Amar Zwedani, a 30year-old refugee said. Saudi Arabia and Turkey seem to agree with the refugees, after reportedly joining forces this week in the fight against Assad. They have allegedly vowed to aid Syrian rebels, such as the al-Qaeda linked al-Nusra, in their attempts to overthrow the president. (Al Arabiya ) Turkey will start training and equipping moderate Syrian rebels from May 9 at a military base in central Kirsehir province, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavusoglu told Yeni Safak newspaper. A group of 300 rebels will benefit from the first stage of the program, and will be followed by a second group of 300 fighters. In total, 2,000 rebels are expected to be trained by the end of the year. On Feb. 19, Turkey signed a deal with the United States to take part in the program, which was originally due to begin in March. The program will be conducted under the guidance of the Turkish Armed Forces. Ankara and Washington will provide an equal number of trainers, according to the bilateral agreement. In the second phase, they will be trained in the southern province of Hatay in the use of equipment such as anti-tank weapons and machine guns, before being fully battle-ready in Syria. Trained rebels are expected to fight both the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and the Syrian army, Çavusoglu said. The establishment of a safe zone inside Syria would be necessary for the rebels to fight in a secure way, he added, dismissing claims that Turkey would send its own troops to Syria. Metin Gurcan, a security policy researcher at Ankara’s Bilkent University and a former specialforces officer, is cautiously optimistic about Turkey’s decision to train and equip Syrian rebels. “The real picture on the ground makes me cautious. However, further initiatives to adopt a comprehensive defensive military strategy would render me optimistic in the long run,” Gurcan told Al Arabiya News. He said Turkey would train rebels to enable them to protect their villages and neighborhoods against ISIS. “But in order to be sustainable and effective, this training should involve conventional military tactics such as armored operations for attacking targets, as well as guerilla strategies such as hitand-run and improvised explosive devices,” he said. “It’s also a must to provide some degree of sound logistical support to protect the fighters against ISIS attacks.” Gurcan underlined the importance of coaching and training potential leaders among Syrian rebels to increase the sustainability of the initiative. Since Nov. 2014, Turkish soldiers have been training Kurdish peshmerga forces in northern Iraq as part of the fight against ISIS. Ufuk Ulutas, director of foreign policy research at the Ankara-based SETA Foundation, said countries that support the Syrian opposition, including Turkey and the United States, face two options: put boots on the ground to oust President Bashar al-Assad, or substantively help rebels already on the ground to achieve that. The program, “with its all shortcomings, basically aims to achieve the second option,” Ulutas told Al Arabiya News. “Turkey, as a neighboring country that has been suffering from spillover for more than four years now, has been advocating the second option for a long time.” Ulutas said since Turkey borders the strategic northern front, which includes the rebel stronghold and Syria’s largest city Aleppo, Ankara’s involvement in the program has geographical advantages. “Besides that, Turkey - having the second-largest army in NATO, well-known military professionalism and cultural affinity with Syrians, is in a unique position in terms of training opposition fighters.” Ulutas said to improve stability and living conditions in Syria, and to prepare the ground for a political solution, the program must “increase the number of trainees to a level that would quantitatively mean something on the ground. The rumored numbers of trainees are too low, and wouldn’t have the desired impact.” Experts emphasized to Al Arabiya News the need to establish no-fly-zones for the Syrian opposition to defeat the Assad regime and ensure stability. “Rebels are doing quite well on the ground, but don’t have the means to counter the regime’s aerial attacks. A major portion of human loss in Syria is caused by the regime’s indiscriminate use of its air force, including the use of barrel bombs and chemical weapons,” Ulutas said. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES China cuts interest rates for third time since November as economy sputters BEIJING: China's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate on Sunday for the third time since November, as economic growth cools to levels not seen since the global financial crisis. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) lowered its benchmark lending rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 5.1 percent, and its one-year benchmark deposit rates by the same amount to 2.25 percent, adding that the reductions would be effective from May 11. The central bank said in a statement on its website that the move would support the healthy development of the economy. Economists had said it was not a matter of if, but when China eased policy again after economic growth in the first quarter cooled to 7 percent, the slowest pace since 2009. Some market watchers had even said the central bank was risking falling behind the curve in responding to rapidly deteriorating conditions. Initial indicators and industry surveys for April released over the last few weeks had pointed to a further loss of momentum heading into the second quarter. "Currently, the pace of domestic economic restructuring is quickening and the fluctuation of external demand is relatively big. China's economy is still facing relatively big downward pressure," the central bank said. Liquidity in the banking system is generally adequate and market interest rates are falling, providing a good window to open up the upper limit for deposit rates, it said. The central bank has now cut Digital health is on the cusp of a revolution similar to that witnessed when the personal computer went mainstream, according to the former chief executive of Apple and Pepsi-Cola. John Sculley, the marketing maven who famously clashed with the legendary Apple founder Steve Jobs, who died in 2011, says the use of technology in medicine has “extraordinary” promise. Sculley, who joined Apple in 1983 and in his decade-long tenure saw annual sales increase to $8 billion from $800 million, said digital-health – which includes wireless devices that track health and highly personalized drugs – is the interest rates and relaxed banks' reserve requirements five times in six months, and many economists expect more easing measures over the course of the year as the world's second-largest economy is weighed down by a weak property market and slackening growth in manufacturing and investment. “This is not a surprise. The consumer inflation reading for April was lower than expected and employment faces downward pressures," said Lin Hu, an economist at Guosen Securities in Beijing. "But the effectiveness of the rate cut won’t be very big, it may (only) help stabilize expectations. Fiscal policy should be stepped up and there will be further monetary policy easing if economic data continues to underwhelm. We expect the worst could be over after the second quarter and growth may stabilize in the third or fourth quarters as the property sector recovers.” next industry to watch. He was a keynote speaker at Digital Health Live in Dubai, which organizers called the world’s first interactive digitalhealth event. “The promise for [digital health] is just extraordinary,” Sculley said at the three-day event. “We’re just at the early days today… like what it was like in the tech industry when personal computers were becoming practical and functional and [people said] ‘gee, they really are going to be important’.” While the U.S. spends around $3 trillion on healthcare annually, currently only about $2 billion of that is earmarked for digital healthcare, he said. However, things like the U.S. Affordable Care Act, also known as ObamaCare, are forcing people to think about different and cheaper ways of health-service delivery, given employers are now required to help insure staff. “It’s a very exciting time to be involved in healthcare, especially digital health,” said Sculley, who presided over Pepsi-Cola for 15 years before joining Apple. “It’s opening people’s eyes to things like tele-health,” he added. “People are starting to realize there are other ways you can get information… you can get all different types of highly valued medical advice, consultations that can be done digitally, over smartphones or video calls.” Digital Health Live included displays of devices such as a ‘smart fridge’ that gives nutritional advice and recommends recipes based on its contents. Sculley praised the 26-yearold Emirati twin brothers Omran and Erfan Al Hashemi, whose company Nuviun organised the event. He said advances would come rapidly in the healthcare industry, with customers able to drive change. “Consumerization has moved into so many other indus- tries, from how music and newspapers and magazines and television are being completely reinvented around the customer,” he said. Exponential increases in cloud and analytics technology has led to a power shift from “large incumbent companies in industry” to customers the world over, Sculley added. Sculley on Steve Jobs Sculley also recounted his experiences working with Steve Jobs at Apple, in mostly reverential tones. The two executives are said to have fallen out over management style and strategy when working together. He said one of the major themes of his recent entrepreneurial book Moonshot!, described by conference chair and Goolge Health Advisory Board Member John Nosta as a user’s manual for becoming a millionaire, was ‘zooming’ – a trick he learned from Jobs. “Steve didn’t like to sit in his office much. We’d walk the Stanford campus and the hills above Silicon Valley, talking about ideas. Steve called this zooming. What he meant by that was you have to zoom out and connect the dots and look at different domains that do not seem like they have obvious connection points with each other.” For example, he said Jobs was able to combine his interest in calligraphy with the seemingly unconnected world of computing and create computer typefaces the world had never seen, but that Apple is now renowned for. LONDON: It may only account for 2 percent of the eurozone economy but Greece has a habit of punching above its weight when it comes to bruising the currency union. And there are fears it could be once again posing a threat to an otherwise burgeoning recovery. Official figures on Wednesday are expected to show that the 19country eurozone grew by 0.4 percent in the first quarter of 2015 from the previous three-month period. That's up from the 0.3 percent recorded in last quarter of 2014 and would be the eurozone's highest growth rate since the second quarter of 2013, when it emerged from its longest-ever recession. In the first quarter, Germany, Europe's biggest economy, is expected to have led the way, its export-heavy economy prospering from the fall in the value of the euro — Europe's single currency has fallen to near a decade-low against the dollar in the wake of the European Central Bank's decision to launch a 1.1 trillion-euro ($1.2 trillion) monetary stimulus. Low oil prices, less stringent budgetary policies around Europe are also helping to shore up the recovery. Other bright lights include Spain, one of the countries at the forefront of the region's debt crisis over the past few years that has gained plaudits from European policymakers for reforming its economy, particularly the labor market. Economists think those efforts are now bearing fruit. "We think that if you look at the current situation in the eurozone it is about as close to being the dream scenario backdrop as anyone could have realistically hoped a year or more ago to help to kick-start a meaningful recovery," said Ben May, leading eurozone economist at Oxford Economics. May is predicting growth of 0.8 percent, which would be a four-year high and easily outpace levels recorded in the U.S. or Britain, two of the top-performing developed economies over the past year. Beyond the first quarter, however, May concedes that Greece's crisis, on top of slower global growth, could mean this is another "false dawn" for the eurozone. Recent reports suggest that's possible. Fudged wheat figures feed Pak GDP LAHORE: With around 84 per cent of the harvesting and 75 per cent threshing completed, the Punjab is still debating the final size of its wheat crop -- its latest estimates now range between 18 million tonnes and 19.10 million tonnes. Lately, Punjab tried to revise its expected yield down to 18 million tonnes (down from 19.50 million tonnes) but was very heavily snubbed by the federal government for bringing the national production figures down by 1.5 million tonnes, or, in monitory terms, a loss of Rs45 billion – grossly affecting the GDP. The Punjab bureaucracy is now sticking to 19.10 million tonnes, to feed right signals to the market – keeping prices stable because of less production – and save the federal wrath for causing a GDP disaster. Though, unofficially, it still insists that actual figures might not go beyond 18 million tonnes. “The crop, on average, lost 100 to 125 sunshine hours in the province,” explains an official of the Punjab Agriculture Department. Against normal 950 sunshine hours, it received only 825 hours. This cloudy weather, coupled with heavy downpour in certain areas gave excessive vegetative growth to the crop in many areas, hitting the grain filling process. March alone brought over 300 millimeters rains, together with wind and hailstorms, in some parts of the central Punjab. This explains grain shriveling in certain parts of the province and drop in grain weight. These conditions seem to have driven almost a million tonnes hole in overall figures. The Punjab is finalising field trial to firm up the final figures, but debate within the official circles is intense - how to justify the figures it is hoping for, without attracting the federal ire. The weather problem hit progressive growers, who had kept their crop well fed, both with fertiliser and water, says another official. Once this crop got additional rains, its vegetative growth became hugely excessive, eating into grains’ health. Small farmers, who could not afford the luxury of full dose of fertiliser, actually gained out of rains. This, the progressive growers lost of production and smaller ones gained. But the field formations still say that the Punjab would not, in any way, go down 19 million tonnes. The arrival of around 200,000 tonnes at the Food Department centres and dispersal of over 150,000 tonnes gunny bags testify to these claims. But since the issue has become sensitive for the Punjab government, everyone is keeping a mum on it. It is typical case of caught between devil and deep blue sea: The Punjab does not want to give a healthy figures for the fear of wheat price; millers and traders are going slow on purchase knowing that massive quantity is still in the pipeline. The province cannot project a lower figure for fear of the federal government, cut in GDP and lenders later questioning growth figures. However, the situation should clear itself in the next few days as the Punjab has to release final figures, which it hopefully would do when the impact of announcement on market is estimated to be minimum, he concluded. Dubai reveals timeline for build ing Expo 2020 metro line Dubai’s transport authority has outlined the timeline for building an extension of its metro system to serve the site of the upcoming Expo 2020. The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) says the winning bidder to build the 15km line, which includes seven stations, will be announced on Jan. 28 2016. The so-called Route 2020 project comprises an extension of the Dubai Metro’s Red Line from Nakheel Harbour & Tower Station to the planned site of the Expo. Around 4km of the track and two of the stations will be underground, the RTA said. A future plan is in place to construct an additional three stations to serve the new Al Maktoum International Airport. The RTA says it will start receiving requests for pre-qualification from potential bidders from May 31, and the shortlist of consortiums qualified to undertake the project construction will be selected on June 30. It plans to release tender documents on July 2, and on Dec. 6 says it will start receiving proposals, before announcing the winning consortium on Jan. 28 2016. “Construction works on [the] ‘Route 2020’ project will start once the contract is awarded in the first quarter of 2016, and the project is set to be accomplished in the first quarter of 2020 such that it will be up-and-running to serve visitors of Expo 2020,” said Mattar Al Tayer, chairman and executive director of the RTA, in a statement. The RTA recently held a gathering to highlight details of the project, which it says was attended by representatives of more than 100 rail contractors as well as suppliers of trains and rail systems. “The intense presence of international firms is a great start of this project which is set to provide safe and smooth transport to visitors of Expo and several districts of Dubai as well. It will also act as a vital link between various areas of Dubai and Al Maktoum International Airport in future,” said Al Tayer. Business confidence and retail sales across the eurozone have taken a dent, while surveys of managers suggest business activity has peaked, meaning growth in the rest of the year may not pick up as much as hoped. "While it is encouraging that the recovery is becoming more broad-based across the euro area, there are clearly still pockets of vulnerability, with Greece an obvious source of concern," said Timo del Carpio, European economist at RBC Capital Markets, who is forecasting eurozone growth of 0.5 percent in the first quarter. The headline growth rate, whatever it is, will mask the likely fall back into recession of Greece barely a year after it emerged from one of the developed world's deepest downturn since World War II. Last week, the European Union slashed its projection for Greek growth this year to just 0.5 percent from 2.5 percent previously — assuming Greece secures a deal with creditors that will help it pay off debts. The main reason behind Greece's renewed crisis is the new left-wing government's pledge to end the hated budget austerity that creditors from the eurozone and International Monetary Fund have insisted upon. For over three months, talks have dragged on as the Greek government tries to come up with a series of economic and budget reforms that will convince the creditors to pay out 7.2 billion euros ($8 billion) of bailout cash. With every passing day, the uncertainty has sharpened, to the detriment of the Greek economy. Greeks have been pulling money out of banks and investors have shied away from the country. If the bailout talks fail, the country could default on its debts, have to put limits on the free flow of money and eventually even exit the euro. Most economists think that would cause a massive recession in Greece for at least a year as the country tries to adjust to a new, weaker currency. Though the eurozone has shored up its defenses against such a worst-case scenario, a Greek exit would stoke jitters in the markets about which country could be headed for the door next. Pierre Moscovici, the Europe- an Commission's top economy official, admitted as much last week. "Once you have one country leaving, the next question is who's next, so you lose status and you lose force," he said. The repercussions of a socalled Grexit could be far and wide — a hit to confidence could limit investment and consumer spending. Moody's Investor Services, which last month cut Greece's credit rating further into junk status, said the risks to the eurozone should not be underestimated. "The direct impact might be limited because of Greece's limited trade links and lower financial market exposure to Greece in other euro area countries, but its exit could nevertheless cause a confidence shock and disrupt government debt markets," said Alastair Wilson, Moody's managing director for global sovereign risk. But we're not there yet. And if officials from Greece and the creditors are to be believed, progress is being made. Whether there's enough to secure a deal at a meeting Monday of eurozone finance ministers remains an open question. Saudi Arabia’s Dammam airport to w elcome 9m passengers this year King Fahd International Airport (KFIA) said it handled in 2014 more than 8.49 million passengers, a growth rate of 12 percent, beating competitor airports in the region for the second consecutive year. In the same year international traffic increased by 10 percent and now accounts for more than half of KFIA’s passenger traffic, with the addition of new airlines or increased services from existing airlines such as Lufthansa, Philippine Airlines and Jet Airways to Europe, southeast Asia and south Asia. During the first quarter of 2015, KFIA said international traffic grew by over 16 percent as the airport continues to introduce more direct flight connections to Asia and Europe. Yousef Al-Dhahri, director-general of KFIA, said: “The momentum continues to accelerate and in the first quarter of 2015 KFIA achieved a growth rate of 18.5 percent, handling over 2.4 million passengers. “This is the highest number of passengers handled in a single quarter in KFIA’s history and the airport is on track to welcome more than 9 million passengers this year. “KFIA and the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) are working together to further improve connectivity in KFIA to respond to the growing traffic with the support of the Eastern Province Municipality and leading Saudi businesses in the region.” The airport continues to grow from strength to strength, anchored by a management and operational partnership with the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) and Changi Airports International (CAI). This cooperation enabled KFIA to achieve growth in the number of airlines, passenger traffic and city links. KFIA is served by 35 airlines and has added 15 new destinations since 2008 to develop a global network of 65 cities. To improve its air cargo services, KFIA inaugurated the new multimodal Cargo Village facility on Apr. 6, with DHL Express, NAQEL, SMSA Express, TNT and UPS operating as anchor tenants. Additional capacity is coming online and will assist airlines operating into the Kingdom. Located 20 kilometers northwest of Dammam, KFIA serves the entire eastern region of the Kingdom, mainly Dammam, Dhahran. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Salman extends ‘Shukriya’ to supporters MUMBAI: Salman Khan’s conviction and five-year sentence saw the film fraternity expressing overwhelming solidarity with the actor. But on Friday, when the sentence in a 2002 hit-and-run case was suspended, B-Towners seemed to express “relief” in muted and measured ways. Later on Friday evening, the superstar took to Twitter to thank his fans. “All those who prayed for and supported me, thank you, meherbani, shukriya,” Salman tweeted. The 49-year-old’s sister Arpita Khan Sharma also thanked her brother’s die-hard fans for their relentless support. “This wouldn’t have been possible without all your love, support & prayers. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts,” Arpita tweeted. Hours after the sentence was suspended on Friday, the actor received a hero’s welcome from fans outside the Khan’s Bandra residence. The fans were singing songs, dancing and even bursting crackers to celebrate his homecoming. Dressed in a white shirt, Salman came out on the balcony of his apartment, and waved to his fans as a gesture of his gratefulness for their ceaseless support during his film journey as well as trying times. Also seen with Salman were his father and prolific writer Salim, mother Salma, brother Arbaaz and sister Arpita — all of whom have stood by his side in the case. Salma, who fell ill on Wednesday when the five-year jail term was announced for the actor, stood with her son, looking relieved and at peace. On Wednesday, popular names like Subhash Ghai, Riteish Deshmukh, Bipasha Basu, Dia Mirza, Varun Dhawan, Sonakshi Sinha, Kunal Kohli, Arjun Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Wajid Khan and Farah Khan Ali said they “stand” by Salman, who according to most of them, is the “nicest human being in this business”. To many critics, this unceasing support of the Bollywood fraternity seemed skewed and unjust as most names ignored the plight of the victims. Many even said he didn’t ‘deserve’ the conviction. But after jewellery designer Farah Khan Ali, singer Abhijeet Bhattacharya and actor Ajaz Khan came under attack for distasteful remarks for the victims of the hit-and-run case, most top actors and filmmakers chose to keep their opinion at bay on Twitter. Hours after the Bombay High Court granted Salman regular bail, only a few celebrities tweeted about the case. “@BeingSalmanKhan Bollywood, fans and his critics will all have to agree with this … Salman rules Fridays … I’m very happy for the Khan family,” tweeted Sajid Khan. Jumme ki raat hitmaker Mika Singh, shared, “My best wishes to big brother @BeingSalmanKhan and I’m 200% sure God will help the man who always helps others. Keep praying.” The Wanted star is also facing trial in a Rajasthan court for hunting a black buck during the shooting of 1999 film Hum Saath Saath Hain. Actress Lindsay Lohan reportedly has fallen "woefully short" of completing her community service, logging less than 20 hours since February. The "Mean Girls" star was ordered by a court in February to complete a further 125 hours of voluntary work by the end of this month. This, after a Los Angeles judge criticised certain tasks she had counted as part of her punishment. A progress hearing was scheduled to take place on Thrusday, in which she should have confirmed the sentence is close to completion, reports tmz.com. However, a community service organisation here has told prosecutors Lohan has completed fewer than 20 hours. A prosecutor told the website that they will be asking for a warrant to be issued for the actress' arrest. However, if Lohan stays in London, she won't be arrested as there is no extradition for a misdemeanour offence. Lohan posted on Instagram, earlier this week, an image of her surrounded by files, claiming she was undertaking community service. However, even if she works hard from now until the deadline, she may find it tough to complete the sentence as a previous hearing stated she could only undertake four hours of voluntary work a day.Her probation stems from a reckless driving charge relating to an accident in June 2012, for which she was sentenced to community service, psychotherapy and lockdown rehabilitation. For Imran marriage Priyanka’s means equal partnership ‘Quantico’ gets picked up by ABC A ctor Imran Khan believes that to make marriage work, couples need to share responsibilities. "In India, it is taken that washing clothes, and things like this is a woman's job, and not what men do, which is an unhealthy attitude... a thought process which is not conducive for a healthy relationship. "Both need to take on equal responsibilities to make their relationship work," the "Matru Ki Bijlee Ka Mandola" star, who is currently promoting detergent brand Ariel's 'Share the Load' movement, told IANS. The 32-year-old, also a father to daughter Imara Malik Khan, believes that "once you become a parent, so many of our priorities get re-aligned in life". "You start to realise that there are so many things that you used to earlier care about are completely unimportant now. Everything becomes about your relationship, your child, about your responsibilities towards your family," said the actor, who tied the knot with Avantika Malik in 2011. .American TV show "Quantico", the pilot of which was shot with Bollywood actress Priyanka Chopra essaying the female lead, has been picked for telecast by TV network ABC. It will air in fall season. Confirming the news, an excited Priyanka took to micro-blogging website Twitter and shared: "And it's happened #QuanticoABC will air this fall @ABCNetwork @anjulaacharia @tracybrennan007 @kcslee God Bless!yay! (sic)" The 32-year-old actress also shared a photograph of the cast of the show along with her tweet. Priyanka, who is the first Bollywood actress to star in a pilot at ABC and has made her space in the West with her singing talent, plays Alex Parrish, a half-Caucasian, half-Indian FBI trainee with a haunting past. The show centres on a diverse group of recruits who have arrived at the FBI Quantico Base for training. Being the best and brightest of the lot, it seems impossible that one of them is suspected of masterminding the biggest attack on New York City since 9/11, according to deadline.com. "Quantico" also stars Dougray Scott as Liam, Jake McLaughlin as Ryan, Aunjanue Ellis as Miranda, Yasmine Al Massri as Nimah, Johanna Braddy as Shelby, Tate Ellington as Simon Asher and Graham Rogers as Caleb Haas. RANVEER SINGH PRAISES One Direction to make first aw ard Deepika Padukone on show appearance as four-piece Tw itter, says he is not biased British boyband One Direction will make their first awards show appearance as a four-piece band at 2015 Billboard Music Awards (BMA). The band will be among presenters at the event, which will be held at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on May 17, reports aceshowbiz.com. This will be Harry Styles, Niall Horan, Louis Tomlinson and Liam Payne's first appearance at an awards show as a four-piece after, Zayn Malik exited the group back in March to be "a normal 22-yearold". The 2015 Billboard Music Awards is set to be hosted by rapper Ludacris and model Chrissy Teigen. Singers like Mariah Carey, Britney Spears, Iggy Azalea, Ed Sheeran, Meghan Trainor, John Legend, Kelly Clarkson, Wiz Khalifa and Sam Smith are among stars lined up to perform. Imran Abbas’s film 'Abdullah' makes it to Cannes MUMBAI: Bollywood heartthrob Ranveer Singh is going gaga over his rumoured ladylove Deepika Padukone’s “magical performance” in Piku. The actor went as far as to say that it is her best performance to date. He further praised the work of director Shoojit Sircar by tweeting about the tremendous job he did. Deepika did not share the same excitement as Ranveer. When asked about his tweet she laughed and said, “I think I take it in the same way as hundred other people have tweeted it, so you should ask me about those also.” The film deals with a cab driver (Irrfan Khan) caught between a dysfunctional father (Amitabh Bachchan) and daughter (Deepika Padukone) as he drives them to Calcutta. Ranveer isn’t the only one in B-town who publicly praised his rumoured love’s film performance. The first to start this trend were couple Indian cricketer Virat Kohli and Bollywood actress Anushka Sharma. The two attracted a lot of media attention and finally confirmed rumours of their relationship. 2015 is certainly turning out to be a great year for Pakistani cinema. More and more Pakistani films are hitting the theaters and two films have already made it to the Cannes Film Festival. Now it seems as if Cannes will feature a third Pakistani film. According to the Imran Abbas official Facebook page, the actor’s film Abdullah has been selected for the 68th Cannes Film Festival scheduled to be held from May 15 to May 21. The story of Abdullah revolves around the tragic Quetta incidents of 2011 in which five Russian citizens, allegedly suicide bombers, were killed at a checkpost of frontier corps. If the news is true, this will be the third Pakistani film to feature at Cannes this year after Saffan Qadir’s Holiday in December and Rayika Choudhri’s Baat Cheet. A search for the film Abdullah on the official website of the Cannes Film Festival did not yield any result. The website does, however, feature Baat Cheet and Holiday in December. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Lew is Hamilton pred icts allMercedes duel for Spanish GP w in World champion has a hunch that Ferrari won't challenge on Sunday; Third-placed Vettel concedes it will be "difficult" to topple Merc Pablo Zabaleta expects changes at Manchester City this summer after admitting that finishing second is not good enough. City were expected to challenge Chelsea for the Premier League title but instead find themselves in a battle to finish as runners-up behind the newly-crowned champions. While Zabaleta says it would be important to finish second rather than third, he acknowledges they still should be doing better. “This is a Manchester City side that want to win trophies, every season,” he told Sky Sports. “The expectations and ambi- tions are really big and that’s why now we are a little disappointed about the season because we are out of the cups and Chelsea have won the title with four or five games to go. “We know that is not enough (to finish second) because when you look at the players we have in the team we expect to win something, but we want to win all three games and then in the summer see if there are any changes in the club and be ready for changes because always in big clubs players come in and go. “I always expect change. Big clubs are very ambitious and want Anthony Joshua knocks out Raphael Zumbano Love to continue Kevin Johnson preparations Anthony Joshua knocked out Raphael Zumbano Love and then came face-to face with next opponent Kevin Johnson. The heavyweight prospect improved his career record to 12-0 after thrilling the Birmingham crowd with a trademark finish in the second round before coming face-to-face with upcoming foe Kevin Johnson. Joshua was fully in control of the bout but ended it with frightening ferocity - a right hand flew past Love's guard and bludgeoned him. The Brazilian visitor was left floundering on the floor with no possibility of returning to his feet. The opening round saw Joshua establish control with a jab, with Love's pawings attempts to return fire doing no damage. Joshua seemed content to hear the first bell despite backing Love onto the ropes and ripping body shots on a couple of occasions. In the second, the Brazilian audaciously smiled as a jab snapped his head back - a sign of confidence that Joshua immediately extinguished with another vicious knockout. "I don't know how long the first chapter will be," Joshua said when asked if would seek tougher tests. "I'm feeling more confident with each fight that goes on." He will meet Johnson on May 30 at the O2 Arena in London on the undercard to Kell Brook v Frankie Gavin - and the American climbed into the ring after Joshua's win in Birmingham. "Whether me and Kevin go 10 rounds, or 8, 6, 4 or 2 - it doesn't bother me," Joshua insisted. His American counterpart, to a chorus of boos, said: "I've got the antidote for this guy. I know what I've got to do to stop this guy. This will be the meanest fight anyone has seen." However, Joshua was given the final word when asked what would happen when the pair meet later this month. “Two fighters that are hungry, that believe they are going to put on a show on, get the stoppage, are going to come out and we’re going to clash. “May the best man win, but I’m sure everyone in here knows who the best man is out of me and him – it’s easy work for me.” Lewis Hamilton suspects the battle for victory in Sunday’s Spanish GP will be an exclusive duel between himself and pole-sitting Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg. For the third time this season, the two Silver Arrows will line up alongside each other on the front-row of the grid. However, for the first time since last year it is Rosberg who holds the advantage after ending Hamilton’s 100 per cent pole record in 2015. Sebastian Vettel starts third for Ferrari and the SF15-T has consistently shown stronger relative pace to the Mercedes W06 in race conditions this year. On this occasion, however, Hamilton has a hunch that the narrative that dominated 2014 is going to be repeated on Sunday. “I’d be guessing, but I think the race is between me and Nico,” Hamilton told Sky Sports F1. In Friday’s race simulations on the medium tyre – the compound which is set to prove the one of choice for the front-runners in the race – Mercedes appeared to hold a clear advantage over Ferrari, with Rosberg’s pace looking particularly strong. Vettel, the race victor in Malaysia, acknowledges that beating either W06 is going to be an uphill challenge. Lewis Hamilton believes the Spanish GP will be fought between himself and Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg after discounting the Ferrari drivers Lewis Hamilton believes the Spanish GP will be fought between himself and Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg after discounting the Ferrari drivers “Being realistic, they are quick. They are not on pole and second, the first row, by chance,” the Ferrari driver said. “They showed I think in every single session this weekend that they are very competitive with either tyre. So I expect them to be very strong. “But, of course I hope that we can be a bit closer. The past races we were a bit closer on race pace but, as I said, being realistic it will be difficult to beat them.” Hamilton's challenge to Rosberg in qualifying was stymied by an unbalanced W06, the world champion having failed to find the set-up sweet-spot on his car this weekend. Although the Circuit de Catalunya is a track not famous for its overtaking, the run to the first corner from the start is one of the longest of the season and been the scene of numerous bold passes in the early stages of races. But with the same car as Rosberg, Hamilton is targeting an electric initial getaway when the lights go out. Lewis Hamilton looks at Kimi Raikkonen's Ferrari Lewis Hamilton looks at Kimi Raikkonen's Ferrari “We’ve both got the exact same clutches, so naturally we should have the same start,” he said on Saturday night. “If I’m fresher tomorrow and have slightly better reaction time, it might make a difference by Turn One. So that’ll be a goal.” Giro d’Italia: Orica-GreenEdge w in stage one as Simon Gerrans leads Peter Moores sacking by England is the right call, says Nick Knight to sign big players. City are one of those clubs that wants to win trophies next season and that is why you can expect some change.” City host QPR on Super Sunday before finishing their season with a trip to Swansea and a home match against Southampton. It is almost three years since City scored twice in stoppage time against QPR to win the Premier League title in dramatic fashion and Zabaleta, who netted the opener in the 3-2 victory, has fond memories of the clash. Pablo Zabaleta celebrates scoring the opening goal against QPR in May 2012 Pablo Zabaleta cele- Alberto Contador made early gains on his rivals for overall victory at the Giro Italia after his TinkoffSaxo team finished second to Orica-GreenEdge on the opening stage’s team time trial. Orica-GreenEdge stopped the clock on a 17.6km course from San Lorenzo al Mare to San Remo on the Mediterranean coast in a time of 19min 26sec, which was seven seconds faster than Tinkoff-Saxo and 13 seconds ahead of thirdplaced Astana. Simon Gerrans was OricaGreenEdge’s first rider over the finish line and consequently becomes the first wearer of the leader’s pink jersey in this year’s race. Team Sky could only finish 27 seconds down in ninth place, which means team leader Richie Porte is 20 seconds behind Contador in the general classification. Rigoberto Uran’s Etixx – Quick-Step were fourth on the day, 19 seconds down, which leaves the Colombian 12 seconds down on Contador. Simon Gerrans became the first leader of this year's race Simon Gerrans became the first leader of this year's race Contador, however, did not look comfortable and was momentarily distanced by his teammates, who subsequently had to slow down in order to allow him brates scoring the opening goal against QPR in May 2012 “I don’t score too many but that one was in a special game, in a game that we were playing for the title,” he said. “I know people will forgot about my goal, everyone will remember Sergio’s (Aguero) in the last minute but every time we play QPR it is a great memory from that game. Now it is a different story, another game, but we need to play with the same spirit. "When you cannot win the league it is important for the club to finish as high as you can... and come back next season even stronger." We take a trip back to May to catch back up. It was the second year in succession that Orica-GreenEdge have won the Giro’s team time trial and with the next three stages all poised to finish in some form of sprint, they are looking to keep the pink jersey until Wednesday's mountainous fifth stage. Gerrans said: “What an honour 2012 as Manchester City clinched the title in dramatic fashion We take a trip back to May 2012 as Manchester City clinched the title in dramatic fashion Asked about how Aguero compares to his Argentina team-mate Lionel Messi, Zabaleta said: “Messi is just out of this world, he is the best player in the world and that’s why he is so good and in all important games he always make a difference with great goals. “Aguero is one of the best strikers in the world without doubt, they are both great but I would say Messi is from a different planet.” to have the pink jersey. All my victories are due to fantastic teamwork and none more so than this jersey. We have a few guys who are specialists in the team. They really drove the pace and everybody fully committed to the plan.” Orica-GreenEdge general manager Matt White added: "It's real- ly great for the team because the pressure is gone. Our No 1 objective was to win today, and now we go on the hunt for stages. Simon has had a horrible year with injuries but he is in very good shape and it's only fitting that he has the maglia rosa today. I would like to keep the pink jersey to Abetone [on stage five]." Pierce buzzer-beater lifts Wizards past Hawks Forward Paul Pierce banked in the winning jumper at the buzzer as the Washington Wizards beat the Atlanta Hawks 103-101 in Game Three of their Eastern Conference semi-final play-off series on Saturday. Guard Bradley Beal and forwards Nene and Otto Porter each scored 17 points as the shorthanded Wizards survived a furious comeback by the Hawks to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven NBA series against the top seed in the East. Game Four is in Washington on Monday. Washington played their second straight game without injured All-Star guard John Wall and won at home despite blowing a 21point fourth-quarter lead. Sparked by their second unit, Atlanta stormed back with a 21-3 run, including 17 straight points, to get within three points with 3:12 remaining. Forward Mike Muscala's three-pointer tied the score with 14.1 seconds left. Pierce, defended by Hawks guard Dennis Schroder, hit a step-back jumper just inside the three-point arc as the buzzer sounded. He finished with 13 points. Even without Wall, who suffered five non-displaced fractures in his left wrist and hand in Game One, Washington led comfortably throughout and were up 91-70 with 9:54 remaining. Schroder and guard Jeff Teague each scored 18 points for the Hawks, who trailed by double digits for most of the game. Forward DeMarre Carroll scored 14 points, snapping a streak of six games with at least 20. Atlanta forward Paul Millsap (flulike symptoms) came off the bench and had eight points. Forward Kyle Korver, the only starter to play during the final minutes, had six points. In the other play-off match on Saturday night, the Memphis Grizzlies held off a late charge by the Golden State Warriors at FedExForum for a 99-89 victory and a 21 lead in the NBA Western Conference play-off semi-finals. Grizzlies power forward Zach Randolph scored 22 points and center Marc Gasol posted a double-double with 21 points and 15 rebounds. Gasol did most of his work in the first half, but he hit a jumper that beat the shot clock with 2:06 left to hike the Grizzlies' lead to 93-85. Gasol fouled out with 1:45 left. Golden State, who trailed by 19 points early in the fourth quarter, got to within four at 88-84 with 3:15 to play on a Harrison Barnes layup (16 points, six rebounds). But Memphis closed on an 11-5 run to seal the victory.Warriors guard and NBA Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry finished with 23 points and six assists. But Curry was just 8 of 21 from the floor and 2 of 10 from 3-point range. Warriors guard Klay Thompson scored 20 points, going 8 of 13 from the field and 3 of 6 from behind the arc. After making 20 turnovers in the Game 2 loss, Golden State committed 17 more turnovers in Game 3 that led to 22 Memphis points. The Grizzlies had their largest lead with 10:38 left in the fourth quarter when Randolph knocked down a step-back jumper for an 83-64 lead. Grizzlies point guard Mike Conley, who again played with a mask because of a facial injury, had 11 points and five assists. Guard Courtney Lee finished with 11 points and four assists. Peter Moores lacked the international pedigree necessary as England head coach says Sky Sports’ Nick Knight. Moores’ second spell in charge of the national team ended in the same way as his first, with news that he was sacked on Sunday. Knight believes it was the right move, but feels some sympathy for Moores who he’d still like to see have a role in the England setup. “I’m not surprised the decision has been made to go in a different direction”, said Knight. “The last six to eight months have not gone well in terms of results. Tim Abraham looks back at Peter Moores' time as England head coach Tim Abraham looks back at Peter Moores' time as England head coach “From the outside looking in, perhaps he lacked that international pedigree necessary at the highest level and I think that’s one of the possible reasons why he’s been moved aside. “He has developed some players within the side – that is one of his great skills and I would be very keen to still have Peter involved in the set-up, identifying younger players and bringing them through the system – but unfortunately the team as a whole hasn’t moved in the right direction.” The move to part with Moores was made shortly after the announcement of Andrew Strauss as the new Director of England cricket. Former England captain Andrew Strauss has been named as Director of England Cricket Former England captain Andrew Strauss has been named as Director of England Cricket Knight thinks it’s a brilliant appointment and understands why Strauss was eager to start with his own man in charge. “The buck stops with Andrew Strauss,” said Knight. “It is why he has been appointed, to get these decisions right. “He will do whatever he thinks will be for the betterment of the England set-up. He’s passionate about the England team.” “He didn’t have to take on this job, but he has taken it because he feels he can make a difference. “He’ll have his own ideas and he has the strength of character to stand by his decisions, as we’ve seen with the sacking of Moores. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . MONDAY MAY 11 . 2015 -Sawr 21, 1394 H.S Vol:IX Issue No:275 Price: Afs.15 Weapons’ supply to Pakistan: US draws IRE OF AFGHANS Abdul Zuhoor Qayomi K ABUL: Reacting to the United States’ deci sion to provide used weapons to Pakistan, the Obama administration drew ire of Afghans as the Meshrano Jirga on Sunday termed the US “a foe in friend’s guise”. Provoked by the recent report of the Congressional Research Center that the United States of America has decided to provide used weapons, including 14 combat aircrafts, 59 military trainer jets and 374 armored personnel carriers to Pakistan, the senators said that Afghans were expecting these weapons. According to the report, the weapons supplied to Pakistan were earlier used by the US forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. Expressing serious concerns over insecurity and sincerity of the US, the senators said the international partners of the Afghan government should have made Afghanistan the first choice rather than Pakistan. They said that the used military hardware could have helped the Afghan security forces a lot in improving security. Urging the government to prevent militants from posing threats in northern and eastern provinces of the country, the senators said that Washington has deceived Kabul while favoring Islamabad in deals. They said that supply of the used weapons to Pakistan indicated that the US was a “murderer of Afghans”. Afzal Shamil, a senator, said that it was believed that the US would hand over the weapons to Kabul as a key alley in the ongoing war against terrorism..... see P3 Suicide blast kills 3 staffers of AGO, wounds 18 others in Kabul AT News Report KABUL: At least three people have been killed and 18 others wounded when a suicide bomber attacked a vehicle of the Attorney General Office (AGO) on Sunday in Kabul, said an official source. The Director of the 119 department at the Ministry of Interior (MoI), Humayun Ainee, said that incident took place around 4:00 pm on Sunday in Sanatorium area, 6th district of Kabul city. All the victims of the blast were staffers of the AGO. He said that staffers of the AGO were on their way to home when they were attacked. The Taliban accepted the responsibility of the blast and claimed that they have killed 18 attorneys and wounded seven others. It is worth mentioning that a suicide bomber attacked vehicle of the AGO in the same area last week, which led to killing of two persons and wounded 15 others. Jaw and district of Badghis FALLS TO TALIBAN AT Monitoring Desk KABUL: Officials in Badghis province has confirmed that Jawand district of the province has fallen under the Taliban control. Bahauddin Qudsi, the chairman of Badghis Provincial Council, said that Jawand district of the province is currently under the Taliban’s control. “The militants have surrounded district chief and po- lice chief of the district,” Radio Azadi quoted Qudsi as saying. Mirwais Mirzakwal, the spokesman for the provincial governor office said that national army commandos along with other security forces are trying their best to clear the district from the presence of militants. “Though the exact number of casualties is not clear, reports say that at least six Afghan soldiers have been killed in the clashes,” he added. Mirzakwal said that a swarm of militants, numbering around 600 fighters, storm Jawand district the other night. He added that foreign militants were also among the Taliban insurgents. Safia Aymaq, a parliamentarian from Badghis, described the security situation in Jawand district as fragile and said that she has discussed the issue with the government officials several times in the past, but they took the threat lightly. She said, due of lack of enough security forces, the Taliban militants frequently attack the remote district. She said that the current clashes between security forces and the Taliban have forced tens of families to leave their houses. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF.