Ghani thanks US troops for sacrifices in Afghanistan
Transcription
Ghani thanks US troops for sacrifices in Afghanistan
Eye on the News TUESDAY . MARCH 24 . 2015 -Hamal 04, 1394 HS Ghani thanks US troops for sacrifices in Afghanistan AT Monitoring Desk P resident Ashraf Ghani in his first visit to Washington DC thanked the US troops for their service in the country and said they have helped to train a country that can defend itself against terrorism. So what s the legacy? The legacy is now a proud Afghan security forces that has dealt with the best of you and emulates the best of your example, Ghani told a gathering of members at the Pentagon. The special forces who worked shoulder to shoulder with you are now carrying the mission, he added. According to the Washington Times, the president also emphasized changes the country has made that allow young Afghan girls more freedom to get an education. He directed the remarks specifically to someone in the audience Reese Larson, a 9-yearold girl whose father is currently deployed in Afghanistan. Reese, I have greetings to you from 3 million Afghan girls who are attending school today. Fourteen years ago, there were exactly none. Each one of them wants to entertain the hopes you do, and your dad is making this possible, he said. Remember, he is there to make a difference. Some Republicans have warned that not leaving behind a residual US presence in Afghanistan could lead to the country s hard-won security falling back into chaos similar to what happened in Iraq. Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter said that while the US and other international partners will continue to help in the fight, Mr. Ghani has made it clear that Afghanistan s future is ultimately for Afghans to grab hold of and for Afghans to decide. During his first visit to Washington since being elected president, Mr. Ghani is expected to make the case for more flexibility in the planned drawdown of U.S. troops in Afghanistan at the end of this year. There are currently about 10,000 American service members in Afghanistan, though the White House has said it will reduce that to about 5,500 by December. President Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah the CEO of the National Unity Government arrived in Washington on Sunday. More than 850,000 Americans have served in Afghanistan since 2001. Many have returned home injured and more than 2,000 were killed in action. Pakistanis among 13 fighters DEAD IN HELMAND OFFENSIVE LASHKARGAH: More than a dozen insurgents have been killed in an ongoing clearing operation in southern Helmand province, an official said on Monday. The fighters suffered the fatalities in Joshali locality, where security forces defused 16 landmines and seized a walkie-talkie and hundreds Kalashnikov bullets. Lt. Col. Mohammad Rasoul Zazai, spokesman for the 215th Maiwand Military Corps, Truthful, Factual and Unbiased afgtimes@yahoo.com www.afghanistantimes.af Vol:IX Issue No:228 Price: Afs.15 www.face book.com/ afghanistantime s www.twitter.com/ afghanistantimes Afghanistan will be GRAVEYARD FOR DAESH: GHANI AIDE WASHINGTON: With the increasing capabilities and strength of the security forces, Afghanistan will prove a graveyard of Daesh, a confident presidential spokesman said ahead of Afghan-US talks at Camp David. Ajmal Obaid Abidy made the assertion during an interview Pajhwok Afghan News hours after President Ashraf Ghani and his CEO Dr Abdullah Abdullah arrived in Washington for talks with American leaders. He said the talks would focus not only on security aspects of the relationship, but also on economic self-reliance, a goal articulated by Ghani after coming to power last year. Stability of Afghanistan is key to stability of the region and Islamic countries. Of course, the United States can play a very significant role in creation of such consensus (among regional players and Islamic countries), he added. On Sunday evening, Secretary of State, John Kerry hosted a dinner for Ghani and Abdullah. At Monday s talks, Kerry will be joined by Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, Treasury Secretary, Jack Lew and others. The visit of new Afghan leaders, Abidy said, was to thank the American people, its security forces and leadership for the role they had played and the sacrifices made to bring peace and defeat insurgents. A lot of change has happened in Afghanistan between 14 years ago and now. This change inside the country was not possible without the support of the United States, he acknowledged. In fact, Ghani and Abdullah would kick off their official engagement Monday when they drive down to the Pentagon and deliver a speech to the US armed forces for the sacrifices made by them in Afghanistan. On Tuesday, the two leaders will visit the Arlington Cemetery. The Afghan delegation will reiterate its commitment to the fight against corruption and administrative effectiveness. This is a responsible government. We are taking measures to fight corruption and we have a very effective agenda of reform. We are committed to fighting corruption and implementing reform, he said. Security would be one of the major issues, Abidy said, adding the nature of war had changed. There are new threats facing Afghanistan and the region, Islamic countries and the whole world. There should be effective and proper ways to overcome the threats, he stressed. Actually terror has morphed into a system. It is not only a phenomenon. (Pajhwok) KABUL: The ex-President Hamid Karzai talking to religious scholars from Nangarhar, Laghman, Kunar and Nuristan provinces here on Monday. The scholars lauded Hamid Karzai s nation-building efforts. Efforts ongoing to reopen closed schools in Zabul ANSF all set to forestall DAESH THREAT, SAYS NDS QALAT: Education officials say efforts would be made throughout the new academic year to reopen schools which had been closed due to insecurity in southern Zabul province. They hope many such schools will be reopened. These views were expressed at a gathering marking the start of the new academic year at Sheikh Mati High School in Qalat, the provincial capital. Provincial education officials promised they would reopen closed schools and resolve problems in functional schools in-time. Education Director Rahimullah Lodin told Pajhwok Afghan News only 90 of 238 schools had been operational last academic year. He said 40000 to 50000 boys and girls remained deprived of education in Zabul and the reason was insecurity. He said they had been holding meetings with tribal elders over the past three months to seek their support in reopening schools. The elders had promised complete cooperation, he added. The education director said they planned to reopen 10 closed schools during the first week of the new academic year. On the other hand, students said the education department had been unable to resolve problems in functional schools. Samiullah, a student at the Sheikh Mati High School No.2, said they had been without a complete set of textbooks last year, when lack of professional teachers negatively impacted their studies. He added students should be delivered textbooks in time and the problem of teachers shortage resolved. Another student, Abdul Hamid, said their school lacked sufficient benches and desks for students. (Pajhwok) ational Directorate of Secu rity (NDS) said that the Is lamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) fighters are old Taliban militants with a new flag. Deputy Director of the NDS, Hesamuddin Hesam, while briefing Wolesi Jirga on security situation in the country said that some Taliban militants have switched white flags for black. He termed ISIS, also known as Daesh, as a serious threat to Afghanistan, as they are trying to attract and recruit Afghan youth. Daesh fighters are trying to mount insecurity in Afghanistan s north and find access to Central Asian region, he said. He added that some foreign elements who have fled North Waziristan into Afghanistan are trying to recruit Afghan youth. Pakistani forces have recently launched a large-scale military offensive against militants in Abdul Zuhoor Qayomi N North Waziristan. We have devised a special mechanism for fight against ISIS and we have sent the mechanism to President Ashraf Ghani and are waiting for his order to implement it, Hesam said. He said that efforts are on to secure safe release of the 31 passengers in southern Zabul province. Unidentified gunmen stopped two buses in Shahjoi district of southern Zabul province on gunpoint and kidnapped 31 passengers of the Hazara ethnicity around a month ago. Hessam said that based on their information the passengers were alive and safe. The kidnappers are constantly shifting the passengers in their captivity from one place to another, he added. The Minister of Interior, Nurul-Haq Ulumi, said that both political and military efforts were required to secure safe release of the kidnapped passengers. To raise the capacity of Afghan security forces, he said that they will urge internation- Baghlan man Islamabad plans to build spouse Peshaw ar-Kabul motorw ay slaughters with sickle KABUL: Islamabad planned to construct a motorway from Peshawar to Kabul and a feasibility study for the project would be commissioned soon, the Pakistan ambassador said on Monday The project would improve connectivity between the two neighbours and Central Asian states besides bringing economic prosperity to Afghanistan, Syed Abrar Hussain hoped. Addressing a Pakistan Day function in Kabul, the diplomat recalled the passage of the historical Lahore Resolution on March 23, 1940 had played a vital role in determining the destiny of the Muslims of Sub-Continent. The ceremony began with national anthem and hoisting of Pakistan flag by Ambassador. The event was attended by members of the Pakistani community. Hussain highlighted the historical significance of the day and paid tribute to the founding fathers for rendering immense sacrifices for achieving a separate homeland for Muslims. On Afghan-Pakistan ties, he called for intensifying bilateral cooperation in areas of trade, economy, culture and defence. Pakistan would like to see a strong, stable, peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan, he added. (Pajhwok) told Pajhwok Afghan News the dead included 10 men from Pakistan s tribal region of Waziristan. Zazai said the operation had been extended to Sangin district, with security forces launching an all-out push to protect the areas cleared of militants. Meanwhile, the Taliban claimed killing several security personnel in the Sangin fighting, but local officials spurned the assertion as groundless. (Pajhwok) presidential decree, Madadzai said, adding: The commission is assigned to assess all dimensions of the electoral system including problems in management of the electoral bodies and shortcomings in the electoral law and presenting proposals to the president in this regard. Due to various issues in the electoral system, he said, it was not possible to predict a timetable when the commission would complete its tasks. However, he said the commission would complete its activities ahead of the parliamentary elections due in June. Meanwhile, the Election Watch Afghanistan (EWA) welcomed formation of the commission and hoped it would meet people s expectations in term of electoral reforms. But the watchdog casted doubts over professionalism of the selected members, saying relevant observer groups had been ignored in its formation. In a press release, the organisation said it was concerned the reform process could meet political interferences and subsequently overlooking people s and civil society s demands. (Pajhwok) PUL-I-KHUMRI: A drug addict has killed his wife with a sickle in the Shahabuddin area of Pul-iKhumri, the capital of northern Baghlan province, an official said on Monday. Women s Affairs Director Khadija Yaqin told Pajhwok Afghan News that the uxoricide incident took place Sunday night and the killer managed to escape. The couple had been living with her husband for 10 years, having five children, the director said. She linked the killing to a domestic dispute, but stopped short of giving details. A resident of the area, Mohibullah, said: Habibullah the was adhusband of the victim dicted to drugs. He had sold all belongings and his wife prevented him selling a carpet. Habibullah got angry and attacked her with a sickle, the man added. Some 225 cases of violence against women, including six of murder incidents, were registered last year. (Pajhwok) 400 PROJECTS TO BE EXECUTED IN KHOST THIS YEAR Newly-formed electoral reform panel to meet soon KABUL: A member of the newly-constituted Electoral Reform Commission on Monday called their task gigantic, saying the body was duty-bound to identify flaws and gaps in the system and come up with solutions. Reforms in the electoral system are part of the unity government deal between the president and the chief executive officer. After concerns were raised regarding the absence of a body to overhaul the electoral system, the president issued a decree forming the electoral reform commission two days ago. The 15-member panel is tasked with introducing reforms to the electoral system, strengthening democratic norms, restoring public s trust in government institutions and ensuring that the rule of law is respected as their main objectives. Gul Ahmad Madadzai, a member of the commission, told Pajhwok Afghan News the commission had yet not officially started its activities, but they would hold their maiden session soon. Under the terms of reference, the commission will arrange its activities in line with the al allies of Afghanistan to give modern weapons to Afghan security forces. He said that currently some 3,000 policemen with 98 police vehicles are currently assigned to ensure security of lawmakers. The Ministry of Interior (MoI) is intended to collect the vehicle from the lawmakers, Ulumi added. In the meantime the acting Minister of Defense, Murad Ali Murad said that their rescue operations for release of the kidnapped Hazara passengers haven t yielded positive result yet, as the kidnappers are constantly shifting the kidnapped people from one place to another. He said that Afghan forces were pressurizing militants through military operations to come to the negotiation table as peace negotiations couldn t be spurred only by plea. He stressed that peace can only come through military operations. The security officials were summoned by the Wolesi Jirga to brief lawmakers on security situation in the country. Sculptor Pavel Greshnikov finalizes a statue of Russian President Vladimir Putin in the style of a Roman emperor in the workshop of the Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg. The bust, which w ill be cast in bronze, is due to be unveiled outside a metro station on the northern outskirts of St. Petersburg on May 9, the holiday commemorating the Soviet victory in World War II. (TASS/Sergei Konkov) KHOST CITY: The governor s house on Monday said 400 reconstruction projects would be executed in 203 villages of various districts of southeastern Khost province this solar year. A statement from the governor s house said the projects had been approved under the National Solidarity Programme (NSP) as a result of untiring efforts by the provincial administration. Baryalai Rawan, the provincial government s spokesman, said the projects would be implemented as per local people s wishes in Sabari, Yaqub, Bak, Tarzai, Alisher, Musakhel, Nadir Shahkot, Gurbaz and Tani districts.Rawan said the projects had been estimated to cost about 391 million afghanis and the schemes would be implemented in areas of transport, agriculture and local reconstruction. Without providing further details about the projects, the statement said thousands of people would find jobs on the projects, which would help further increase people s cooperation with the government. Rawan said the provincial government had sent proposals for some more new projects to Kabul in compliance with people s demands. He said they were expecting a positive response from the central government.(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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Afghan stude n ts CELEBRATE NAW ROZ IN DELH I By Neelapu Shanti NEW DELHI: The Afghan students in South Asian University celebrated the New Year with gaiety and wished for peace and prosperity in their country. As per the Persian calendar, Nawroz marks the onset of spring season and New Year that is celebrated on March 21 every year. This festival is celebrated in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and Kurdish region of Turkey. The Afghan students feel that Nawroz is not restricted to one culture and brings people from different groups closer to each other. Nawroz is a day we should rethink our life, we should think about our past what we have done and how we can be more constructive not only in our personal life but also in terms of our society, said Omar Sadr, a PhD student pursuing International Relations. Most of the South Asian com- munities suffer a lot from poverty, war, terrorism, conflict. Nawroz has a message for us. The message of Nawroz will be peace, prosperity and happiness..... So, we should take this message from Nawroz, he added. This New Year is significant for Afghanistan as the country has been longing for peace and stability. Mir Waez, a student pursuing Post Graduation in Economics, echoing similar sentiments said the New Year brings joy with hopes of a prosperous and better future. Abdullaha Ataee, another student enrolled with the South Asian University, said it is an opportunity to introduce the Afghan culture not only in India but across the South Asian region . (newKerala.com) Afghanistan in ICCCricket World Cup 2015: Displaced women and girls trapped in Afghanistan s cities Marks out of 10 O Photo: NRC/ Christian Jepsen Displaced Afghan females face significant constraints to accessing education, health and employment opportunities, according to a new report by NRC. 7 out of 10 say they have never attended school. Far more attention must be expended towards better identifying and responding to the displacement related protection needs of women and girls displaced in urban Afghanistan, says Secretary General, Jan Egeland. A new report launched today by NRC and The Liaison Office (TLO), an Afghan nongovernmental organization, presents evidence and testimony from women and girls in urban IDP informal settlements across Afghanistan and highlights worrying conditions experienced by displaced females. The testimo- ny of women and girls presented in the report paint a grim picture of the dire conditions facing women and girls displaced to Afghanistan s cities and sheds new light on the disproportionate risks they face being increasingly marginalised and isolated. Many of them find themselves kept in prison-like seclusion, and are not permitted to venture outside their homes and unable to seek much needed assistance. We are imprisoned in our tents and we don t have permission to go out. What is this sort of life worth? says a 24 year-old woman from the Helmand province, internally displaced in Kabul and one of the respondents in the report. Displaced women and girls across Afghanistan s cities are also at increased risk of forced and early marriage. Representing a form of income, they are increasingly married off to older men who are able to pay bride wealth/dowry. We are being sold in exchange for money like animals. Our rights are ignored; we are often sold to widowers, blind men, disabled or old men and we have no choice to refuse marrying them , says a 23 year-old woman from the Muhammad Aghai district in the Logar province, now living in a camp for internally displaced in Kabul. This report provides a voice for some of the most marginalised and vulnerable groups of IDPs and should act as a sober reminder of the need to go further in order to meet the needs of women and girls living in appalling conditions in Afghanistan s cities , says Prasant Naik, NRC Afghanistan Country Director. (NRC) f all nations participating in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015, Afghanistan s story was different. For a nation that did not have a well-defined cricket team about a decade ago, Afghanistan rose from the ashes, battling war and economic crisis and obstacles of all sorts to storm their way into the grandest stage of cricket. Abhishek Mukherjee evaluates Afghanistan s performance in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 and analyses their player performances. All team members of the Afghanistan squad for ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 deserve 10 out of 10 for the sheer adversities they were up against when they made it to the tournament. Cricketers of other countries may have had obstacles of their own, but nothing compares to what Afghanistan had to go through to make their way to the tournament. However, since this exercise involves grading cricketers, let us be objective though, at heart, I have granted everyone a perfect 10. Samiullah Shenwari (7/ 10): If Shenwari had done nothing else in the World Cup, he would have etched his name in the history of Afghan cricket following his epic 96 against Scotland at Dunedin. Chasing 211 Afghanistan were left reeling at 97 for seven, but Shenwari played out of his skin, adding 35 for the eighth wicket and 60 more for the ninth before he was dismissed for 96. The last pair saw them through, and Afghanistan registered their first ever win.Top 10 batsmen in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 Shenwari had walked out when Afghanistan were three down for three against Bangladesh at Manuka Oval, and managed to score 42. He also scored 38 against Sri Lanka at Dunedin and 54 against New Zealand at Napier, and finished the tournament with 254 runs at 42.33. Shapoor Zadran (6.5/10): Shapoor, with his imposing frame and sagging mane, had troubled batsmen throughout the World Cup, bowling at brisk pace and making the ball jag at awkward angles. The Scotland match was easily his best performance: not only did he claim four for 38, but his 12 not out (his ODI batting average reads a mere 7.25) was crucial in guiding Afghanistan to a victory. Shapoor was hammered by David Warner, but eventually finished the tournament with 10 wickets at 26.50 and an economy rate of 5.19. He also remained unbeaten throughout the World Cup, batting five times. Hamid Hassan (6.5/10): Had Hamid been fully fit, Afghanistan may have put up a better fight against the stronger nations. With his face glowing in the characteristic war-paint and the cart wheeling celebration that has attained iconic status (he gets half a point for the celebration itself), Hamid was definitely the fastest of the pack, often leaving batsmen hurried for strokes. Hamid bowled an excellent first spell against Bangladesh, claimed three for 45 against Sri Lanka, played a crucial cameo against Scotland, and finished the tournament with a difficult spell against England in a losing cause. Eight wickets at 32.62 and an economy rate of 5.11 make impressive reading. Dawlat Zadran (5/ 10): Dawlat Zadran returned figures of 10-1-29-3 (and provided support to Shenwari during the chase) against Scotland; he also took a wicket off the first ball against Sri Lanka; but though he claimed Aaron Finch and Glenn Maxwell, they came at the cost of 101 runs. His economy rate read 6.04, but if one takes the Australia performance away, it reads an outstanding 4.74. Mohammad Nabi (4/ 10): A lot was expected from Nabi, but the Afghan captain generally disappointed, managing only 90 in the entire series. Almost half these runs came against Bangladesh, where he clobbered a 43-ball 44 in a losing cause. He bowled tidily, especially in the historic match against Scotland, and certainly gets an extra point for inspired leadership. Javed Ahmadi (4/ 10): Ahmadi s tournament was similar to Nabi s: he could accumulate a mere 97 but that included a 51-ball 51 in the Scotland match (he was third out when Afghanistan were on 85; they soon became 97 for seven). Mirwais Ashraf (4/10): The nagging, probing Ashraf removed both Bangladeshi openers at Manuka Oval but his batting did not come off. The second match saw him smash two massive sixes and bowl another economic spell, but he did not play another match. Asghar Stanikzai (2/10): Stanikzai s tournament can be summarised into one quality innings the 57-ball 54 against Sri Lanka. He did little else of note as his first-gear-to-fifth-gear-and-viceversa approach to batting did not come off. Shafiqullah Shafiq (2/ 10): Shafiqullah got a consolation match of sorts in Afghanistan s last appearance of the World Cup, against England at Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG). Afghanistan scored a mere 111 for seven, in which Shafiqullah topscored with 30. Najibullah Zadran (2/10): Najibullah played a few cameos, but his only performance of note came against New Zealand. He walked out with Afghanistan on 59 for six, and hit out for a 56ball 56 to lift his side to 186. Barring that he did little of note in the tournament if one discounts that outrageous six off Rangana Herath, that is. Nawroz Mangal (2/10): Mangal disappointed with the bat to the extent that one almost forgot that he was in the side. He batted at various positions, made a spirited 35ball 33 against Australia at WACA and couple of 20s, but that was it. Aftab Alam (2/10): Aftab picked up two for 55 in Afghanistan s first match against Bangladesh and hit out (almost blindly) later in the day. He was never picked again. Afsar Zazai (2/10): Zazai was sound, if not spectacular, behind the stumps. He claimed seven catches, and generally impressed everyone. His batting did not come off: a tally of 36 runs from six innings does not speak too highly of him. Gulbadin Naib (1/10): Naib fell for a golden duck in the only match he played, but deserves a solitary point for dismissing the Scottish captain Preston Mommsen just when he was looking dangerous. After all, not everyone plays a part in a World Cup win! Usman Ghani (0.5/10): Ghani opened batting twice, scoring 12 and a duck. He could easily have been given a nought, but it can be said in his defence that he played against the two best sides of his group (he was dismissed by Mitchell Johnson and Daniel Vettori). Nasir Jamal (0.5/10): Like Shafiqullah, Jamal was also given a solitary match against England. While Shafiqullah top-scored with 30, Jamal, with a patient 52-ball 17, came next. ICC Cricket World Cup 2015: Complete Coverage (Abhishek Mukherjee is the Chief Editor and Cricket Historian at Cricket Country. He blogs here and can be followed on Twitter here.) Invitation for Bids (IFB) Project Coordination Unit For PROCURMENT OF INTERNET SERVICES IFB No.: MEW/IRDP/G281C/NCB Date: 24 March 2015 1. The Ministry of Energy and Water (MEW) has received a grant from the International Development Association towards the Irrigation Restoration and Development Project, and intends to apply part of the grant to payment under the contract for procurement of Internet Services as under. 1. The Project Coordination Unit of Ministry of Energy and Water (MEW)invite sealed bids from eligible bidders for providing of Internet Services as under. The contract period will be One (01) year. Lot No 1 2 Bandwidth Information Location 3 MBPS Download Dedicated /3 MBPS Upload Dedicated 1:1, Microwave, Full duplex IP with 4 Static IP Services and all required equipments with their installations. The internet should be capable of supporting POLICOM Video Conference devices. The internet should conform to the specification and other details given in section VIII of bidding document. 3 MBPS Download Dedicated /3 MBPS Upload Dedicated 1:1, Microwave, Full duplex IP with 4 Static IP Services and all required equipments with their installations. The internet should be capable of supporting POLICOM Video Conference devices. The internet should conform to the specification and other details given in section VIII of bidding document. Office of PCU/IRDP, Ministry of Energy and Water, DarulAman Road, Kabul, Afghanistan WAPECA Office, Airport Road Kabul, Afghanistan 3. Bidding will be conducted through the National Competitive Bidding (NCB) procedures specified in the World Bank s Guidelines: Procurement of Goods, Works and Non-Consulting Services under IBRD Loans and IDA Credits & Grants by World Bank Borrowersdated January, 2011and is open to all bidders from Eligible Source Countries as defined in the Bidding Documents. 4. Interested eligible bidders may obtain further information from Nasir Ahmad Ahadi (email:Ahadi.Nasir@eirp-afg.org Mobile No: +93(0)700 686 110), Procurement Officer, Project Coordination Unit, Main office and inspect the Bidding Documents at the address given below from 8:00 to 16:30 Hrs from Saturday to Wednesday. 5. A complete set of Bidding Documents in English may be purchased by the interested bidders on the submission of a written application to the address below and upon payment of non-refundable fee of 2,500Afs. The method of payment will be cash/direct payment. The bidding document may be collected by the bidders from address below. 6. Bids must be delivered to the address below on before 21 April 2015 at 10:00 hours Afghanistan Time. Electronic bidding shall not be permitted. Late bids will be rejected. Bids will be opened physically in the presence of the bidders representatives who choose to attend in person at the address below at the afore-mentioned date and time. 7. The address(s) referred to above is (are): Nasir Ahmad Ahadi, Procurement Officer Procurement Unit, 2nd Floor, Project Coordination Unit, Ministry of Energy and Water, DarulAman Road, Kabul, Afghanistan Mobile :0093 (0) 700686110 Electronic mail address: ahadi.nasir@eirp-afg.org, 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES The importance OF AFGHAN-US ALLIANCE By Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah H aving chosen unity over di vision in the first peaceful and democratic transition of power in our nation s history, we are visiting the United States to deepen the cooperation between our countries. With US support, the hardworking people of Afghanistan can rebuild our country, develop our economy and resist terrorism. Both cursed and blessed by its location in the heart of Asia, our country has seen too much violence. More than 1 million Afghans died, and more than 30 percent of our population was forced into exile during the struggle to defeat the Soviet invasion in the 1980s. Then came meddling regional actors, who took advantage of feuding factions and a power vacuum, only to be followed by the Taliban, who brought deadly repression and became host to terrorists. For the past decade, Afghanistan has joined the United States and other nations in battling alQaeda and regional terror networks, and now Afghanistan has become the eastern wall standing against the butchery of ISIL, also known as the Islamic State. Because Afghanistan must never again become a launching ground for terrorist attacks, we want to continue to work with the United States. Afghanistan is not asking the United States to do our job for us. We thank the American people and remember your brave fallen soldiers who defended freedom and dignity here after the tragedies of Sept. 11, 2001. Our ultimate goal is self-reliance. On Dec. 31, we fulfilled our promise to our people and our commitment to your president and to NATO by taking full responsibility for combat operations in our country. Gen. John F. Campbell, the US commander of the International Security Assistance Force, has testified to the high professionalism and morale of the Afghan armed forces. A continued security partnership with training, advice and assistance from the United States will ensure that we will be an important ally in the decades to come. Our partnership goes beyond assurances of mutual security. Now there is hope in a nation that once had none. Afghans protect and cherish the many schools built with US assistance that are teaching more than 3 million of our daughters to read, along with the clinics that have saved the lives of tens of thousands of our wives and mothers. With peace will come development that lets Afghanistan benefit from America s business experience. Our first priority is to tackle corruption, waste and mismanagement. Candidates for governorships and ministries now undergo integrity reviews, and a new national procurement agency will ensure that contracting for all large public projects is clean. Afghans believe deeply in the rights of the individual, but injustice, both legal and social, abounds. Our legal system must be comprehensively restructured, and a national review of all prosecutors and judges to weed out corrupt or unqualified officials is already underway. More reforms will follow. Political stability is built on the bedrock of economic growth. Sadly, nearly 40 years of conflict, poor governance and eco- nomic mismanagement have stifled growth in Afghanistan, leaving us dependent on outside aid. We will develop our country s resources. But we can t do this entirely on our own. Just as we needed America s help to fight terrorism, we still need your help to rebuild our economy. We need know-how, not charity. We ask your corporations, your nonprofits and your start-ups to help us embed clean, efficient ways of doing business. Too much wealth has failed to reach ordinary Afghans. Our three numerical majorities women, youth and the poor are our economic minorities. Over the next five years, a new Citizens Charter will ensure that most Afghan villages can count on having clean water, primary schooling and health care, access to a market and technology for better farming. While the opportunities to build peace and stability have never been greater, a new ecology of terror threatens to block not just our prosperity but yours as well. Localized insurgencies and external enablers have evolved into existential threats to states. In parts of the Middle East, extremism has taken a violent form. To the east, Pakistan s military operations are pushing a number of terrorist networks into our territory. Narcotics provide deadly criminal networks with the weapons and money to attract new recruits from around the world. We are determined to fight this scourge. Weakened governments offer fertile ground for violent groups opposed to the democratic way of life. We are responding to extremism s threats by building partnerships at the global, regional, Islamic and national levels of governance. Globally, Afghanistan abides by international conventions and the rule of law. Our government will join free-trade arrangements that build prosperity and promote peace. Regionally, we are engaging our neighbors across Asia to build trust and trade. Afghanistan will become a platform for cooperation in a vast region that extends from India to Azerbaijan and beyond. Properly supported, Afghanistan is uniquely positioned to block the spread of extremism. With the bitter exception of the Taliban regime, Islam in Afghanistan has traditionally been inclusive and reflective, not violent and angry. And after 36 years of conflict, our people have become immunized against ideologically based conflict. Afghanistan s transformation will not be easy. There will be setbacks. Because we will negotiate peace from a position of strength, violent encounters may rise as our armed forces tighten their hold on security. But we will not surrender the gains that we have made in education, health, democratic development, the media, civil society and women s rights. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said that the arc of history is long but that it bends toward justice. Afghanistan s history has been marked by violence, sacrifice and tears. But the partnership between Afghanistan and the United States can make Afghanistan an enduring success, replacing conflict and violence with a legacy of justice and peace for our children. This column appeared in the Washington Post ahead of the authors 5-day visit to the US. By Akhtar M.Nikzad KABUL: Indian media reported recently that swine flu outbreak has been sweeping India including its capital city New Delhi. This virus has taken hundreds of lives and affected hundreds others. If media reports are any guide then the total number of deaths due to swine flu has reached 1,198 and over 22,000 people have been affected with the H1N1 virus across India. Swine flu is commonly known as an infectious disease caused by the pig deadly virus. Symptoms can be mild or severe. The most common symptoms include: a high fever, runny nose, sore throat, muscle pains, headache, coughing, and feeling tired. Since Afghanistan and India enjoy cordial ties therefore Afghan nationals have not only been living in India but also do travelling. It s feared they may bring home the virus from India as there are no health and vaccination facilities at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. It is believed that from 400500 Afghans travel to India by flight on daily basis for medical care and visit purposes. Talking to Afghanistan Times spokesman for Afghanistan Civil Aviation Authority (ACAA), Qasim Rahimi said that around 500 citizens fly to India on daily basis from different airports such as Kabul, Balkh, Kandahar and Herat. According ACAA, around 15,000 Afghans travel to India on monthly basis, and nearly 547,500 Afghans travel to India for different purposes including treatment. In reply to a query that whether the Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) have the facilities to diagnose the swine flu virus among those that return from India and as well as about any measures taken by the ministry in controlling the outbreak of the H1N1, the Public Health Minister, Ferozuddin Feroz, told Afghanistan Times that after being informed about the outbreak of the swine flu virus, directed the MoPH to take concrete and urgent measures for controlling the likely spread of the virus and diagnosing of affected citizens. He said that a special team was assigned at Kabul, Kandahar and Herat airports to implement diagnostic measure among those who return from India. Every Afghan who returns from India undergoes a blood test at the airports. The type A of the H1N1 virus has been diagnosed EMERGENCY CALLS Police 100 - 119 Hospitals Sw ine flu alert in Afghanistan: A young man in Kabul sells surgical masks on the street. among Afghans that had returned from India, he added. The ACAA spokesman did not confirm existence of any health clinic at the airports but he welcomed establishment of a diagnostic center at Kabul, Herat and Kandahar airports and said that they would help in controlling the outbreak of the virus. Criticizing the Public Health Ministry for reluctance in controlling the spate of swine flu in the country, a number of Afghans who traveled to India claimed that the MoPH had not taken any measure for testing those Afghans and foreigners who return from India. Nasim Nasrat, an Afghan who recently visited India, said that there was no heath facility at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul to diagnose the infectious disease. I have not seen any diagnostic center or healthcare personnel at the airport to ask travelers about any health problem and if they are affected with swine flu in India, he said. He added that the virus could easily spread as the MoPH was reluctant to take any measure in this regard. Wali Entezar, another Afghan recently returned from India after treatment, said that the outbreak of swine flu was a big threat to Afghanistan as most of Afghans travel to that country on daily basis for treatment and other purposes therefore they can serve as cording to information from his department, currently 155,000 students, including 26,000 girls, are enrolled in 353 schools across the province. Speaking on the oc- type but other types like H1N2, H3N1 and H3N2 can also create the infectious disease in human. There are three types of influenza that that affect people. The H1N1 virus can be transferred through air particles after sneezing and cough. The symptoms caused by the swine influenza virus (SIV) occur in short distances. The transmission of the virus can occur by contact with contaminated surfaces to eyes and mouth, he added. Hinting at symptoms of hog flu, he said that symptoms of this infectious disease caused by the H1N1 virus are similar to those of other types and include sudden fever a temperature of 38C, tiredness, aching muscles or joint pain, headache and runny or blocked nose. About preventive measures to control outbreak of pig flu, Nooruddin said that the easiest way to prevent the disease is to take hygienic measures including washing hands wish detergents, not touching contaminated eyes, nose and mouth with contaminated hands as the virus can be transmitted through the surface of cell phones and other devises that are used daily by people, staying at home when someone feels sick, avoiding large gatherings when swine flu is in its season. He also said that best remedy to prevent the disease is to rest at home, keep warm and drink plenty of water to avoid dehydration. Pakistan s embassy BRIEF LIFE celebrates Republic Day SKETCHES OF NEW ministers-designate G AT News Report KABUL: The Embassy of Pakistan in Kabul on Monday celebrated Pakistan s Republic Day. According to a press release issued by Embassy of Pakistan in Kabul, the ceremony was attended by sizeable members of Pakistani community including educationists, engineers, doctors, senior executives and businessmen. Addressing participants of the ceremony, the Ambassador of Pakistan in Kabul, Syed Abrar Hussain highlighted the historical significance of the Day and paid tributes to the founding fathers that had rendered immense sacrifices for achieving a separate homeland. The ambassador also spoke on AfPak ties and underscored the need for intensifying bilateral cooperation between the two countries in the areas of trade, econo- my, culture and defense. He said that Pakistan attached utmost significance to its ties with the brotherly country and would like to see a strong, stable, peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan. Talking of efforts to enhance trade with Afghanistan, the ambassador said that Pakistan had removed several trade impediments so as to facilitate and encourage bilateral trade. He stated that Pakistan had executed various projects in health, education and infrastructure sectors in Afghanistan which would tremendously benefit the Afghan people. Syed Abrar Hussain said that Pakistan had planned to construct a motorway from Peshawar to Kabul and a feasibility study about the project would soon be commissioned. The motorway project will not only improve connectivity between the two neighbors and Central Asian States but would also bring economic prosperity to Afghanistan. Taliban, illegal gunmen terrorizing Kunduz residents KUNDUZ CITY: Some residents of northern Kunduz province on Monday complained of a heavy presence of militants and an armed group, saying official had failed to disarm them. The groups often resorted to infighting, they said, adding common people had become victims of clashes. Around 9,000 armed men, included militants, are said to be active in the province. Syed Attaullah, a resident of Khanabad district, said armed men in special uniforms established checkpoints after evening. They snatch watches, mobile phones, cash and other valuables from residents. (Pajhwok) Paktika schools, seminaries to get new buildings SHARAN: The education department of southeastern Paktika province on Monday announced 11 madaris and 12 schools would get new buildings, while 43 other schools would be rehabilitated in the ongoing year. Education Director Kochai Zazai said funds for the rehabilitation and construction of schools would be provided by the ministry concerned and UNICEF. In addition, the department plans to build 54 local education centres, 10 kindergartens and playgrounds at different schools with the financial assistance of World Bank (WB). Zazai noted lack of professional teachers, long distance between schools and residential areas and security concerns as major issues faced during the last academic year. Ac- main transformers of the virus from India to Afghanistan. The government should be aware about the outbreak of pig influenza in India and should take preventive measures as soon as possible, he suggested. Reports suggest that the H1N1 virus has taken 981 lives in 2009, 1,763 in 2010, 75 in 2011, 405 in 2012 and 692 lives in 2013. According to the recent reports, the number of deaths due to outbreak of swine flu in 2015 has reached to 1,198 and over 22,000 people have been affected with the H1N1 virus across India. However, Dr. Feroz rejected outbreak of swine flu in India and stressed that Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of India and World Health Organization (WHO) in a contact with the MoPH rejected the allegations about existence of swine flu in that country. We talked about the issue with WHO and they rejected the allegations. In the meantime, we shared our concerns about outbreak of pig flu with India s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, and they also rejected the reports but confirmed a few cases in remote states of Rajasthan and Gujarat, he said. He added that Indian officials rejected any positive case of swine flu in India s capital city, New Delhi. Nooruddin Andish, a specialist of infectious diseases, said that the main cause of swine flu is H1N1 influenza sub- casion, a UNICEF representative pledged to extend all-out support for promoting education in Paktika. Tribal Elder Badshah acknowl- edged education standards had improved, as people had started understanding its value. But he complained of the late delivery of books to schools. (Pajhwok) iven below are biographies of the new cabinet picks that President Ashraf Ghani nominated before embarking his five-day visit to Washington: Abdul Bari Jahani, information and culture minister-designate, is a son of Haji Abdul Ahmad Khan, Jahani. He was born in 1948 in Kandahar City. He completed early education in Kandahar in history and geography. In 1981, Jahani went to Pakistan and two years later to the United States where he worked for the Voice of America (VOA). He has authored more than 10 books in Pashto language and many of them have been translated to Dari and English. Jahani was member of the constitution Loya Jirga. He has the honour of authoring Afghanistan s current national anthem. Basir Ahmad Osmani, energy and water ministerdesignate, has a master s degree in architecture. He was a lecturer at Herat University and had worked as coordinator with the European Union and WFP programmes in western Afghanistan. Mohammad Gulab Mangal, borders and tribal affairs minister-designate, is a son of Yaruddin. He was born in 1957 in southeastern Paktia province. Holding a degree in Pashto literature, Mangal had served as the governor of Paktia, Laghman and Helmand provinces in the previous administration. Sayed Sadaat Naderi, urban development minister-designate; Naderi, son of Sayed Mansour Naderi, was born in 1976 in Kabul City. He has a degree in economics and international trade from North London University. He was a member of the central bank s board of directors and president of a private insurance company in Kabul. Mahmood Baligh, public works minister-designate; Mahmood Baligh was born in 1971 in central Daikundi province. He has a master s degree in architecture. He has taught at the Polytechnic University and was editor-inchief of Iqtedar-e-Milli newspaper. Abdul Razaq Wahidi, information and technology ministerdesignate; Wahidi has a master s in mathematics. He has worked as a university lecturer and deputy finance minister. Assadullah Zameer, agriculture minister-designate; Asadullah Zameer, son of Haji Mohammad Dil, was born in Kabul city. Zameer has expertise in fields of economics, agricultural development, rural development, natural resources development and strategic planning. He has 14 years of experience with various sectors of natural resources, rural development and education. He has a master s degree in economics from the US. Humayun Rasa, commerce and industry ministerdesignate, has a master s degree in computer science. Earlier, he was deputy education minister and deputy director of the National Directorate of Security (NDS). Dilbar Nazari, women s affairs minister-designate, is an ex-lawmaker who has a degree in international affairs from Kabul University. Mohammad Batash, transport minister-designate, is son of Haji Bori. He was born in 1961 in the Imam Sahib district of Kunduz province. He has a doctorate in international affairs from a Moscow university. Previously he held several governmental positions, including transport s deputy minister. Over the past three years, he has been working as governor of Faryab province. Salamat Azimi, counternarcotics ministerdesignate, holds a degree in law and political science and has worked as deputy head of Balkh University. Abdul Sattar Murad, economy minister-designate, is a former governor of Kapisa province. He has a degree in international relations from the US. Dr. Nasrin Oryakhel, labour and social affairs minister-designate, has graduated from Kabul University. She has served a lecturer at Kabul Medical University besides serving as head of Rabia Balkhi and Malali hospitals in Kabul. Dr. Abdul Basir Anwar, justice minister-designate, was born in 1952 in the Jabalus Saraj district of central Parwan province. A graduate from Kabul Medical University, he possesses master s degrees in political science and Islamic Studies. A former advisor to ex-president Hamid Karzai, he has served in various governmental positions. Asadullah Hanif Balkhi, education minister-designate, was born in 1957 in Balkh province. He has a doctorate in Law and Sharia from Saudi Arabia. He was ambassador to Kuwait and held several other governmental positions. Balkhi has translated more than 16 books from Arabic to Dari. Farida Mohmand is higher education minister-designate. But his background is yet to be shared with the media. Nominees for the minister of defence and attorney-general and Central Bank head are yet to be introduced. (Pajhwok) FMIC Hospital Behind Kabul Medical University: 0202500200-+93793275595 Rabia-i-Balkhi Hospital Pule Bagh-e- Umomi 070263672 Khairkhana Hospital 0799-321007 2401352 Indira Gandhi Children Hospital, Wazir Akbar Khan, Kabul 2301372 Ibn-e- Seena Pul-e-Artan, Kabul 2100359 Wazir Akbar Khan Hospital 2301741, 2301743 Ali Abad Shahrara, Kabul 2100439 Malalai Maternity Hospital 2201377/ 2301743 Banks Da Afghanistan Bank 2100302, 2100303 Kabul Bank 222666, 070285285 Azizi Bank 0799 700900 Pashtany Bank 2102908, 2103868 Air Services Safi Airways 020 22 22 222 Ariana 020-2100270 Kam Air 0799974422 Hotels Safi Landmark 020-2203131 SERENA 0799654000 New Rumi Restaurant 0776351347 Internet Services UA Telecom 0796701701 / 0796702702 Exchange Rate Purchase: One US$ = 57.70Afs One Pound Sterling= 84.40Afs One Euro = 60.37Afs 1000 Pak Rs = 560Afs Sale: One US$ = 57.90Afs One Pound Sterling= 85.20Afs One Euro= 62.90 Afs 1000 Pak Rs= 568Afs 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24 , 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Somali pirates shifting location towards India, Manohar Parrikar says India clarified on Monday there is no place for a third party in talks with Pakistan and the resolution of the issues between the neighbouring countries will be carried out by their respective governments. “The government of India prefers to speak for itself. There should be no scope for misunderstanding or misinterpretation on India’s position on role of ‘socalled’ Hurriyat,” the Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said, according to IBN Live. “There are only two parties and there is no place for third party in resolution for the India-Pakistan issue. Only way forward to proceed on all outstanding issues is peaceful bilateral dialogue within framework of Shimla Agreement & Lahore Declaration,” MEA spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin added. Akbaruddin’s statement comes on Pakistan’s national day and hours after Pakistan High Commissioner to India Abdul Basit claimed the Indian government does not object to his meetings with Hurriyat leaders. “I don’t think the government of India is objecting to our meeting with Hurriyat leaders,” Abdul Basit said. Read: Don’t think Indian govt objects to us meeting Hurriyat leaders: Abdul Basit Down playing his meetings with Hurriyat leaders which have earlier been the cause for India cancelling foreign secretary-level talks, Basit said, “Don’t try to make an issue out of nonissue.” Earlier this month Indian foreign secretary S Jaishanker visited Pakistan and held talks with his counterparts in Islamabad. Read: Ensuring peace and tranquility along border is vital: Indian foreign secretary Further, earlier today, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Pakistan Day. Read: After 7-year hiatus, nation witnesses Pakistan Day parade Modi took to social networking site Twitter and said, “It is my firm conviction that all out- standing issues can be resolved through bilateral dialogue in an atmosphere free from terror & violence.” Pakistan Day messages: Nation stands united against all odds, says Nawaz ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said the anti-state elements threatening Pakistan were out to challenge not only the lives but also the very fabric of Pakistani nation, vowing that the nation stands united to defeat all kinds of militancy and extremism. “Pakistan is resolved to redeem its pledge given to its founding fathers that it will protect the homeland,” he made the remark in his message to the nation on Pakistan Day. We are also committed to preserve and ensure freedom, equality and social justice as core values of our polity as desired by our enlightened forbears, he added. Three quarters of a century, the premier stated, had elapsed since the Muslims of the subcontinent irreversibly resolved to seek their own independent Muslim state. “I am confident that with the valued assistance of our valiant armed forces, unconditionally supported by the entire array of political opinion, we will surely overpower threatening forces,” he observed. Presidential remarks Meanwhile, President Mamnoon Hussain has said that on the historic occasion of the Pakistan Day, all citizens should renew their resolve to bring the country to the forefront of the comity of nations The president, in his message on the Pakistan Day, said the day marked the momentous occasion when Muslims of India resolved to struggle for an independent state based on principles of equality and justice. BHUBANESWAR: Beaten back in their usual area of operations, Somali pirates are "shifting their location" towards India, but the country is watchful to deal with such threats, defence minister Manohar Parrikar said . "Today's threats are not traditional. Somali pirates, after being neutralized by various countries' navies, are shifting their locations towards India. Because their (shipping) lanes are heavily guarded, they have moved 30-40 nautical miles, although they still are 450 nautical miles away from India," he said. "They may not be next to India but ... We are watchful and careful," Parrikar said at an international conference on "India & the Indian Ocean: Renewing the Maritime Trade & Civilisational Linkages", organized by the Institute of Social and Cultural Studies (ISCS) jointly with Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS). Calling for greater cooperation between the neighbouring countries, he said, "The Indian Ocean can be an enricher and also a destroyer, hence we should also be prepared for disaster and develop strong relationships and communication with neighbouring countries to avoid any kind of disaster." Pitching for a creation of a common platform for the Indian Ocean rim region, he further said, "We are in a common grid and are tied to each other. If India strengthens, being the focal point and located strategically, it can facilitate others." He also said that India's strength lies in nonviolence, but it can be practised only by those that are strong. Somali pirates produced at the Sewri fast-track court. The pirates were nabbed in four different operations that were carried out by the Coast Guard and the Navy off Lakshadweep. (TOI Photo by Prashant Nakwe) Stressing that the Indian Ocean region is "very important for us", Parrikar pointed out that it "accounts for more than 50 per cent of the world's oil reserves and more than 45 per cent of the world's gas reserves". India’s Border Security Force (BSF) has shot dead a Bangladeshi on the border at Chapainawabganj’s Shibganj Upazila. The incident happened around 1am on Monday near the Ohedpur borders, according to Chapainawabganj-based Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB) battalion Commander Lt Col AZSM Bazlul Haque. His BSF counterpart, 20 Battalion Commandant Raj Kumart Batasha has been informed of the shooting, said the BGB officer, and added that a flag-meeting had been convened. The dead has been identified as Tarikul Islam, 35, of Jamaiparha Village of the Upazila. Locals said that he was involved in the cattle trade. Islam along with Senior Indian and Chinese officials are meeting in Delhi for talks aimed at resolving a contentious border dispute, the first discussions since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power. China's special representative Yang Jiechi is in Delhi for talks with National Security Adviser Ajit Doval. The talks are seeking to improve ties before Mr Modi visits Beijing in May. The neighbours were involved in a bitter two-week stand-off near their de facto border in September 2014. The two countries share an ill-defined 4,057km (2,520 miles) bor- der and fought a brief war in 1962. Tensions flare up from time to time and numerous rounds of border talks have been unsuccessful so far. The latest meeting in Delhi is the 18th round of boundary talks. Since taking over as prime minister last summer, Mr Modi has spoken of his desire for better relations with China and called for an early settlement of the border dispute. In September during his visit to India, Chinese President Xi Jinping said he was committed to working with India to maintain "peace and tranquillity". a few others had entered Indian territory to bring in cattle at the wee hours of Monday, when the BSF opened fire. His companions brought him home with gunshot wounds, where he died later, according to the locals. Sri Lanka sets up national unity government to speed up reforms Miscreants set ablaze 5 tankers in Balochistan, abduct four drivers QUETTA: Armed men set on fire five oil tankers in Balochistan's Mastung district on Monday and also kidnapped four drivers before fleeing from the scene. Levies sources told DawnNews that armed men opened indiscriminate fire on five oil tankers in Kirdi Gap area of Mastung. The sources added that the tankers were carrying fuel from Karachi for the Saindak Project situated in Balochistan's Chaghi district when they were targeted in Kirdi Gap. The tankers caught fire as the gunfire ignited the fuel payload, following which the militants picked up four drivers and fled to an undisclosed location in the mountainous region. Fire fighters were dispatched from Mastung city to put off the fire. Levies and Frontier Corps (FC) personnel reached the spot as a probe into the incident went underway. A search operation was launched in the area to ensure the safe recovery of kidnapped drivers, Levies said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, however, Levies suspect Baloch separatist militants could be behind the attack. Oil tankers have regularly been targeted with arson attacks blamed on insurgents attempting to disrupt two key supply lines that cross western Pakistan President Maithripala Sirisena used his executive powers to appoint 11 new cabinet members and 15 deputy ministers from the main opposition Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told Reuters news agency. With the new appointments, the number of ministers in Sirisena's cabinet has risen to 39. "The move will enable better cooperation between the ruling party and the main opposition in parliament until parliamentary elections," Senaratne said. "This is a national government, and this is a (SLFP) party decision. We want to do all the reforms and then go to the elections," Senaratne add- ed. Proposed reforms Sirisena, a former SLFP member, stood for the presidency in January 8 elections, promising to bring political stability to the country and embark on a much-needed reconciliation process among political and ethnic groups. He appointed the then-opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe as prime minister to consolidate the process. The proposed reforms, to be enacted in Sirisena's first 100 days in office, focus on the abolition of the executive presidency and the reestablishment of independent commissions to oversee the police, civil service and judiciary and to monitor human rights. However, the new leader may have trouble finding the two-thirds majority in parliament needed for constitutional reforms, or winning such a majority through the election of a new parliament. The new appointments could also widen the rift within the already-divided opposition ranks before parliamentary elections later this year. Observers say the move is likely to upset the opposition United National Party (UNP), which backed Sirisena in the January 8 vote. "It will satisfy no one because UNP will feel it is being crowded out by the integration of the SLFP members into the cabinet," Dayan Jayatilake, a former Sri Lankan diplomat, told Reuters, adding that the new appointments would slow down the decisionmaking process. A SLFP faction is trying to get former president Mahinda Rajapakse back to power. Rajapakse ruled the country for a decade and was accused of corruption, nepotism and cronyism. The 69-year-old also faced criticism from Western countries over his refusal to allow an international investigation into alleged war crimes and his apparent unwillingness to promote reconciliation with the country's Tamil minority following the decades-long civil war, which ended in May 2009. 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24 , 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Syrian insurgents ‘mimicking’ army violence Kurdish authorities in Iraq have accused Iran of sending 30,000 soldiers and military experts to fight the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group. Shakhawan Abdullah, the head of the Iraq's parliamentary security and defence committee, told Al Jazeera on Sunday that Iranian soldiers were operating in a number of Iraqi cities and fighting on Iraqi soil. Inside Story: Revenge and reprisals in Iraq? Abdullah said Iran's presence went beyond military advisers and experts, and that Iranians were fighting under the banner of the Popular Mobilisation Forces. The Popular Mobilisation Forces is an umbrella organisation of Shia armed groups composed of around 100,000 fighters. Iran has repeatedly denied sending soldiers to Iraq despite claims by the US. In August, Iran was accused of sending hundreds of soldiers to retake the town of Jalawla from ISIL, while in December it was alleged that an Iranian F-4 fighter struck ISIL targets in the province of Diyala. Shia fighters have been accused of killing dozens of civilians in retribution against the actions of ISIL since the group seized large swathes of land and announced the establishment of a "caliphate" straddling the two countries. Insurgent groups in Syria have carried out scores of indiscriminate attacks that have killed and maimed civilians in violation of the laws of war, a Human Rights Watch report said on Monday. The report said armed groups could not point to abuses by government forces and allied militias to justify their own violence, which it said had often targeted areas with a high concentration of religious minorities. "We've seen a race to the bottom in Syria, with rebel groups mimicking the ruthlessness of government forces with devastating consequences for civilians," said Nadim Houry, HRW's deputy Middle East director. The Syrian crisis started in March 2011 with Arab Spring-inspired protests against President Bashar al-Assad. The uprising turned into armed conflict as the security forces cracked down on protesters. Four years on, more than 200,000 people have been killed in a civil war pitting the army and allied militias against a range of insurgent groups, including hardline jihadists such as Islamic State and mainstream rebels. The report covered attacks between January 2012 to April 2014 in and around Damascus and Homs. Some attacks were claimed by groups such as al-Qaeda's Syria wing Nusra Front and the ultrahardline ISIS, HRW said. Howev- er, members of the "Free Syrian Army" and other rebel groups also appear to have carried out deliberate, deadly attacks on civilian areas, the HRW report found. Free Syrian Army is a name adopted by a plethora of mainstream rebel groups that often operate independently of each other. Some of these groups have received support from Assad's Western and Arab foes. The research was based on victim and witness accounts, on-site investigations, videos and information on social media. It described attacks using car bombs, mortars and rockets. The report documented 17 car bombings and other explosions in the Damascus countryside, central Damascus and various locations in Homs. Many of the areas targeted have a large population of religious minorities including Christians, Alawites, Shiites and Druze which are seen by Sunni Muslim insurgents as supportive of the government, the report said. Assad is an Alawite and his allies include the Shiite Islamist government in Iran. The report urged the United Nations Security Council to refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court and impose an arms embargo on forces implicated in widespread or systematic abuses, whichever side they were fighting on. Six Tunisia police chiefs dismissed over museum attack The Iraqi army, supported by Shia fighters, is laying "full siege" to the city of Tikrit where Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group fighters are now surrounded, according to Iraq's defence minister. The Iraqi military - backed by at least 20,000 Shia fighters - has been fighting to regain control of Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, one of several predominantly Sunni towns to fall to ISIL last year. Operations to recapture Tikrit have been on hold for nearly a week, with Khaled al-Obeidi, the Iraqi defence minister, saying the army was trying to minimise casualties by not rushing the final assault. "When we see that the time is right for the Tikrit alliance, we will storm in as quickly as possible," he said. "Tikrit is under full siege. We are taking caution to not take any losses and to protect civilians in the city. "The terrorists are surrounded inside the city and their morale is low. When the right moment comes, we will storm the city without any resistance or losses." The Tikrit siege is one of the first major operations in which the US-led coalition is not taking part, with US officials saying they were not asked to participate. Possible divide Against the backdrop of the Tikrit siege, the head of a Shia armed group has criticised the Iraqi army, saying it has asked for coalition air strikes to help retake the city. Hadi al-Ameri's remarks on Sunday pointed to a possible divide between the Iraqi army and Shia units, most of which are made up of fighters. While the US has been working to train Iraqi military brigades, it has not worked with the Shia groups, since doing so would bring them uncomfortably close to Iran, which offers significant assistance to the groups. John Brennan, CIA director, said having the leader of Iran's elite Quds Force direct Iraqi forces against ISIL is complicating the US mis- sion. In an interview with Fox News Sunday, Brennan described General Qassem Soleimani as being "very aggressive and active" in advising the Shia militias, adding that he "wouldn't consider Iran an ally right now inside Iraq". Iranian advisers have played a prominent role on the front lines of Iraq's Salahuddin province. If Iraqi forces are unable to push ISIL back and recover lost territory, US President Barack Obama would be faced with a choice of accepting failure in Iraq or committing US combat troops - something both US and Iraqi officials have spoken firmly against. Tunisia's prime minister has dismissed six police commanders, including those in charge of tourist security and an intelligence brigade, according to a spokesperson. Monday's decision by Habib Essid follows the March 18 attack on the National Bardo Museum in Tunis, which killed 21 people, 20 of whom were foreign tourists. "He visited [the area around the museum] last night and saw several deficiencies. So he has decided to fire a number of officials including the Tunis police chief and the police chief for the Bardo area that includes the museum," Mofdi Mssedi, Essid's communications director, told AFP news agency. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group claimed re- sponsibility for the attack, which has badly shaken the crucial tourism industry in the North African nation considered the birthplace of the Arab Spring revolts. Authorities say the two men blamed for that attack had no clear links to armed groups. Several well-armed groups in neighbouring and chaotic Libya have pledged allegiance to ISIL. UN envoy w arns Yemen is ‘on the edge of civil w ar’ Libya unity govt could get first names this week: UN envoy British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon told the United States on Monday his country would always be at Washington's side on the battlefield “when the chips are down,” part of a concerted campaign to assuage U.S. fears over British defense spending. The U.S. army's chief of staff said earlier this month he was very concerned about the impact of spending cuts on British defense and future cooperation with London, traditionally a staunch U.S. ally. Ahead of an unusually close national election on May 7, Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservatives and the opposition Labour Party are under pressure from lawmakers across the spectrum to commit to protect defense spending after the ballot. Both have dodged firm pledges. Fallon, who held talks with U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter earlier this month, said Washington and concerned British lawmakers had nothing to worry about. “The U.S. understands what really matters in today’s unstable world. When the chips are down, the UK will always be at their side,” Fal- lon wrote in the Daily Telegraph. “Our American friends know that the UK is not about to let down its guard.” Fallon said Britain's finances were on a firm foundation, that it was investing in its military and had the biggest defense budget in the EU, and that it was putting its capabilities to work in places like Iraq. The United States knew it could rely on Britain, he said, saying that when Carter greeted him in Washington earlier this month he told him: “Thank God we're in this together.” The first names for a new Libyan unity government could emerge this week after progress in U.N.mediated talks between its warring parties, U.N. special envoy Bernardino Leon said Monday. Leon was in Brussels for a conference of Libyan mayors after visiting Morocco, where he has been working with representatives of Libya's rival parliaments to reach a deal to end months of fighting. “There is a chance that we can make progress and have the first names for a unity government this week,” Leon told reporters. “It is going to be a difficult discussion and I wouldn't like expectations to be too high, bearing in mind how difficult the situation is on the ground. But there is a possibility and we will do our best to reach there by the end of this week.” Leon had said on Sunday that the first documents to pave the way for a unity government could be ready within two days. Libya has been in turmoil since the overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011 by rebels backed by U.S., French and British air strikes. Libya has had two governments and parliaments since the capital Tripoli was seized in August 2014 by Fajr Libya, a militia alliance which includes Islamists that has installed its own government and legislature. On Friday the internationally recognised cabinet based in the eastern city of Tobruk said loyalist forces had launched an offensive to “liberate” Tripoli. The Tripoli parliament's delegation threatened to walk out of the current peace talks in the Moroccan resort of Skhirat when the fighting erupted at the end of last week. Indonesia leader rejects China’s South China Sea claims Indonesian President Joko Widodo has said China's claims to the majority of the South China Sea have "no legal foundation in international law", according to a report in Japan's Yomiuri newspaper. The comments were the first time Widodo, who took office in October, has taken a position on the South China Sea dispute. The English version of the interview was published by Yomiuri on Monday in advance of Widodo's visits to Japan and China this week, Indonesia, the largest country in Southeast Asia, has been a self-appointed broker in the many territorial disputes between its neighbours and China over the South China Sea. "We need peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region. It is important to have political and security stability to build up our economic growth," Wido- do was quoted as saying. "So we support the Code of Conduct [of the South China Sea] and also dialogue between China and Japan, China and ASEAN." Widodo is scheduled to hold talks with Shinzo Abe, the Japanese prime minister, on Monday. Widodo confirmed that he and Abe would sign a defence cooperation agreement that would cover "how to work with" Japan's military, and "search and rescue operations, humanitarian assistance, and cyber defence",Yomiuri reported. Japan has already bolstered partnerships with the Philippines and Vietnam, the two countries most at odds with China over territorial rows in the South China Sea. Japan itself is embroiled in a bitter dispute with China over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, further to the north. Widodo also said he hoped to discuss maritime cooperation with Japan's coast guard "because Japan has good experience to manage its waters", the newspaper reported. A boy wounded in one of Friday's suicide bomb attacks lies in a hospital bed in Sanaa The U.N. special envoy for Yemen warned an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council on Sunday that events appear to be leading the country “to the edge of civil war” and urged all parties to step back from the brink and resolve the conflict peacefully. Jamal Benomar stressed repeatedly in a video briefing from Qatar that “peaceful dialogue is the only option we have.” That view was echoed by the Security Council in a presidential statement which reaffirmed the readiness of the U.N.’s most powerful body to take “further measures” against any party impeding the road to peace in Yemen. That could mean new sanctions, or possibly other actions. Lithuania’s U.N. Ambassador Raimonda Murmokaite said after the closed consultations that all the council members supported a return to negotiations, but she doesn't foresee new sanctions – “not at this stage.” Benomar said “it would be an illusion” to think that Houthi Shiite rebels - who control the capital Sanaa, much of the north, and are moving further south backed by some members of Yemen's armed forces - could succeed in taking control of the entire country. On Sunday, the Houthis seized Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city. “It would be equally false,” Benomar said, to think that embattled President Abed-Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who fled earlier this month to the southern city of Aden - the country’s economic hub - could assemble sufficient forces “to liberate the country from the Houthis.” He warned that any party that pushes the country in either direction “would be inviting a protracted conflict in the vein of an Iraq, Syria, Libya combined scenario.” Meanwhile the U.N. Security Council also voiced unanimous support for Yemen’s President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and the unity of the country. “The Security Council reaffirms its strong commitment to the unity, sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Yemen, and its commitment to stand by the people of Yemen,” the 15 members said in a statement during an emergency meeting in New York. The council “supports the legitimacy” of Hadi, it added in its statement, and also made a vague threat of more sanctions against the Shiite militia, known as Huthis, who seized a key central Yemeni city’s airport. Yemen’s turmoil and political crisis has deepened since the Houthis seized Sanaa in September and put Hadi under house arrest and eventually dissolved the country’s parliament. The country’s al-Qaeda branch, considered by the United States the terror network's most dangerous offshoot, has stepped up attacks against the Shiite rebels. The Houthis newly announced move to take over the entire country follows the suicide bombings of a pair of mosques in Sanaa that killed 137 people which were claimed by the Islamic State group. It also followed clashes around Aden's airport and planes from Sanaa dropping bombs on the city's presidential palace which Benomar said fortunately did not injure Hadi, who is strongly supported by the Security Council. “Following the suicide bombings and fighting,” Benomar warned, “emotions are running extremely high, and unless a solution can be found in the coming days the country will slide into further violent conflict and fragmentation.” He said Yemenis believe the situation is “on a rapid downward spiral,” and are concerned that the conflict “has taken on worrying sectarian tones and deepening north-south divisions.” “Fears exist that AlQaeda in the Arabian Peninsula will exploit the current instability to cause further chaos,” he said. The deteriorating situation led U.S. troops to evacuate a southern air base crucial to the drone program targeting al-Qaeda militants. Benomar said “extremists on many sides” are actively trying to undermine U.N.-brokered negotiations that he is leading aimed at putting Yemen back on track to complete its transition to democracy so it can finish work on a constitution, hold a referendum on it, and conduct elections. He stressed that the political impasse can only be unblocked by negotiations that include both the Houthis and Hadi. “I urge all sides at this time of rising tensions and rhetoric to de-escalate and exercise maximum restraint, and refrain from provocation,” Benomar said. In the presidential statement approved by all 15 members, the Security Council echoed Benomar’s call for all parties to stop fighting, engage in the U.N.-brokered negotiations and complete the peaceful transition. 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 25 , 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 By Aimal Faizi 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 100: If one House rejects decisions of the other, a joint commission comprised of an equal number of members from each House shall be formed to solve the difference. The decision of the commission, after endorsement by the President, shall be enforced. If the joint commission does not solve the difference, the decision shall be considered rejected. In such situation, the House of People shall pass it with two-thirds majority in its next session. This decision, without submission to the House of Elders, shall be promulgated once endorsement by the President. Editorial Electoral reforms need of the hour The presidential elections that led to the formation of the National Unity Government (NUG) were a revealing snapshot of what has been achieved in Afghanistan. Though, our democracy is not matured yet, but despite that the democratic transfer of power by ex-President Hamid Karzai to the incumbent Ashraf Ghani speaks volumes about the success of this new set up in the country. Even now, political differences are there in the NUG, nevertheless despite flaws, this is something better than despotism or an exotic-theocracy being exported by a neighboring country— a country that doesn’t tolerate theocracy at home but yearns to see it imposed in Afghanistan. As has happened elsewhere in the developing world, elections here were also tense and fraught with rigging that unleashed a highly detrimental political crisis. The crisis risked too many gains. Luckily it was prevented by international intervention. Now the promise of the NUG to reform electoral bodies is a welcoming gesture. A member of the Parliament and the Chairperson of the new Electoral Reform Commission, Shukria Barakzai, pledged reforms in structure of the national electoral bodies. She hinted of keeping some of the electoral commissions members on the chopping block. To overcome the deepening rift over electoral reforms mechanism, the reform commission was established shortly before the visit of President Ashraf Ghani and CEO Abdullah Abdullah to the United States. A presidential decree led to the formation of a 15-member committee. MP Barakzai is the chairperson of this commission while Sediqullah Tauhidi is the Deputy Chairman. Since the 2014 presidential elections were fraught with massive scale rigging. The fraud allegations unleashed a tense situation where none of the candidates, Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah was ready to budge even an inch. There is no more any political stalemate but yes despite that state affairs are not going smoothly as there are still some differences between the two leaders of the current government. Voters looked alienated. Their confidence sagged. Their huge sacrifices betrayed and their hopes dashed to ground. Many believed democracy is incompatible in this country. However, all that is the past. What the government currently needs is to overcome corruption, reconstruct people’s confidence, and introduce reforms in the electoral commissions. To reconstruct people’s confidence and win their trust, the government will have to make institutions countable and responsible. The government will have to introduce meritocracy. Political and electoral reforms are need of the hour. To ensure the government is sincere in its efforts to bring about substantial changes in governance, political set up, and elections, it will have to discourage filibuster and gerrymandering. But the problem is the government looks all-mouth and no-performer. If being all-mouth is the solution then actions wouldn’t have any place in politics. Therefore, the government should be mindful that no political action and movement is possible when discussion and political rhetoric permanently is established. The two leaders still look busy in a tacit internal war, but the rising violence should motivate the ruling elite to settle their feuds and turn their attention to the deepening economic, political, and security challenges. The sooner they realize the importance of reforms and commitments the sooner the country will see the dawn of freedom—freedom from terror, militancy, corruption, political instability, economic bondage, and foreign interferences. If the government wants to prevent the recurrence of what the nation witnessed in the 2014 presidential race, it will have to reform the electoral commissions at all costs. 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. As Washington prepares for the first official trip of the Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, a U.S. National Security Council official, Jeff Eggers called the U.S. administration’s relationship with the Afghan President “better and qualitatively different” than what it used to be with the former President, Hamid Karzai. Dan Feldman, the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan called the Afghan President and the Chief Executive “competent partners with a very different approach towards the bilateral relationship with the U.S., and a very different vision” which is “very much in alignment” with what the U.S. has laid out from “security to reconciliation.” Reading the above statements from the senior U.S. officials which are intended to shape the general opinion of the U.S. involvement in Afghanistan, one can understand how selfish and reckless the American prospective of a “better and qualitatively different” bilateral relationship of a poor country like By Asma-Khan Lone The focus on the effectiveness of the security forces is understandable given the challenges that confront Afghanistan.However, in the long run, economic stability will have to be the key to sustainable peace in Afghanistan. While the previous government was largely security-driven, new president Ashraf Ghani is expected to underscore economic reconstruction as a key component of state-building. Currently on a much anticipated visit to the US, Mr. Ghani will need to work hard to convince the Obama administration to review its decision to withdraw most of its troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2016. Targeted economic intervention could help bridge the governance gap and financial deficits, which contribute to a widening political and security vacuum. This vacuum in turn provides the leeway for extremists to move in. For a decade after 2002, Afghanistan witnessed an encouraging 9.5 per cent growth rate and single-digit inflation, but this economic cycle was widely sustained by the inflow of donor funds and aid. With the ISAF drawdown edging nearer, the growth rate began Afghanistan is with the Unite States of America. As a close aide to the former President, I witnessed how much President Karzai endeavoured to improve and strengthen relations between Kabul and Washington over the years behind the closed-doors bilateral talks with the senior U.S. officials. All President Karzai wanted was for the U.S. administration to better understand him as the leader of the country and to respect the Afghan sovereignty and dignity in its policies and in its actions towards Afghanistan. President Karzai’s main concern -the key reason for the deterioration of Kabul’s relations with Washingtonwas the issue of civilian causalities caused by unilateral military operations including blind U.S. airstrikes on residential areas in the Afghan villages and towns killing innocent Afghans including children and women. Based on a recent study conducted by a London-based research and advocacy organization called “Action on Armed Violence” (AOAV), with the withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan and reduction in U.S. military operations, “civilian deaths from aerial bombing in Afghanistan have fallen.” Iain Overton, Director of Policy at AOAV, said, that with the termination of foreign military operations in Afghanistan, “NATO recognized that even with well-trained and wellquipped militaries, mistakes were still made in Afghanistan that meant far too many civilians were being killed by their bombs.” The issue of civilian casualties was always at the top of the former President’s concerns and of the Afghan people but did the U.S. administration take any measure to ensure the protection of the Afghan civilians? It will not be incorrect to say none! The U.S. forces detained and kept thousands of Afghans in illegal detention for years without trial, in the maximum security prison Bagram. They financed and armed irresponsible militias and warlords which according to the New York Times now “have become more predatory...to feed themselves and because there is no one to stop them.” Such policies fed into Taliban propaganda, with many becoming sympathisers, eventually resulting in many civilians joining the ranks of the Taliban as well as other antigovernment armed forces adding to the overall insecurity and instability in the country. Lack of clarity in the U.S. policies towards Pakistan and the so called war on terror gave every reason to President Karzai to be persuaded that the U.S. seeks to perpetuate the war in Afghanistan and is conniving with Pakistan to interfere in Afghan affairs. From the Afghan prospective, the U.S. could and should have pressured Pakistan to halt aiding, abetting and sponsoring terrorism. Yet the expectation in the U.S. administration had was for Karzai to remain silent and to not contradict its policies. Had Mr. Karzai turned a blind eye on the U.S. wrongdoings in Afghanistan, he would have been an “adequate strategic partner” or as he had once been described by U.S. officials as well as scholars like Barnett Rubin: “the most pro-American leader you can ask for in the Muslim world”. Karzai was not anti-American. Like every other patriot Afghan, he was grateful for every penny of U.S. assistance to the people of Afghanistan. He repeatedly expressed his appreciation forthe sacrifices that the international community made in Afghanistan. In an interview with author, William Dalrymple, Karzai once said: “I feel it is my responsibility to make sure that the future is better for the Afghan people than ever before. I just hope the Americans will realize I have a responsibility toward Afghanistan, and that my being adamant about issues is not in opposition to them. I am not an opponent of the West. I am just the slave of the interests of the Afghan people. And that I shall fulfill.” Now, although the U.S. administration expects President Ashraf Ghani currently visiting Washington to deliver the message that “He is not Hamid Karzai”, he had better make it clear to Washington that he is first and foremost an Afghan and his priority is to fulfill the interests of his people. Afghans want bilateral relations with the U.S. on the basis of mutual respect as two sovereign countries in its practical terms. But it would be of no benefit to them, if the U.S. partnership with Afghanistan does not translate into peace and stability in their country. to dip in 2013 and fell to 3.8 per cent by the beginning of this year. With little infrastructure, Afghanistan is set to face a downwards spiral especially as donor funding dries up. While the 2012 Strategic Partnership Agreement with the US provides a temporary reprieve, including financial support for another decade, Kabul will ultimately have to devise plans to reboot its economy. In fact, at the core of its structural weakness lies Afghanistan’s overt reliance on foreign aid. At present, Afghanistan is banking on two factors to resuscitate its economy: its strategic location and its natural resources. Situated at the intersection of the East-West trade corridor it hopes to leverage its strategic position and revive the ancient Silk Route. The US has already drawn up plans for this in the form of its New Silk Road Initiative (NSRI). So has China, with its proposed Silk Route Economic Belt. Also on the horizon is the transportation of gas from the Caspian region to South Asia through the Tapi (Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India) pipeline and the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-China pipeline. Another energy project envisages the transmission of hydroelectric power to South Asia. Afghanistan and Pakistan have also signed a trade and transit agreement in 2010 allowing for the free movement of goods. The other element of Afghanistan’s economic architecture is its natural resources. Afghanistan has traditionally been rich in resources such as coal, chromite and marble and has exported gas to Russia since 1967. Though some studies were undertaken decades ago indicating the presence of vast mineral and hydrocarbon resources, it was not until 2010 that the US announced the discovery of nearly $1 trillion (Dh3.67 tn) in untapped mineral deposits. These reserves included huge veins of iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals such as lithium. Afghanistan has already attracted considerable investment, with China pledging $2.8 billion for the development of copper mines, and a consortium of Indian companies in partnership with Canadian companies announcing an investment of $14.6 billion for the development of iron ore mines in Hajigak. However these projects are at a standstill due to the precarious security scenario. The wealth of resources is, however, a double-edged sword that could usher in a vicious cycle of violence. So, while grand in design and exhib- iting huge promise, the enterprises are wrought with uncertainties. In the meantime, Afghanistan could focus on its other strengths such as agriculture and livestock. With just 6 per cent of its land cultivated, it could increase yield and switch over from a predominantly opium-driven sector to alternative crops. This would address its food security issues too. It could also enter into water-sharing agreements with neighbours, especially Pakistan. It could further build on its expanding service sector while undertaking measures to plug corruption – the third highest in the world – and try to bring order to its vast informal economy. Episodes such as the Kabul Bank fraud, which was one of the worst in international banking history, should never be allowed to happen and earnest efforts should be made to reform the sector. Only by developing a robust economy will Afghanistan become a bulwark against extremist ideology. if it does that it will not just be a win for this war-ravaged nation, but for the wider world. Asma-Khan Lone is an assistant professor at Jindal Global University, India. This article was first seen at The National. List of land grabbers 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 25, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES What do opponents of an Iran nuclear deal really want? Dr. John Duke Anthony By Mohammed Umer Daudzai Just weeks after becoming president of Afghanistan last September, Ashraf Ghani signaled a dramatic shift in the country’s regional diplomacy. He promptly visited Pakistan and its main allies Saudi Arabia and China, and then Pakistan’s army chief and head of intelligence visited Kabul. The Afghan government is hoping Pakistan will help facilitate dialogue with the leaders of the Afghan Taliban, whom Pakistan has long harbored and enabled. Pakistan, for its part, has asked Kabul’s assistance against the leaders of the militant group Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (T.T.P.), the so-called Pakistani Taliban, whose leaders are said to be hiding in eastern Afghanistan. This rapprochement has generated much excitement, but all the hype does not measure well against reality. Despite signs of renewed cooperation, Afghanistan and Pakistan still have fundamentally different goals and approaches. While Mr. Ghani’s moves are bold and risky for Afghanistan, Pakistan’s response so far has been largely tactical and self-serving. Mr. Ghani justifies this new policy by arguing that circumstances have changed and the conditions for peace are better than ever before. And on the surface, he seems to have a point. Pakistan appears to have more reason to fight back against terrorism, having been hit hard by T.T.P. in recent months. After an attack on a school in Peshawar in December and a slew of bombings since, the Pakistani government seems to have abandoned its appeasement-style approach of the past and finally set out to eliminate T.T.P. China, meanwhile, has expressed more interest in the region, including a willingness to help broker talks with the Afghan Taliban. In exchange it hopes to enlist the assistance of Afghanistan and Pakistan to counter the threat of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a Uighur separatist group thought to have links to the Taliban. But these new conditions do not change the basic dynamic between Afghanistan and Pakistan. And by banking on them, Mr. Ghani is taking great risks at a huge cost to Afghanistan with little chance of reward. After a debilitating electoral crisis last year, he is spending enormous political capital trying to justify a controversial agenda. His widely publicized visit to the Pakistani military headquarters in Rawalpindi in November and a new program to send Afghan cadets for training in Pakistan have brought him sharp criticism at home. In return, Pakistan has taken only tactical steps — or steps primarily aimed at improving its international reputation and its own security. After many years of supporting militancy in the region, the Pakistani government now wants to wash its hands of the problem by claiming that its origins lie in Afghanistan. Under the National Action Plan initiated after the Peshawar school attack, Pakistan projects to expel many Afghan refugees, with little regard for the costs of reintegrating them that the Afghan government will have to bear or the risk that some extremists will enter Afghanistan among the refugees. Given recent signs that the West will continue to invest in Afghanistan and that China is poised to do so in earnest, Pakistan also has new incentives to be seen as helping any peace process with the Taliban. But the promise of dialogue is a far cry from actual negotiations, let alone a political settlement. This is not the first time there has been talk of talks with the Taliban. Throughout the 1990s, the Taliban met repeatedly with their opponents — asking them for major concessions without much compromising themselves. In 2011, after President Hamid Karzai called Pakistan “our twin brother,” there was renewed hope for progress. Over the next couple of years, Pakistan released some Taliban leaders from its prisons and helped arrange meetings between Afghan officials and the group’s then number two. But those moves yielded no concrete results. And now, despite Mr. Ghani’s recent gestures, the Taliban have not yet come to the negotiation table. Based on my experience as Afghanistan’s ambassador to Pakistan in 2011-13, and other dealings with the highest levels of the Pakistani establishment over the years, it seems clear to me that the fundamentals of Pakistan’s ap- proach to Afghanistan have not changed. Militancy remains an instrument of its foreign policy. The Pakistani military will only stop backing the Taliban after it finds other proxies to advance its conception of its national interests. One of those perceived interests is maintaining so-called strategic depth in Afghanistan: Islamabad has long sought to use my country as a rear base in case of an Indian military advance. In 1988, the Pakistani leader Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq said that Pakistan had “earned the right” to have a friendly regime in Kabul; certainly, he would “not permit” any “Indian and Soviet influence” in Afghanistan. To this day, the Pakistani military treats the Afghan Taliban as a strategic asset. Another major concern of Islamabad is ensuring that Afghanistan does not encourage Pashtun or Baluch separatists in Pakistan. Those groups were divided between the two countries by the 1893 Durand Line Agreement, and at various times over the years Islamabad has accused Kabul of supporting their struggle for independence. Pakistan has an interest in keeping Afghanistan so preoccupied by its own instability that it cannot spare any resources on the Pashtuns’ and Baluchs’ cause. Pakistan’s end game, in other words, is not markedly different today than it has been for years. And this is why Mr. Ghani’s overtures to Islamabad are dangerous: They are diverting attention away from more essential, perhaps existential, tasks — like strengthening the Afghan National Security Forces, which is critical to increasing the Afghan government’s leverage in any talks with the Taliban. In its wishful attempt to make progress with the Taliban, Kabul is gambling precious political capital on superficial tweaks in Pakistan’s policy. Rather than expect a miraculous U-turn from Islamabad, Mr. Ghani’s government would do better to use its resources, and the international community’s continued support, to concentrate on its main purpose: consolidating the Afghan state. Mohammed Umer Daudzai was interior minister of Afghanistan from August 2013 to December 2014, and previously Afghanistan’s ambassador to Iran and Pakistan. A version of this oped appeared in print on March 23, 2015, in The International New York Times. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is once again in Switzerland with his British, Chinese, French, German, and Russian counterparts to continue negotiations regarding Iran's nuclear program. Whether the respective diplomatic and national security negotiators will succeed remains to be seen. To be sure, a mutually acceptable agreement with Iran by six among the world's most powerful and influential nations, on one hand, and the Islamic Republic of Iran, on the other, is no small matter. In substance as well as in procedure and desired outcome, the goals – ensuring that Iran does not produce a nuclear bomb and, to that end, agreeing on as intrusive a nature and range of inspections as any in history – are as laudable as they are in many ways timely, urgent, and necessary. Rising Arab-Iranian Tensions The negotiators are keenly aware that the talks have been occurring alongside a rise in regional tensions. Simultaneous to the discussions, the negotiators have been especially mindful of Arab governments' ongoing objections to the destabilizing influence of Iran's ongoing interference in the domestic affairs of their countries, e.g., members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), a six-state grouping comprised of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, plus Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen. In this regard, they are cognizant of the GCC leaders' resentment that the issue of Iran's continuing intrusions in Arabia and the Gulf – destabilizing interventions as yet unreciprocated – was not allowed to be part of the talks. In the run-up to America and Iran's day of reckoning there is much to consider Dr. John Duke Anthony The negotiators acknowledge these leaders' irritation at the reasons for the omission: namely, that Tehran was opposed to its inclusion. Indeed, in retrospect, in their eagerness to pursue an agreement of some kind – however partial and limited in its scope and potential impact – the negotiators were inadequately empathetic to the legitimate concerns of neighboring countries and too quick to accommodate Iran's objections. Even so, the negotiators argue in their defense that their efforts should not be defeated in advance by anyone with a sincere interest in advancing the legitimate goals of regional and global peace, security, stability, and the possible accompanying prospects for prosperity. Opponents Outside of the Arab World Possessing separate motivations and desires from those noted above, it is useful to assess the true intentions of others opposed to a potentially acceptable agreement: a group largely comprised of American neoconservatives, their Israeli allies, and other likeminded individuals and institutions. These groups have loudly proclaimed that they would have the P5+1 negotiators – representing the Five Permanent Is Gagauzia next on Russia’s list? By Luke Coffey Gagauzia, a tiny autonomous region in Moldova, checks most of the boxes for Russian meddling. It is ethnically Turkic, religiously Christian Orthodox, and the main language spoken is Russian. The region is a byproduct of imperial rivalry between the Ottoman and Russian empires typically found in the Black Sea basin in the 19th century. Like Crimea, it was taken by Russia from the Ottoman Empire. In this case, Russia acquired Gagauzia after the Russo-Turkish War (1806–1812) as part of the 1812 Treaty of Bucharest. Today, it is the poorest region of Moldova and Gagauzians blame the westward orientation of the central government for many of their problems. Local politicians regularly use separatists and pro-Russian slogans to drum up local support. Events in eastern Ukraine have only encouraged this. Russian sympathies Moldova: Under the influenceRussian meddling in Moldova is nothing new. One only has to look at the breakaway republic of Transnistria and the 2,000 Russian troops that are based there to keep the conflict "frozen". Pro-Russian sympathies run deep in Gagauzia. During last year's national elections in Moldova, the pro-Russian Socialist Party got their best result in Gagauzia. While the rest of Moldova is targeted by Russian economic sanctions, both Transnistria and Gagauzia enjoy exemptions. In February 2014, as the crisis in Crimea was reaching a peak, and eastern Ukraine was starting to simmer, the regional government in Gagauzia held two referenda. One asked voters to decide their preference between closer relations with the European Union or the Russian backed Eurasian Customs Union. The vote was not even close: 98.5 percent of the voters supported Moldova's integration with the Eurasian Customs Union. The second referendum asked about support for a so-called "deferred independence" bill being proposed in Gagauzia's legislative body. This proposed bill would allow the autonomous region to become automatically independent if Moldova ever lost its national sovereignty. Again, the outcome was a landslide: 98 percent voted in favour of the motion. Moldovan authorities said that the referenda in Gagauzia were unconstitutional, calling it an attempt to undermine the country's foreign policy. Unsurprisingly, Moscow LETTER TO THE EDITOR We are living in a society that people celebrate festivals of Zoroaster’s era. We live in a society that girls appear on TV screens wearing clothes that are against Afghan traditions. We are living in a society that millions of its youths are job seekers, most them holding master degree. We are living in a society that our Sufis are killed inside mosque. We are living in a society that its government cannot pay the state salary and its economy is dwindling despite flow of billions of American dollars in past 13 years. And finally, we are living in a society that an angry mob lynches a girl for allegedly burning a copy of the Holy Qur’an. We are facing more and more hurdles in our society. The mentioned problems are a few from a bunch of them. What will be the fate of this ill-fated society? The answer for this query is that the fate of this society will be unknown. Because, considering the problems in our society, the fate of the Afghan society appears unknown. And Afghans will not see the bright days in the near future. However, there are a number of few points that will help us to step towards a bright future. The most and the very important point is to work on our culture and education. Illiteracy has pushed us to see the day when a woman ‘Farkhunda’ was lynched by an angry mob in Kabul. Another solution to this problem is to increase awareness programs on TV and radio channels, instead of vulgar programs in a number of TV and radio channels in Kabul. No one will feel our pains and no one will heel them until we roll up our sleeves and start finding solutions for decade-long problems in our society. Or else the Afghan society’s fate will remain ‘unknown’ for very distant future. Saeeda Dunya Amin, 3rd Macroryan, 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 backed these referenda. Russian media widely reported the results. The voting was monitored by a Transnistrian-born member of Russia's State Duma, Roman Khudyakov. Less than 24 hours after the voting ended, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin welcomed the turnout and the outcome. Putin's behaviour is like that of the Russian Tsars who built the Imperial Russian Empire nation by nation, khanate by khanate, and kingdom by kingdom. Imperial Russia To understand Russia's motives in Gagauzia it is important to understand Vladimir Putin's view of Russia's role in the world. What the world is witnessing today is not a resurgent Cold War or Soviet-style Russia as commentators frequently claim, but an Imperial Russia. Putin's behaviour is like that of the Russian Tsars who built the Imperial Russian Empire nation by nation, khanate by khanate, and kingdom by kingdom. In the eyes of Russians at the time, the 17th and 18th century territorial gains that, in part, defined Imperial Russia were regarded not as "annexations" but as taking what was already theirs. Luke Coffey is a research fellow specialising in transatlantic and Eurasian security at a Washington DC based think-tank. He previously served as a special adviser to the British defence secretary and was a commissioned officer in the United States army. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy. Members of the United Nations Security Council, i.e., China, France, Great Britain, Russia, and the United States, plus Germany – avoid reaching an agreement that may contain provisions not to their liking, which they believe may be imminently near to being concluded with the Islamic Republic. Make no mistake, these groups seeks a profoundly different set of accomplishments vis-à-vis Iran than the ones under consideration in the nuclear talks. The intentions of these opponents of a potentially acceptable agreement are, rather, to see America directly confront Iran. The Old Iraq Syndrome Those driving the issue in this antagonistic and provocative direction are hardly new to the American and Israeli political scenes. One need only reference, as this author did in an address to The Voltaire Institute in Brussels in 2005, their influence and collective political and media clout in successfully moving Washington's decision making regarding confronting Iraq militarily from a concept to policy recommendation to an actual American-led invasion and occupation. The outcomes that these groups seek this time around, like those they sought before, have been heavily obscured. They remain deliberately veiled in fear, myth, rumor, innuendo, and warmongering. What those opposed to a mutually acceptable accord with Tehran have in mind bears a strong resemblance to the bill of goods sold to the American people with the U.S. effort to topple the regime of Saddam Hussein. The results of the damage they wrought in Iraq – a country that had not attacked the United States or posed any credible threat to American interests – have yet to run their course. Already, with no end in sight, the consequences are certain to cost more than a trillion dollars. Already, the human price is inestimable. In addition to the thousands of American killed and tens of thousands wounded are the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis killed, rendered homeless, made refugees, and maimed for life. Even with the cessation of U.S. military operations in Iraq at the end of 2011, the suicide rate of U.S. soldiers returning from the cauldron forged by the collective weight of the American neoconservatives, elements among their Israeli allies, and others in a post-September 11, 2001 revenge mode against Arabs and Muslims continues at a disturbing rate. Beginning in 2004, the year after America's war against Iraq commenced, the rate of U.S. veterans committing suicide climbed to record highs. The result, moreover, toppled the regime, decimated the country's security and defense forces, sowed many of the seeds that made it possible for the Islamic State group to emerge, spread, and wreak the havoc it has wrought, and paved the way for Iran to become the single largest and most influential foreign factor in Iraq – without its having to fire a single shot or shed a drop of blood. It also allowed Israelis and Israeli agents to enter northern Iraq to assist in the training of Kurdish security forces, thereby further advancing decades-old Israeli-Kurdish collaboration and their joint goal of ensuring a weaker government in Baghdad than existed before in addition to practically guaranteeing that Iraq would be deprived of the means and ability to pose a threat to Israel at anytime in the foreseeable future. Unspoken Goals The dominant U.S. role in launching the war and in administering the occupation also succeeded in the placement of American advisers in most Iraqi government ministries. Such positioning enhanced American proximity to Iraqis authorized to plan and administer the successor government's multi-billion dollar contracts. This alone ensured that Americans would have privileged access to invaluable intelligence ahead of others. And it practically guaranteed U.S. companies a preferential position not only vis-à-vis future exploration and development of the country's energy and other economic resources. It also enabled American firms to be in a better position than might otherwise have been the case to bid successfully on Iraq's major lucrative aviation, engineering, infrastructure, reconstruction, and construction projects. As with Iraq, what those against practically any mutually acceptable governmental accord with Iran regarding its nuclear program seek to achieve is as devious as it is damaging. By no stretch of the imagination is it in accord with America's legitimate interests. Instead, what they diligently seek might be seen as a single issue and interest: serving the perceived needs of Israel under the guise of doing what is best for America when in fact nothing could be further from the truth. As sure as actions have consequences, these U.S. and Israeli groups would abide a forceful American confrontation with the undeniable poten- tial for yet another costly war. Indeed, an article titled "Time to Attack Iran," appearing in the January/February 2012 issue of Foreign Affairs – the most widely read journal among American policymakers, U.S. policy analysts, and foreign affairs practitioners – implied that, as the prospects are considerable that the United States will have to use armed force against Iran's nuclear program eventually, it might as well proceed to do so now, when the likely costs would arguably be less than later. The U.S. Secretary of State's and his negotiator counterparts' efforts to do what is in American and global interests notwithstanding, many among the American and Israeli neoconservatives and other selfcentric interest groups wish him to fail. While the true interests of the lead pressure groups seeking to trip him up are hardly unknown to many specialists, the danger lies elsewhere – in the fact that they have largely and purposely been obscured from important segments of a more generalized public. Rather than the achievement of an accord that could usher in a more mutually beneficial U.S.-Iran relationship than any that has existed since 1979, the neoconservatives, their Israeli bedfellows – and not just, many believe, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, reelected to a fourth term as premier, together with others, including an indeterminate number of American Republican Members of Congress – prefer a continued standoff between Washington and Tehran, and would not rule out a forceful American confrontation with the undeniable potential for yet another costly war. Returning to the Iraq War Playbook The language is similar to the run-up to the invasion and occupation of Iraq that commenced in March 2003. To wit: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell appeared on one of the most widely viewed Sunday talk shows on March 15 calling Iran's government, "one of the worst regimes in the world." Much the same was said by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a March 3 address to a joint session of the U.S. Congress, echoing his 2002 testimony to the U.S. Congress advocating for attacking Iraq. As was the case prior to their urging that the United States go to war with Iraq, opponents of an agreement with Iran have tended to couch their argumentation in the deliberately seductive terms of providing serious and favorable consideration to using force to protect America's alleged national security and related interests. Over a decade ago, such rationales were transparently bogus to area studies specialists and scholars long exposed to Iraqi culture, and its system of governance and political dynamics. The result, to be sure, has hardly been cost-free. As reason is that the strength and weakness of any system of democratic governance turns on the consent of the governed. Of course, the most informed consent is that which typically follows adequate and responsible consultation. In the best of circumstances, consent and consultation are linked to the likelihood of citizens being able to make societally relevant judgments that are just, fair, and prudent. In this case, however, the dynamics of both processes fell far short of what was required. Twelve years after the invasion and occupation of Iraq commenced, notwithstanding the fact that commercially speaking some American interest groups made out "like bandits," the American misadventure in Iraq overall, and practically from its onset, severely damaged American interests that have yet to recover. Viewed in this light, the clamor of some to attack Iran reads like a sad sequel for those who all along preferred that the United States invade Iran first and not Iraq. Indeed, long before September 11, 2001, it was well known among specialists that, dating back to the mid-1990s, America's neoconservatives, their kindred citizen allies, and innumerable Israelis alike wished for the United States to wage war against Iran – not eventually but before any other country. As for any and all others to be attacked and their regimes toppled or brought to their knees – the neocon list included not only Iran and Iraq, but also Syria, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia – these could wait to have America change their governments later. The Ultimate Neoconservative Wish List Many perceive that this is a rather embarrassingly sordid and sorry juncture of American history where the diplomats negotiating with one another in Switzerland find themselves. Bearing this history in mind, it is therefore worth pondering what those who would have the United States, with Israel's strong support, confront Iran and not enter into any mutually binding agreement with it would arguably like to achieve. It includes: (1) Deflecting Attention Away from Israel One of the most important neoconservative and Israeli objectives in having the United States attack Iran is to do whatever is necessary to shift the U.S. focus and notions of Israel's culpability of wrongdoing away from the eastern Mediterranean towards lands east, e.g., Arabia and the Gulf. This would arguably absorb precious U.S. foreign policy energies, attention, and other resources on matters other than Israel for far into the future. It would likely squelch efforts to move as expeditiously as before to establish an independent State of Palestine. In the proponents' view, it would almost as surely deflect Washington from pressuring Israel into an early withdrawal from its illegal settlements in the Palestinian and Syrian territories. By maintaining Iran's pariah status, neoconservatives and other groups are also thereby able to preserve what they have conjured and built up in the mainstream American and other Western media as a recognizable "existential threat" to Israel. The imagery of such a threat in many circles helps sustain the narrative of Israel as a besieged beacon of victimhood rather than a militarily powerful scofflaw inflicting brutal punishment on Palestinian Christian and Muslim Arab civilians in Gaza, and not only expropriating their land but also exploiting their orchards, olive and citrus groves, water, and other valuable natural resources in the Occupied Territories. (2) Territorial Expansionism This similarly happened when Israel invaded Lebanon in June 1982. That act shifted Washington's attention away from rigorously continuing to pursue the goal of a just, enduring, and comprehensive peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians and towards Lebanon instead. By the time that Lebanon regained the lands that Israel had invaded and occupied directly and by proxy 19 years later, the extent of Palestinian territory brought under Israeli control had expanded massively and the Israeli settler movement had quintupled its number of settlers. Israel thereby achieved, on one hand, its illegitimate interests while blocking the legitimate interests of the Palestinians, Syria, Lebanon, the United States, and the rest of the world in resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict. (3) Regime Change Many believe American and Israeli goals are not to change the behavior of the regime in Tehran but, again as with Iraq, to change the regime itself. Those of this view seek an Iran that would be more moderate in its approach to the Arab-Israeli conflict, one less supportive of Hezbollah in Lebanon and of the Assad regime in Syria, one ending its intrusions into the domestic affairs of the GCC countries and Yemen, one curbing if not reversing the degree to which it has eroded de facto the national sovereignty and political independence of neighboring Iraq, and one terminating the nature and extent of its forceful aid to Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Palestine. These were among the exact same kinds of goals of the largely unstated American neoconservative and Israeli geostrategic, geopolitical, and related Israeli objectives vis-à-vis Iraq prior to its invasion in 2003. (4) Protecting Privileged Status Israel cannot take its relationship with America for granted and expect to compete effectively in the long run for America's favor. This is why many Israelis believe they have no choice but to be strategically opposed to the strongest and most expanded American-Arab and U.S.-Saudi Arabian relationship, and the day when, possibly, the United States may find itself in a reciprocally rewarding relationship with the six GCC countries as a single bloc to an even great extent than in the series of bilateral ties with these entities it has enjoyed for quite some time with the six countries all totaled already – there are 22 Arab countries and only one Israel. Tehran finds itself with a similar strategic predicament. Indeed, for nearly half as long as Israel has existed, Iran geopolitically has viewed its situation similarly and has reasoned likewise. That Washington might be on the verge of turning a new page with Tehran that in time could lead to Iran being added to Israel among America's most valued strategic partners – and bringing nearer the day when there might also be a rapprochement between Iran and Israel, as in days of old prior to the onset of the Iranian Revolution in 1979 – is a pan-GCC nightmare. Dr. Anthony is the only American to have been invited to attend each of the GCC's Ministerial and Heads of State Summits since the GCC's inception in 1981. 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Forcing children to fight in Ind ia’s restive east Mahavir Birja, 10, managed to escape the ranks of communist guerrillas after serving a year in India's jungles [Sanjay Pandey/ Al Jazeera] Lohardaga, India - At the sight of a stranger, a visibly frightened 10year-old boy ran crying, "Grandma save me. They have come, they have come for me again." Mahavir Birja was not always petrified of uninvited guests. But his dramatic abduction by Maoist fighters and equally dramatic escape from their clutches has robbed him of his childhood innocence and filled his heart and mind with fear. Hiding behind his grandmother's tattered sari, the boy with piercing dark eyes recounted his horror story. "A group of armed men suddenly barged into our home and told my parents that they were taking me along. When my father opposed, they hit him on the head with the rear of a rifle," he said. The impact was so hard that he fell to the ground with blood pouring from his head. Unmoved, the intruders dragged Mahavir off to their camp - where he remained for nearly a year. Police-run children's lodges rehabilitate those traumatised by Maoist rebels [Sanjay Pandey/Al Jazeera] Mahavir's father subsequently died from the attack, his mother abandoned the children and eloped with another man. The responsibility to raise Mahavir and his 14-year-old sister fell on the frail shoulders of their 60-year-old grandmother, Parvat. Indoctrination and rehabilitation Fearing for Mahavir, Parvat decided to send him to a centre in Lohardaga, in the Indian state of Jharkhand, where about 28 children from remote tribal villages are being rehabilitated by police under a programme that began in 2013. Mahavir lived in the Maoist camps for almost a year and finally managed to flee during a gun battle with security forces. "There were around 50 boys our age in the camp. Our day started early with a rigorous physical exercise session, followed by indoctrination sessions and training in guerrilla warfare. In the evening, we would be asked to go and fetch wood from the forest. If someone dared to defy them, he would be beaten Putin’s biker gang lends muscle to rebel cause in east Ukraine LUGANSK: Dressed in leathers and camouflage, motorbike gang leader Vitali waves at two charred Ukrainian tank turrets decorating the entrance to his club as he recounts how his group has fought alongside pro-Russian rebels. "My love for my homeland, for my territory, is my life," he explains as he stands outside his headquarters in separatist bastion Lugansk. The biker -- also known by his nickname "Prosecutor" -- is boss of the east Ukraine branch of the Night Wolves motorcycle gang, a collection of Kremlin-loving toughs originally created in Russia that boasts close ties to President Vladimir Putin. "I'm a Night Wolf, not a rebel," claims the 35-year-old former soldier. "I'm just defending my homeland", he adds, explaining that his men often work "behind enemy lines". The leader and a dozen other members of the eastern Ukrainian offshoot of the club have been fighting with the separatists since the conflict with Kiev forces erupted nearly one year ago. Vitali says the shattered tanks were destroyed by his men during a battle with government troops in Khryashchuvate, a village close to Lugansk that now lies largely in ruins. "Our trophies!" he jokes. Most of the club members -- united by their passion for motorcycles, their love of the "Fatherland" and the Orthodox faith -- hail from the Donbass region in Ukraine's east. But others have been drawn to the area from Russia and other former Soviet states to defend what they call "the Russian world". "Wherever there are difficulties, we are the first to appear. This was the case in the Crimea," explains Oleg "Golova", who travelled from his native Belarus to the peninsula shortly before it was annexed by Russia last March. "Everything could have exploded just as quickly and just as tragically as in the Donbass," he adds. "We were the first defenders of the Crimea, even President Putin recognised that." The Kremlin strongman has not been shy of showing his support for the biker gang, having previously lauded their patriotism and riden with them on a HarleyDavidson. He is often photographed alongside its founder and leader in Russia, Alexander Zaldostanov, who goes by the nickname of "Khirurg" (the surgeon). Last week, they both spoke on stage at a rally in Moscow celebrating Crimea's annexation. "We were fighting here when there were no rebel forces. From Khryashchuvate to Novosvitlivka, to Lugansk airport. We were fighting practically with sticks!" says Roman "Volk", or the wolf, the man in charge of the club's military operations. Three Night Wolves have died since the beginning of the conflict with the Ukrainian army, they say. Their portraits now adorn the club's common room, surrounded by a wolf skin and icons. With February's Minsk truce generally holding, the bikers have been tasked with providing safety for public events organised by the rebels and with distributing humanitarian aid. But in the club's sleeping quarters, Kalashnikovs still sit at the end of members' beds. "We are ready for anything. We do not believe in the cease-fire," says Vitali, a dagger at his hip. Close to the common room, a gym has been transformed into a hangar, where around 20 motorcycles and classic cars are surrounded by Russian flags. The collection includes vehicles from the bomb-destroyed Lugansk car museum, taken by the Wolves to protect them from looters. Following the example of its Russian branches, the club aims to promote the "patriotic education of society and youth" by organising and financing various projects "to unite the Russian world". "The Soviet Union collapsed and the Soviet identity disappeared, but the people remained united by the Russian identity," says Oleg "Golova". "Being Russian is not a nationality, it is a state of mind," he adds, pointing to a large metal emblem created by the gang's leader Khirurg, which he says represents the "best of Russian history". It combines the double-headed eagle, a Tsarist symbol readopted by modern Russia, and the wheatsheaf beneath a red star from the Soviet crest. (AFP) black and blue. "We used to get one meal [lentils and rice] a day. Once a month, they would serve us chicken or mutton," said Mahavir, savouring the five-course home-cooked meal prepared by his grandma. His friend Sakaldip Kherwar, who was also abducted, pitched in. "They would ask us to do their laundry, help with cooking, carry rations and arms while the caravan was on the move. On a normal day, the caravan walked 810km during the day or at night. We were also trained to operate [assault weapons]," he said playfully pointing his pen-turned-gun at Al Jazeera. The children were usually allowed to visit their family if their unit happened to be passing by their village. But when Sakaldip was allowed to see his ailing mother, she did not want to send him back. "After a lot of negotiation and pleading, they agreed but only after our family agreed to exchange my eight-year-old nephew with the squad instead," said Sakaldip's father, who asked not to be named. Demanding children According to the Asian Centre for Human Rights report India's Child Soldiers, about 2,500 - girls and boys - are involved in armed conflict in the states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Orissa where the communist fighters operate. A United Nations report on child soldiers in India expressed concern over the killing and maiming of children kidnapped and used as fighters or human shields by rebels. These groups have recruited child soldiers with impunity during India's silent civil war since 1971. They come unannounced and uninvitated like messengers of death and take away our children. Dhanjan Oram, 35, farmer Emboldened by the much-hyped zerotolerance policy against armed groups of the Narendra Modi government, security forces have stepped up the offensive against the rebels, further pushing them up against the wall. Feeling pressure to find new recruits, some Maoist leaders issued a diktat to tribal villages to deliver five children each. Though the demand greatly upset the impoverished and exploited people of these areas, most did not have the courage to defy the guerrillas. Those who dare to do so are either beaten mercilessly in public - or killed. As demands for new recruits increased, people of the region started to question whether the rebels really were the "saviours of the oppressed" as they claim. Farmer Dhanjan Oram, 35, said he worried for the safety of his child and sent him to Lohardaga's police-run children's centre in 2013. "Everybody is scared in our village. They come unannounced and uninvited like messengers of death and take away our children. If anyone dares to defy them, they beat him. We live in perpetual fear. We have to save our lives and our kids' lives too. So we keep quiet." Government offensives Manvinder Singh Bhatia, an inspector general with the Jharkhand police, said communist rebels have been on the hunt recently for child recruits. "Since the launching of serious offensives against the Maoists, recruitment to their ranks is thinning out. A major offensive was launched following the news that some children were forcefully taken away, as a result of which, many of the children were returned." In January, the Jharkhand police, acting on a tip, intercepted a few children being taken to join fighters near Jamshedpur. Although most Maoist leaders deny demanding five children from each village, a commander from the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) admitted they do practice forced recruitment of children. Many villagers in rebel-controlled areas fear for their children [Sanjay Pandey/ Al Jazeera] "This is our compulsion because the government apparatus adopts every humane and inhumane tactic against us to suppress the voice of the common people," he told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals. Children recruited are used as spies and fighters, the commander said. Sexual violence National Foundation for India fellow Gautam Sarkar, who is working on a project called "Childhood Under the Shadow of a Gun", underlined instances of sexual exploitation of children - male and female - in rebel camps. Former female fighters have testified they were subjected to sexual violence, including rape and other forms of abuse, a common practice in camps of the Naxalite communist group. "I was trained there to operate automatic weapons, I was involved in some armed attacks in the region. Still I would be treated like a sex slave," said a former female fighter who requested anonymity for privacy reasons. "I got so disheartened and disenchanted that I decided to put down my weapons." According to the Indian government, boys and girls between age six and 12 were recruited into children's squads in Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Odisha states. No separate statistics are available on children killed or maimed in clashes between armed groups and government security forces. But at least 257 civilians, 101 soldiers, and 97 Naxalite rebels were killed in 2013 in 998 incidents, the government said. Like Boko Haram, infamous for attacking schools and stealing children in Nigeria, communist rebels in India also attack places of learning and rob kids of their right to an education. "Even after 67 years of independence, development is a distant dream in these impoverished pockets," Sarkar said. "People living in these areas are left at the mercy of the Naxalites. So it is obvious that they have to obey the Maoists, who run a parallel government in the impregnable jungles of India." (AL JAZEERA) Israel reaches out to France before resumption of Iran nuclear talks Top Israeli envoys were sent to confer with French officials on Sunday about preventing what Israel considers an unfavorable nuclear deal with Iran after tensions surfaced between France and the United States over negotiation strategy. Though France has demanded more stringent restrictions than other Western delegations during talks with Iran, one French diplomat played down Israel’s sway in Paris, saying that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had overplayed his hand in a March 3 speech to the U.S. Congress. France, the United States and four other world powers suspended negotiations with Iran in Switzerland on Friday and are to reconvene next week to try to break the deadlock over sensitive atomic research and lifting of sanctions before a March 31 deadline for a framework deal. Israel’s Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz, however, told Israel Radio that he is flying to Paris at short notice and may also hold meetings with other European nations to re-state his country’s concerns. “This is an effort to prevent a [nuclear] deal that is bad and full of loopholes, or at least ... to succeed in closing or amending some of these loopholes,” said Steinitz, who is being accompanied by Israeli National Security Adviser Joseph Cohen. Officials in Israel, which is not a party to the negotiations but feels especially threatened by the possibility of a nuclear-armed Iran, have long described France as the negotiating power with views closest to Israel’s. Steinitz credited France with including curbs on Iran’s mid-level enrichment of uranium to 20 percent fissile purity in the preliminary nuclear deal agreed in November 2013. “The French helped us a great deal,” he said. Frayed ties At one point during the latest negotiations French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius phoned his team to ensure that it made no more concessions, officials at the talks said last week. And on Saturday Fabius said France wants an agreement that would guarantee that Iran could not produce a nuclear weapon. Iran, meanwhile, says that its nuclear program is for peaceful needs only. Israel’s ties to its main ally, the United States, have frayed over Netanyahu’s lobbying against the prospective Iran deal. Many of U.S. President Barack Obama’s fellow Democrats boycotted Netanyahu’s March 3 speech in Congress, which had been arranged by Republicans. One senior French diplomat said that Netanyahu’s speech, in which he reiterated his demand for a total rollback of Iranian nuclear technologies, had diminished Israel’s clout. Paris is also unhappy with long-stalled IsraeliPalestinian peacemaking. “Israel has marginalized itself. In November 2013 we were working with them and they played the game. They didn’t take unrealistic positions,” the diplomat told Reuters on condition of anonymity. “But here they have gone too far. We told them to play their part so they could influence a final accord, but they have taken unrealistic positions.” U.S. officials have privately bristled at France’s outspoken criticism of the negotiating process and its demands for more stringent restrictions on Iran. Officials have expressed concerns that France might block a deal at the United Nations. France’s envoy to Washington, Gerard Araud, has been particularly vocal, tweeting that the setting of a March 31 deadline for a framework deal was “a bad tactic” and “counterproductive.” The target date for a full agreement is June 30 and European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini has played down the importance of the end-of-March deadline, saying that the priority is to seal a comprehensive deal by July. Fears growing in Yemen over Houthis' advance to Aden Al Mukalla, Yemen - As the conflict in Yemen between beleaguered President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and the Houthi rebel group escalates, there are growing speculations that the Houthis may try to take the southern city of Aden where Hadi is based. On Sunday, Houthis seized the airport in Taiz, Yemen's third largest city and a strategic entry point to Aden. Military sources in Yemen said troops loyal to Hadi and southern paramilitary forces had deployed in Lahj province, north of Aden, in anticipation of a possible advance by the Houthis. In his first speech since fleeing Sanaa for Aden in February, Hadi boasted that the Yemeni government's flag would eventually be hoisted in the Houthis' stronghold of Saada province. Houthi leaders responded by calling for a general mobilisation [with the aim of rallying forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh who did not take part in recent fighting] and called on Yemenis to fight against the "al-Qaedaallied" president, in reference to Hadi. "We are heading to a bloody confrontation," said Abdul Bari Taher, an independent political analyst. The Houthis stormed the capital Sanaa last September and now controls a sizable chunk of the country. RELATED: Yemen strife threatens neighbours too Although Saleh stepped down in 2012 following Arab Spring-inspired protests, he has been accused of fanning the flames of conflict by using his leverage over certain military units that helped extend Houthis' reach to many areas. "What is happening in Yemen is a big disaster created by some forces [Saleh] that want to rule the country again," Taher told Al Jazeera. What is happening in Yemen is a big disaster created by some forces [former President Saleh] that want to rule the country again. They are determined to destroy the country by using the extreme limits of terrorism and death to finish the remaining structure of the state Abdul-Bari Taher, independent analyst "They are determined to destroy the country by using the extreme limits of terrorism and death to finish the remaining structure of the state." Hadi, Saleh's deputy for 18 years, came to power in 2012 as part of an agreement on political transition put forward by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). But, despite international support, Hadi has been unable to restore security and stability to the country. In the wake of suicide attacks on Friday that killed more than 130 people in two mosques frequented by Houthis in Sanaa, Houthi leaders doubled down on their accusations that Hadi is turning a blind eye to al-Qaeda's activities in the country, vowing to attack the group's fighters in their strongholds in the south. Hadi deployed army troops and allied tribesmen in Aden and Lahj governorates to fight the Houthis. Meanwhile, the Houthis amassed their forces in Taiz province neighbouring Aden. "The militias are replacing the state in Yemen," explained Taher. According to military analysts, the mobilisation of forces in Taiz during the last three days is a clear indication of Houthis' plan to advance toward Aden. "The Houthis have massive military reinforcements in Taiz province and they have increased the dose of propaganda against Hadi," said Thabet Hussein, a retired army Brigadier. "They [Houthis] are seriously considering advancing to Aden, Hadi's power base," Hussein told Al Jazeera. When the Yemeni president arrived in Aden, Hussein said, Houthis thought that [Saleh] would be able to overthrow him through Abdulhafiz al-Saqqaf, the chief security of Aden's Special Security Forces, one of the army's elite forces, who rejected Hadi's orders to step down "As they [Houthis and Saleh] are assembling forces in Taiz, there is evidence that they are thinking of pushing into the south and they are gauging the cost," said the retired army officer. Nearly a day after Hadi's forces defeated [al-Saqqaf] defected security unit in Aden on March 19, al-Qaeda fighters briefly captured the city of Huta in Lahj province. After executing more than 25 Yemeni government soldiers, the fighters left. In 2011, al-Qaeda capitalised on the Yemeni government's struggle with its opponents during the nation-wide protests and controlled many cities in the southern provinces of Abyan and Shabwa. "What happened to Lahj is reminiscent of the Abyan scenario in 2011, when the local authorities and army troops handed over cities to al-Qaeda," said one military analyst. UN envoy: Yemen on brink of civil war To avoid the Abyan scenario, pro-Hadi army officials, including Minister of Defense Mahmoud Al Subihi, quickly sent troops to Lahj. "Some army units and popular committees moved quickly to foil that plot that intended to create rationales for invading the south," Hussein said. For the third consecutive day, the rebels have encircled Taiz airport with armed vehicles to protect hundreds of airborne soldiers and military equipment. (AL JAZEERA) 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Germany gears up to open first Islamic bank Turkish lender Kuveyt Turk said it would launch Germany’s first fullfledged Islamic bank in July, a first step intended at offering shariacompliant retail banking services across the continent. The whollyowned subsidiary will be called KT Bank AG and use Frankfurt as its base, aiming to tap Europe's second-largest Muslim community, many of whose members are of Turkish descent. The subsidiary would seek to serve Germany’s roughly 4 million Muslims but also target a wider client base, expanding its branch network across the country and later into the rest of Europe, the statement said. Kuveyt Turk, the largest Islamic bank in Turkey and 62 percent owned by Kuwait Finance House, set up a financial services branch in Mannheim in 2010 and applied for a full banking license in 2012. At the time, the lender said it would invest initial capital of 45 million euros ($48.7 million) in the planned German unit. Islamic finance has been slow to gain a foothold in Europe due to a fragmented market and lack of industry-specific regulations. Britain remains Europe's main Islamic finance hub, with five full-fledged Islamic banks, with a Luxembourg venture also planning to launch an Islamic lender of its own. In 2004, the German state of Saxony-Anhalt raised 100 million euros via Islamic bonds, with Munich-based FWU Group tapping the market in 2012 and 2013. LONDON: Oil prices edged up on Monday, holding above $55 a barrel as a weakening dollar offset losses after Saudi Arabia indicated it was now pumping near a record high of 10 million barrels per day. Saudi Arabia has stood firm on output, saying it would only consider cutting it if other producers outside OPEC also joined. Brent crude oil futures were trading up 8 cents at $55.40 a barrel at 0933 GMT, after hitting a low of $54.12. U.S. WTI crude was down 40 cents at $46.17. Saudi oil minister Ali al Naimi also said the kingdom was now pumping around 10 million barrels per day (bpd), which could indicate an increase of 350,000 bpd over its February production. Analysts at Barclays forecast on Monday that if OPEC production held near current levels of near 30 million bpd, the market surplus would expand from 900,000 bpd to 1.3 million bpd. Oil prices have see-sawed, weighed down by concerns of oversupply but boosted by swings in the strength of U.S. dollar ahead of the expected end of years of zero interest rate policy in the United States later this year. On Monday, oil prices pared losses after the dollar renewed its slide. "In the past 15 years, the global economy was defined by rising commodity prices, zero interest rate policy, and a weak USD. This cycle has now gone into reverse with a decelerating industrial economy in China and the rise of U.S. shale," Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a report. "A combination of a strong dollar, higher interest rates and subdued growth may keep commodity prices in check in 2015," it added. China's February crude oil imports from Iran fell 3.7 percent from a year ago to 2.04 million tonnes. China boosted overall imports late last year, taking advantage of cheap oil to build its reserves, but storage tanks could be reaching their limits, forcing a slowdown in orders. US faces meager options for further Russia energy sanctions WASHINGTON: The United States will struggle to follow through on threats to impose deeper sanctions on the Russian energy sector, as European fears over collateral economic damage leave President Barack Obama's administration with diminished options. Energy is the economic lifeblood of Russia, which vies with the United States and Saudi Arabia to be the world's top oil producer, and the sector is the main target of Western sanctions over Moscow's role in the conflict in Ukraine. But current sanctions have already hit the easiest targets in Russia's high-tech exploration projects in the Arctic, Siberian shale, and deep-sea. That leaves the United States with less palatable options, such as trying to target the country's oil exports, as it has done with Iran. Even though global oil prices have dropped by roughly half since last year, the United States' European allies remain skittish over any damaging repercussions on energy supplies. Russia could respond by squeezing the gas exports on which Europe relies heavily. "If you start playing around with oil prices, Russia is going to play around with gas, and there's no way Europe is going to go along with it," said Carlos Pascual, who until last August was the top energy diplomat at the U.S. State Department. The current top U.S. diplomat on energy issues, Amos Hochstein, says Washington has not exhausted its sanctions toolkit should Russian President Vladimir Putin expand the war in Ukraine. And Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said last week that the administration is ready to "increase the costs" on Russia if it breaks the terms of a ceasefire. Hochstein, the State Department's special envoy and coordinator for international affairs, told Reuters it was unlikely Washington would put sanctions on Russia's current oil production, though he stopped short of ruling it out. "We'd want to look at what affects Russia, the assessment today versus a year ago is different, because the oil markets today are different than they were then," Hochstein said. "Russia can and should be a market participant, but it has to play by the rules of the game." Cracks are showing in European support for more sanctions. Going alone on sanctions is not a realistic option for Washington since it would block U.S. energy companies from collaborating with Russia and let European ones in. Western sanctions imposed late last year forced U.S. oil company Exxon Mobil out of Russia's Arctic and ended its collaboration with Russian state oil company Rosneft, with which it signed a $3.2 billion deal in 2011 to develop the region. European Council President Donald Tusk said on Friday it was increasingly hard to maintain a united position on sanctions in the 28-country bloc. EU officials speaking on condition of anonymity said that half or more of the bloc's countries would like to see easing of the measures. So far, Western sanctions have blocked investments and technology transfers in the frontier oil drilling projects, targeted capital flows into Russia and slapped Putin's inner circle with asset freezes and travel bans. Combined with the drop in oil prices, the sanctions have hammered the Russian economy, with the rouble down 40 percent against the dollar since mid2014, driving it toward recession. But none of this has loosened Putin's grip on Crimea since Russia annexed it a year ago, even though Russia agreed last month in Minsk to a cease-fire with Ukraine. Putin's domestic popularity has risen since the imposition of sanctions. The West could take further steps to halt investment in Russian shale oil drilling, which Moscow is counting on to offset eventual declines in output from traditional oil fields. But more sanctions on shale drilling would be slow to do further damage to the Russian economy because that resource is three to 10 years from significant production. That underlines how the West lacks obvious options to hit Russia's energy business in the short-term and influence its Ukraine strategy, experts said. "These tools may hurt and bite over time, but the inherent fragility of the Ukraine is so high it is working against the ability of the West to achieve its goals," said Andrew Weiss, a Russia expert in two previous administrations. The bluntest sanctions tool available would be to block Russia access to the SWIFT global electronic banking system, as the West did with Iran. Russian bankers and officials have described this as a nuclear option that would lead to full economic warfare. And beyond energy technology, the United States and Europe simply do not have much that Russia needs, experts say. "Apart from capital, technology, and certain market access, some of which has been targeted by previous sanctions, there are not that many things Russia wants from the West," said Marik String, a sanctions lawyer at WilmerHale and former counsel on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Dubai’s Arabtec plans to sell four of its five Saudi Arabian units, the builder's annual results show despite also stating that one of its main aims this year is to expand its activities in the kingdom. The board of Arabtec, which is 36 percent owned by Abu Dhabi state fund Aabar Investments and reported a surprise fourth-quarter loss on Sunday, has approved disposing of Arabtec Saudi Arabia, Arabtec Construction Machinery, Saudi Austrian Arabian Ready Mix Co and EFECO Saudi. Arabtec owns stakes of between 45 and 62 percent of these firms and has control over all of them. Selling the quartet would leave the builder with a solitary Saudi subsidiary - Saudi Target Engineering Construction Co, although it also owns 24 percent of a Riyadh residential project. The proposed sale comes despite a company press release accompanying its results stating: "The company's plan (is) to continue expansion in attractive markets, mainly the Gulf region; in particular the US refiners turn to tanker trucks to avoid ‘dumbbell’ crudes HOUSTON : In a pressing quest to secure the best possible crude, U.S. refiners are increasingly going straight to the source. Firms such as Marathon Petroleum Corp and Delek U.S. Holdings are buying up tanker trucks and extending local pipeline networks in order to get more oil directly from the wellhead, seeking to cut back on blended crude cocktails they say can leave a foul aftertaste. While the business of hauling crude from individual oil wells to bulk storage depots or pipeline hubs has become a lucrative niche in recent years thanks to the shale oil revolution, refiners are getting into the "first mile" game for a different reason: taking control of their supply chains to secure a more predictable, consistent stream of crude. Phillips 66, the nation's fourth-largest refiner, has added trucks and offloading equipment at several of its refineries to help reduce its reliance on oil coming from Cushing, Oklahoma, the nation's biggest crude oil crossroads and storage hub. Here, a growing volume of Canadian oil sands is often mixed with lighter domestic shale crude, resulting in blends that can be less profitable than similar oil fresh from the field. Phillips 66 executives say operations at its 200,000-barrel-per-day refinery in Ponca City, Oklahoma, only 62 miles (100 km) from Cushing, have improved since it began getting more of its crude directly from wells in the Mississippian Lime shale patch nearby. "That's really the key," Phillips 66 President Tim Taylor told Reuters. "With Cushing, you can get a blended barrel that hits the spec, but it's not as consistent as you'd like." Others are also seeking to cut out the middleman where possible, delving into an industry once dominated by independent local players and stepping up pressure on bigger midstream transport and logistics firms to meet their needs. In December, Delek Logistics Partners LP paid $11.5 million to buy 120 trucks and 200 trailers used to haul crude and asphalt, mostly for its parent firm's East Texas and Arkansas refineries. CVR Refining LP, with two refineries within 120 miles (190 km) of Cushing, in Oklahoma and Kansas, has increased the amount of crude it gathers directly, by pipeline or truck, by more than a fifth in the past two years. In January it gathered 63,500 bpd, or more than a third of its total crude slate. Shipping crude by truck, though costly, has become a fast-growing necessity in places like the Eagle Ford in Texas and Permian Basin, newly productive shale oil patches illserved by small local pipeline networks known as gathering systems. As a result, truck deliveries direct to U.S refiners have surged to nearly 400,000 bpd nationwide in 2013, doubling since 2010, government data show. Midstream companies including Blueknight Energy Partners and some private equity firms, including Riverstone Holdings, have also invested. For refiners, the investment is less about profitable logistics than quality control. Many executives say that the crude oil blends being created in Cushing are often substandard approxima- tions of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the longstanding U.S. benchmark familiar to, and favored by, many refiners in the region. Typical light-sweet WTI crude has an API gravity of about 38 to 40. Condensate, or super-light crude that is abundant in most U.S. shale patches, ranges from 45 to 60 or higher. Western Canadian Select, itself a blend, is about 20. While the blends of these crudes may technically meet the API gravity ceiling of 42 at Cushing, industry players say the mixes can be inconsistent in makeup and generate less income because the most desirable stuff is often missing. The blends tend to produce a higher proportion of fuel at two ends of the spectrum: light ends like gasoline, demand for which has dimmed in recent years, and lower-value heavy products like fuel oil and asphalt. What's missing are middle distillates like diesel, where growing demand and profitability lies. "You end up with a dumbbelllike material rich in front and back ends, neither of which refineries find most profitable," said Dennis Sutton, a former chemist and retired crude quality expert with Marathon Petroleum Corp who now heads the Crude Oil Quality Association. The trend extends beyond Cushing. With three refineries relatively close to the Utica shale in Ohio, Marathon Petroleum has added truck and barge offloading to handle crude and super-light condensate as well as fuels, increasing its tanker truck fleet 16 percent from a year ago to 170, according to company presentations. The trucks can be used for crude or fuel. "Every place we can, we're procuring our own crude," Chief Executive Gary Heminger said in an interview. Western Refining Inc will use trucks run by its logistics unit to haul more than 50,000 bpd to its plants in New Mexico and West Texas this year, up 39 percent from 2014, according to its annual regulatory filing. Oil pipeline operators, who risk losing customers as more refiners source their own supply, are also responding. At least five new pipelines - including Tallgrass Energy Partners' Colorado-to-Cushing Pony Express line, which started up in November - will ship crudes in separate batches, rather than throwing them together in a single stream, as has been common for major crude pipelines to Cushing or Houston. Traditional "common stream" lines, where super-light crudes mingle with WTI-like oil, also are adapting. Magellan Midstream Partners' Longhorn pipeline, which moves West Texas Permian Basin crude to Houston, raised its gravity cap last year to 44 from 42. And it recently started up its joint-venture BridgeTex pipeline with a cap of 44. Common-stream lines could theoretically keep raising those caps as more lights enter the flow, but refiners would demand price breaks, said Brian Melton of Blueknight, which is part-owned by global oil trading group Vitol. "If I can run a 44-45 grade and source it at enough of a discount that it makes sense to run it versus a 41 or 42 even if I give up yields, that's the tradeoff," he said. Saudi market, and to study the expansion opportunities in other markets, taking into account the importance of the Egyptian market." Streamlining Arabtec's Saudi operations into a single business may make sense, especially after its board "expressed dissatisfaction" with surging general and administration expenses, which jumped 75 percent in 2014 to 749.9 million dirhams ($204.2 million). The four Arabtec units' gross profit margin was 11.7 percent, higher than Arabtec's other operations, Naeem Brokerage wrote in a note. "We are yet to hear from management on the reasoning behind the (proposed sale) and whether this would imply an anticipated spin-off situation," Naeem added. The four units' combined profits fell by more than half last year to 120.3 million dirhams. Arabtec, which was not immediately available for comment, values their net assets after liabilities at 860.5 million dirhams, according to its financial statements. “Despite duty and taxes, used cars keep arriving in Pak” KARACHI: The used-car import industry has been through a roller coaster ride in the last few years but has not completely collapsed. There are several reasons for it not buckling under market pressures, one of them being its appeal among customers, which has strengthened over the years. Local car assemblers are right when they point out that import of used cars have dented their sales figures but, it is a bitter pill to swallow as the local industry has failed miserably in meeting customer demand. The situation is not so bleak for the assemblers though, as they have competed valiantly with imported vehicles in the 1,300 cubic centimetres (cc) or above engine category with Toyota Corolla, Honda Civic and Honda City. However, the bigger issue plaguing assemblers is the smaller engine vehicles – 1,000cc or below Currently, only Pak Suzuki is producing two 1,000cc models while Indus Motor – the makers of the Toyota Corolla – and Atlas Honda Cars do not have a single model in this engine category. Indus Motor had earlier discontinued its only variant in the segment, the Daihatsu Cuore, and says that “the model had outlived its life cycle” Meanwhile, Pakistan has imported 11,881 used cars during the first six months (Jul-Dec) of fiscal year 2014-15, out of which 76% of the cars fall under the 1,000cc or below category. The trend to favour small cars is neither new nor unusual. Apart from design, customers have grown increasingly conscious over fuel efficiency – one of the main reasons for their popularity. The share of smaller cars in the imported used cars category has been continuously increasing over the last few years, but local carmakers have continued to ignore this trend. Out of the five engine categories, the share of small cars (1,000cc or below) in used car imports was 45% in fiscal year 2012 (FY12). It jumped to 59% in FY13, 72% in FY14 and it now hovers around a massive 76% in the first six months (July-Dec) of FY15. This crisis could have been averted had local car makers done their homework and introduced new models of small cars. Instead of introducing new models, Suzuki Alto and Cuore (both 1,000cc or below category cars) were discontinued from June 30, 2012 as these companies were not able to introduce the Euro II engines in these cars to meet the emission requirements of the government. The local industry understands that it is losing out on a big market by not introducing small cars. 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24 , 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Fashion Pakistan Week: What we are and aren’t looking forward to It’s Fashion Week time! The Fashion Pakistan Council has just announced the lineup for Telenor Fashion Pakistan Week Spring Summer 2015. The four-day event features some of Pakistan’s top designers but there is also a significant high street presence at the event. While the credentials of the likes of Sania Maskatiya, Shamaael Ansari and HSY are unquestionable, brands like Levis have flopped badly on the ramp before and their place at Telenor Fashion Pakistan Week (TFPW) is questionable, this time I hope they hire a stylist who understands how to put together a runway show. Caanchi & Lugari, Lala Textiles, Gul Ahmed and Daaman will have to up their game and think out of the box if they want to make an impact on the ramp. Unless they do, Fashion Pakistan Council needs to rethink whether high street deserves a spot at what is one of Pakistan’s top fashion weeks. Fifth Element has teamed up with Rizwanullah for their Swarovski segment and these sort of designer collaborations are what high street brands should be looking at if they are serious about having a presence on the fashion scene. Al Karam for example have chosen to launch their Sania Maskatiya lawn at fashion week, which is smart as Sania has grown to appreciate what works on the runway. Jafferjees meanwhile is a label that needs a makeover. Their quality is simply phenomenal and yet they have a dowdy image. They don’t keep up to date with international trends at all. I’m not suggesting that they make designer knock-offs but they do need to pay attention to the iconic bags of our time. Everyone from Ferragamo to Forever 21 has done a version of the bucket bag made popular by Mansur Gavriel. Why haven’t they done a play on Celine’s luggage tote like Michael Kors and Kate Spade have done? You’ll find both bags at Pedro. The brand is a Pakistani icon and needs a major fashion turnaround – similar to the one at Burberry where JLo makes Rihanna feel ‘safe’ Singer Rihanna finds a unique warmth and "safeness" in Jennifer Lopez's voice -- the kind her mother has. The two singers have voiced the mother and daughter Lucy and Tip in animated movie "Home", which follows the 12-year-old's search for her parent after they are separated following an alien invasion. Rihanna says Lopez shares a lot of characteristics with her own mother. "I love her. She is great. Doesn't everybody want JLo to be their mum? When you hear Jennifer, her voice has that warmth and safeness that my mother's has. It has that tone. It's almost like it can hug you," Rihanna said. "My own mother is so loving and caring. She just makes you feel safe," she added. Rihanna, 27, relates a lot to her young character in the movie because she is both shy and sensitive. "Tip is vibrant, she's very strong, very independent and very sassy, but she's also very sensitive and those are all things I identify with - characteristics that drew her to me. I was always sassy, I was like that at six years old, four years old. "But I was also shy. It's strange. I'm a very shy person, even to this day," she told Grazia magazine. they went from staid old British stalwart to one of the coolest labels. Here’s hoping Jafferjees TFPW collection is a step in that direction. TFPW’s lineup includes a handful of newer designers. Madiha Raza won her place after wowing the audience at FPC’s emerging talent showcase, Maybelline Millenial Fashion, last year. It will be interesting to see if she can live up to that phenomenal debut. Inaaya is another of last year’s discoveries that needs to build on an impressive beginning. Other relative newcomers like Abdul Samad and Somal Halepoto will have to justify being given the chance to showcase It will also be interesting to see Body Focus Museum and YBQ back on the ramp – both are excellent brands we don’t see enough of. It’s great to see Lahore designers like Fahad Hussayn and HSY showing in Karachi again, particularly as Karachi designers show regularly in Lahore. I do wish they would make their designs more readily available in Karachi like Zara Shahjahan, who opened a store here recently and is showing in Karachi for the first time. It would be great if top Lahore labels like Elan, Muse and Sublime would also come to Kara- chi – both to show and with a retail presence. Some Karachi stalwarts are conspicuous by their absence. FPW will miss the likes Maheen Karim, Sana Safinaz, Shehla Chatoor, Ayesha Farook Hashwani and Adnan Pardesy - all of whom made the winter edition of FPW particularly memorable. On paper this is not one of the strongest editions of Fashion Pakistan Week – despite being a marathon 4-day affair. Despite strong names like Deepak Perwani and Nida Azwer, the lineup lacks depth. Let’s hope that the participating designers make TFPW better than it looks on paper. Revealed: Shahid’s ladylove, Mira Rajput! LAHORE: The city’s newest designer on the block, Maheen Ghani Taseer, always had a penchant for designing but it was only recently that she decided to bring it to fruition with the launch of her label MGT. For Maheen, her passion for fashion and styling go back to when she was just a child. The Express Tribune talks to the industry novice to explore her styling mantra and sartorial vision. “Fashion is like art and it’s not just designing that I enjoy. I consider an outfit to be a statement, so I’m a stylist as well. I think the two go hand in hand,” says Maheen. As a relatively new designer, she is still exploring different styles. “Fashion, for me, is ever-changing and keeps evolving. Inspiration comes to you organically, if design is your true love, you will have to take reference from everything you see around you,” she adds. Model wearing a Maheen Taseer’s design She draws inspiration from Sabyasachi Mukherjee, which is evident in her work. When it comes to western-wear, Maheen looks up to Jenny Peckham and Elie Saab. This winter, Maheen tried her hand at velvet and embellishments, which gave her clothes a grand, regal and ethnic look. When asked about her signature style, she says she is still experimenting and working with different materials, such as lace and silk, juxtaposing modern and traditional looks. Hollyw ood Box Office:‘Insurgent’ tops w ith $54 million, Gunman’ flops L OS ANGELES: Insurgent topped the weekend box of fice with $54 million, but its opening will likely fall just short of the numbers put up a year ago by the first film in the Divergent series. That’s a disappointment for Lionsgate, the studio behind the adaptations of Veronica Roth’s bestselling books about a dystopian future. It hoped that the franchise would be able to build on its initial start, aided by star Shailene Woodley’s higher profile following the success of The Fault in Our Stars. Going into the weekend, Lionsgate had been projecting an opening of between $57 million to $60 million. Insurgent’s audience was 60 percent female and 55 percent under 25. Hispanics made up 17 percent of the opening weekend crowd and African-Americans comprised 11 percent of ticket buyers. The studio says it's happy with the results, noting that with an A-minus CinemaScore and a lack of upcoming film releases pegged at teenage girls, Insurgent has a clear runway. “Our playability is incredibly strong,” said Richie Fay, Lionsgate’s distribution chief. “We’re seeing a few more males than we did on the first one and we’re seeing an overall broadening of the audience.” Insurgent cost $110 million to produce, roughly $25 million more than Divergent racked up in production fees. Divergent opened to $54.6 million before going on to make $288.7 million globally. Internationally, Insurgent grossed an estimated $47 million in 76 markets. Even if the film’s domestic results are weaker than Lionsgate might have hoped, foreign markets where Roth’s books have grown more popular over the last year could make up the difference, leading to a greater worldwide bounty. The weekend’s other major wide release, The Gunman, fired blanks, picking up a meager $5 million and seemingly deep-sixing Sean Penn’s plans to be an aging action star. Open Road distributed the film in 2,816 theaters and had expected a debut in the $8 million range. The Gunman’s modest results were good enough for a fourth place finish in an otherwise slow weekend. “Obviously we had hoped for a little bit more,” said Jason Cassidy, chief marketing officer at Open Road Films. Well, Well, Well, what an amazing way to start your week with a good news! Haider actor has broken millions of hearts, as he finally plan to settle down with his Delhi girlfriend! There had been a grapevine earlier this year, that Shahid has finally found the love of his life and would soon be tying the nuptial knot. Apparently, the couple got engaged on 14th January this year. Now you all must be wondering who is the lucky girl. Mira Rajput, the bride-to-be basically has no Bollywood connection, she is presently pursuing her 3rd year in English (Hons.) from LSR. Ostensibly, the couple met at a religious gathering of Radha Soami Satsang Beas. Pankaj Kapur and Shahid are a very strong believer of the religious group and so is the bride-to-be. Both the families have been trying to keep a very low profile as to avoid any media attention. But according to the latest update by our Kabroo, Pankaj Kapur has recently visited Mira's house Well we are guessing the wedding arrangements are in a swing... And we hope to hear the good news very soon. We wish the couple all the very best! Stay tuned to know the latest updates! When Yami got a pleasant surprise Yami Gautam who is currently shooting in Patiala opposite Pulkit Samrat was missing home as the actress comes from Chandigarh and home was merely two hours away from the sets. Yami was missing family and the delicious home cooked Punjabi food. Coincidentally, call it telepathy, the actress' wish was heard right away. Yami's mother surprised her by dropping on sets and also spent time with her. Not only this, she had also made some yummy Punjabi home cooked food which made Yami's day. This was completely unexpected and purely amazed Yami who also got a chance to spend some quality time with her mother. The two got to catch up on various things after pack up. Yami Gautam shares, "I had not met my family for some time. So, when I went to Patiala for my shoot schedule, my mom surprised me on sets with my favourite food which I miss so much living alone in Bombay." She further adds, "Having her around was the best feeling. We caught up on so many things after pack up." Yami has been juggling with her schedule with shooting for movies back to back. Her latest film Badlapur was loved by the audience and performed a brilliantly at Box office. The actress will soon be seen in T- series's Sanam Re which is set to release on 12th February 2016. Kim Kardashian no more a blonde? Deepika wells up during first TV interview about her battle with depression Reality TV star Kim Kardashian, who flaunted platinum blonde locks at the Paris Fashion Week earlier this month, may have gone back to a dark hair colour. The star shared an image on Twitter with photographer Ellen Von Unwerth, and it clearly shows Kim with her signature dark locks, reports mirror.co.uk The 34-year-old wrote: "On set a few days ago with the amazing @ellenvonunwerth. Can't wait for you to see the projects we've been working on!" However, considering the surprises that the reality TV star keeps throwing up, it could easily just be a wig for the shoot. But photographs showing her seated behind the wheel of her car on Friday indicated that the star's hair colour has changed -- she is seen checking her reflection on the rear view mirror. On March 17, Kim's makeup artist Mario Dedivanovic shared a picture of Kim on Instagram showing the curvaceous backside of the star with the caption, `Brunette vibes on set. Guess who?` The beautiful Deepika Padukone opened up about her battle with depression in an exclusive interview with Burkha Dutt on Saturday, during which the Bollywood actress fearlessly described breaking down ‘at the drop of a hat’ and the importance of having a strong support system. While speaking about the early days of her ailment, the actress welled up as she described how despite winning awards and giving talks on her achievements, she would often lock herself up in a bathroom to cry and how hard it was just to get out of bed. “It’s scary, but I’m doing what I’m doing because it was so hard for me that I don’t want anyone else to go through it,” she said. Read: ’I broke down often’: Deepika talks about her depression The actress said that she felt the need to share her story if it meant saving even one person from taking their own life. “If I can impact one life in this entire process of speaking up and letting people know that it’s something I have been through and something that I could deal with because I had a fantastic support system,” said the actress who was accompanied by her mother Ujjala Padukone, and her doctors, Dr Shyam Bhatt and Dr Anna Chandy. Read: Deepika to set up mental health care foundation Deepika also called out media outlets that reported her depression in an insensitive and often incorrect manner, saying the actress was depressed “because her friend Ranvir was depressed.” Reports also suggested she was using her depression to promote a movie and make money. Deepika, however, dismissed them, saying, “I’ve been through hell and back. We are a nation with the most depressed people in the world. There is a larger issue at hand.” 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. . TUESDAY MARCH 24, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES NBA: Blake Griffin and Chris Paul play key roles as LA Clippers see off New Orleans Pelicans Barcelona beat Real Madrid 2-1 at the Nou Camp on Sunday night to move four points clear of their rivals at the top of La Liga. The Catalans took a 20th-minute lead thanks to Jeremy Mathieu’s header, only for Cristiano Ronaldo to equalise just past the half-hour mark with his 42nd goal of the season in all competitions. However, Luis Enrique’s side claimed what could turn out to be a vital victory thanks to Luis Suarez’s 57thminute strike, the Uruguayan’s first-ever El Clasico goal. Watch Luis Suarez's winner for Barcelona as they beat Real Mdrid 2-1 It was Barcelona, as befits the home side, who made the faster start as they went in search of the win that would give them clear daylight in the title race. However, despite bossing the early exchanges - as one would expect from a team with 17 victories to their name in the previous 18 matches since surprisingly losing at Real Sociedad back in January - it was Real who created the first real opening of the evening. And it came when Ronaldo escaped the attentions of the Barcelona defence at the back post after being picked out by a delicious ball from Karim Benzema, only for the Portuguese forward’s effort to beat Claudio Bravo, but not the crossbar. Barcelona then responded to that near miss by taking the lead, and through the most unlikely of scorers in the shape of centre-back Mathieu, who got the better of Sergio Ramos to power Lionel Messi’s inchperfect free kick from the left past Iker Casillas. Gael Clichy and Guillem Balague look back on the passage of playing leading to Real's equaliser But the visitors took just 11 minutes to draw level, although only after Barca forward Neymar had somehow missed an open goal from only six yards out, a glaring miss that was even more important when Madrid equalised seconds later. It was a beautifully worked goal too from Real involving Gareth Bale and Luka Modric, with the Croatian playing Karim Benzema through on goal, before his cute back-heel found Ronaldo, the Real back four, although the forward still had much work to do to bring the ball out of the sky, before coolly finishing low past Casillas for his 14th goal of the campaign. And thereafter it was all Barca as the Catalans missed a whole host of chances with Messi, twice, Neymar and Jordi Alba all wasting presentable openings to double their side’s advantage. But Barcelona were not made to pay for their profligacy in front of goal though, with the closest Madrid coming to grabbing an undeserved equaliser coming when Benzema’s deflected shot from the edge of the area forced Bravo into a smart reaction save 12 minutes from time. Novak Djokovic says he is at his prime after beating Roger Federer Sheffield Steelers win Elite League title after beating Cardiff Devils Novak Djokovic says he is at the prime of his career after successfully defending his Indian Wells crown against Roger Federer to claim his 50th career ATP title . The world No 1 is now tied with 17-time Grand Slam champion Federer for the most men's titles in the California desert with four wins following his 6-3 6-7 (5-7) 62 success on Sunday. It was another epic struggle in a long list of hardcourt battles between the two top players in the world, who have met 38 times with Swiss great Federer still holding a slight 20-18 edge. Djokovic defended his BNP Paribas Open title with a thrilling win against Federer Djokovic had lost his last two matches to Federer in straight sets after beating him in last year's Wimbledon final. The five-time Australian Open winner also needed three sets to beat Federer in the 2014 Indian Wells title match. But after the clash, the topseeded Serb felt that he fully deserved his win against one of the greatest of all-time on the big stage. "If you look at the big picture, I thought I deserved it in a way, because I really fought for it," said Djokovic. "I am at the prime of my career. I am going to use every part of this fact to stay where I am and to fight for as many major titles as possible. "I don't think these challenges that I go through and the pressure that I feel are harming me or that I find it difficult. It is a privilege because I earned it." I am at the prime of my career. I am Sheffield Steelers clinched their first Elite League title in four years after winning their titanic showdown with Cardiff Devils 2-1. Cardiff would have kept their own chances alive with a victory and were on course to do that after taking the lead through Carl Hudson. However, Robert Dowd drew Sheffield level in the second period before Jeff Legue slotted home the winner in the third period as Sheffield, in their final game of the season, sealed their first Elite League crown since 2011. Cardiff's loss allowed Braehead to move up to second place with their 9-4 mauling of Hull Stingrays. The Clan, for whom Stefan Meyer, Leigh Salters and Matt Keith all netted braces against Hull, now hold the advantage for the second Champions Hockey League place heading into the final day of the regular season on Sunday. Braehead finish off with a trip to Fife Flyers, who were beaten by last season's champions Belfast Giants on Saturday, while Cardiff host Nottingham Panthers. In Saturday's other match Edinburgh Capitals beat Dundee Stars 5-3. Sunday Braehead picked up the victory they needed against Fife Flyers to seal second spot in the Elite League and secure qualification for the Champions Hockey League on Sunday. The Clan's 3-2 victory, with Stefan Meyer hitting the decider, lead them to second place and a quarter-final meeting with Hull Stringrays in the play-offs. Floyd Mayweather ‘destroying’ sparring partners as he prepares for Manny Pacquiao Somerset have signed West Indies batsman Chris Gayle for a portion of the NatWest T20 Blast tournament. Gayle will move to Taunton as an overseas player on either May 22 or May 29, depending on how his franchise performs in the IPL, and will stay with the club until June 13, allowing him to play six T20 fixtures. He follows in the footsteps of West Indies greats Joel Garner and Viv Richards in signing for the county. Cricket Betting Bet £5 Get £20 Free Gayle, who nearly joined Somerset in 2012, has played in 45 T20 Internationals, scoring 1406 runs at 35.15 with a high score of 117. In 195 domestic T20 matches, he has amassed 6975 runs at 42.01 with a top score of 175no, hitting 13 centuries and 45 half-centuries. Somerset Director of Cricket Matt Maynard said: "Signing a world class player of the quality of Chris Gayle is tremendously exciting for the club. He will be a tremendous addition to our already extremely strong squad. "He is an inspira- with the World Player of the Year making no mistake with his ninth goal in only 11 matches at the Nou Camp. And Madrid would have gone in at the break 2-1 ahead had Bale not been flagged offside after putting the ball in the net after a Ronaldo flick on. There was some confusion around who the linesman deemed to be ahead of play as Bale was clearly two yards onside while Ronaldo was borderline level with the defender when he knocked the ball on. Minutes later Bale somehow missed from close range before Claudio Bravo reacted smartly to tip over a rasping drive from Ronaldo. After the interval it was Barcelona who moved up a gear, although not be- fore Bravo was first called upon to keep out Benzema’s close-range effort after a fantastic move between Ronaldo and Modric four minutes into the second period. Javier Mascherano gets booked while Sergio Ramos takes a tumble Then came the decisive moment of the match as Dani Alves found Suarez with a high ball over Blake Griffin and Chris Paul were the star performers as the LA Clippers damaged the play-off ambitions of the New Orleans Pelicans who were beaten 107-100 on Sunday. Both Griffin and Paul scored 23 points with the latter adding 11 assists, while Anthony Davis led New Orleans with 26 points and 12 rebounds. Betting Bet £5 Get £20 Free Davis played 39 minutes after missing two games with a sprained left ankle, which was the same injury that prevented teammate Tyreke Evans from taking to the court. Evans' replacement Norris Cole collected 12 points before fouling out in the final minutes. The Clippers were trailing by three points at the half-way stage before taking the third quarter 3124. Meanwhile, in Oklahoma, Russell Westbrook registered 12 points, 10 rebounds and 17 assists for his 10th triple-double of the season as the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Miami Heat 9375. Enes Kanter notched up 27 points and 12 rebounds for Thunder who have now won three in a row. Kanter had been expected to miss his second straight game with an ankle injury but was cleared to play on the morning of the match and then got off to a fast start with 15 points during the first quarter. The Heat had five players in double figures, led by Hassan Whiteside with 13 – all in the first half. Elsewhere, in Milwaukee, LeBron James scored 28 points and sparked a key second-half run with an emphatic dunk to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 108-90 triumph over the Bucks. JR Smith added 23 points for Cleveland who sealed a third straight win, while Milwaukee have now lost six in a row. The Cavaliers were thankful that Smith made three straight 3s to close out a run that turned a sixpoint deficit into a 93-78 lead with 6:19 left in the game. And Archie Goodwin sank a three-pointer during the final 30 seconds to seal a 98-82 victory for the Phoenix Suns over the Dallas Mavericks. going to use every part of this fact to stay where I am and to fight for as many major titles as possible. Novak Djokovic Djokovic, who blasted eight aces, 26 winners and broke Federer five times in front of a crowd of about 15,000 inside the Tennis Garden stadium and surpassed his coach Boris Becker (49) to become the 12th player in Open Era history with 50 ATP Tour titles. Floyd Mayweather is “destroying” sparring partners in training ahead of his pound-for-pound showdown with Manny Pacquiao. Boxing Betting Bet £5 Get £20 Free Mayweather will put his unblemished 470 record on the line against his long-time welterweight rival in Las Vegas on May 2. The American is reportedly beating up anyone foolish enough to try and take him during the sparring sessions, claims his uncle Jeff Mayweather. "The kids, early in camp, they don't care that he's Floyd Mayweather. They want to prove something. They've proved something, all right. They're getting destroyed," Jeff Mayweather told MLive. "He's annihilating everybody. He's a beast. This isn't the same old Floyd. Former undisputed welterweight champion Zab Judah was enlisted to help prepare Mayweather for facing left-handers. However, the experienced southpaw, who gave Mayweather a scare before losing on points in their 2006 clash, suffered a similar fate to the younger fighters. "Everybody was just hyped because they thought Judah was going to be something different, but Judah was worse than the other guys," he added. "It seemed like Floyd had something personal against him. He beat the **** out of him. So then he quit, he let Judah off the hook, because Judah's got a fight coming up and he messed his eye up.” “It may just be his mind, and all the **** he's been dealing with Manny over the years. Obviously, he's taken that in some kind of way. I mean, he's punishing these guys." Anna Fenninger defends her overall World Cup title in Meribel tional character and we are delighted to be bringing him to Somerset. We have a number of overseas players on the roster for the 2015 campaign and Chris’ arrival and registration will give us a number of options which we will look at as we approach each competition." Gayle added: "I’m excited about joining Somerset for the NatWest T20 Blast this year. "Many of the club’s members and supporters will know that I came close to playing for the county in 2012 and I have always felt that, if I was able to, I wanted to honour that commitment to Somerset. "I’m looking forward to coming to Taunton and scoring some runs." Anna Fenninger ensured double Austrian joy after pipping Tina Maze to defend her overall World Cup title to mirror team-mate Marcel Hirscher's feat for the men's crystal globe. orld giant slalom champion Fenninger finished 22 points ahead of Olympic champion Maze of Slovenia in the overall standings and sealed the trophy in style with a commanding performance on the Roc de Fer course. Maze had gone into the last event of the World Cup finals with a narrow 18-point lead over Fenninger. But the Austrian pulled out all the stops in bad visibility down the piste to win the giant slalom in an aggregate time of 2min 26.91sec, 0.38sec ahead of teammate EvaMaria Brem, with Maze in third at 0.46sec. The result saw Fenninger not only leapfrog Maze to the top of the overall standings, but also claim the smaller globe for the discipline's best performer over a thrilling season. "It's fantastic!" beamed the 25-year-old Fenninger. "The battle is until the end, the last race. "It was hard to stay focused on the skiing because there was so much pressure. I'm happy to stand here as winner. It was a good season and I'm happy about all my races." Fenninger added of Maze: "She was great. She was fighting so hard and I've never had such a big fight with any athlete. "In the end she lost the overall by such a small margin. I have to congratulate her, it was a great season and she had a lot of pressure too." It was hard to stay focused on the skiing because there was so much pressure. I'm happy to stand here as winner. It was a good season and I'm happy about all my races. Anna Fenninger Nearfaultless Fenninger's success came hot on the heels of Hirscher, who had gone into the men's slalom 55 points adrift of Germany's Felix Neureuther. After finishing third in the first leg, Hirscher produced a near-faultless second run to power to victory in a combined time of 1min 33.53sec to finish atop the slalom standings on 614 points, Neureuther netting only 22pts for his 12th-placed finish to stand second, 23pts adrift. "It was definitely a tough situation, I am really sorry for Felix as he was so close to his first globe. But you know, it's part of our sport," Hirscher said. "I am super happy, because before the race I was in a very unusual position, normally I didn't stand a chance but the victory made it possible and I'm thrilled. 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. TUESDAY . MARCH 24 . 2015 -Hamal 04, 1394 H.S Vol:IX Issue No:228 Price: Afs.15 Protestors seek justice for Farkhunda, chide police for failure 55,000 Afghan refugees have returned home since beginning of 2015 Govt should form a commission (anti-terror court) affiliated to the Supreme Court that should only deal with terror cases including courts of the militants where award punishments and also lynching. The govt should allow space to civilians to become legislature, judiciary and executive. Lynching needs to be included in definition of terrorism ORKHAM: Since the begin ning of the year, over 55,000 Afghan refugees have returned to Afghanistan, more than twice as much as in the whole of 2014, The Telegraph reported. The rate of spontaneous returns of undocumented Afghans has increased from an average of 59 a day in 2014 to 651 in 2015. Afghans won t be forced out, says Khattak The Pakistani police came to our house and told us to leave, Hoji Karim, an Afghan refugee tells of his ordeal. They threw all our things onto the street. Karim and his family abandoned their home in Azad Kashmir and went to Afghanistan where they live in tents with 15 other families a makeshift settlement by the road that runs from Torkham to Jalalabad. The family s home province of Patkia is too dangerous for them to return. Back home Only about 4,000 of those are from among the 1.6 million documented Afghan refugees in Pakistan. These lucky few are redirected to the UNHCR centre near Jala- AT News Report KABUL: Hundreds of protestors took to streets on Monday to seek justice for Farkhunda, a 27-year old woman who was lynched by an angry mob in Kabul last week for what is believed to be a concocted story of burning a copy of the holy Qura an. After accusing Farkhunda of burning a copy of Holy Qura an, the angry mob beat her to death, run a car over her, then set her dead body on fire, and thrown her corpse into the Kabul River by Shah-e-Doshamshera Mosque in Kabul on Thursday. However, later, Farkhunda was found innocent. Hundreds of protestors, mostly women, gathered in the locale where Farkhunda was lynched, where they demanded of the government to arrest those responsible for her brutal killing. To give vent to their anger, the protestors marched till Pul-e-Bagh Omumi carrying banners reading Farkhunda was burned in the fire of ignorance and we condemn killing of Farkhunda . The protestors were chanting the slogans against those involved in killing of 27-year old Farkhunda and said that the government should bring perpetrators of the heinous act to justice. Many of the protestors had covered their faces with mask of Farkhunda.Belqis Roshan, a female senator who has also attended the protest, said that the government should exert its utmost efforts to arrest and punish those involved in the brutal act. She called on people to seek justice for Farkhonda. She urged the government to prevent from repetition of such incidents in the future.Roya, another protestor, slammed police on negligence in action to rescue the innocent girl. She urged president to listen to protestors voice and punish murders of Farkhunda. In the meantime, the Wolesi Jirga strongly condemned the brutal action and asked the concerned organs to prosecute those involved in the brutal killing of Farkhunda.The Minister of Interior, Nur-ul-Haq Ulumi, admitted police s failure to rescue Farkhunda, but assured that they will spare no efforts to prevent from repetition of such incidents in the future. We failed to rescue Farkhunda. She was really innocent. She hasn t burned any copy of Holly Qura an, he said. Ulumi added that they have arrested 13 people in connection with lynching of Farkhunda. Javed Barakzai, a protestor, who looked to be at 40s, told Afghanistan Times that lynching should be termed an act of terrorism. Recently I returned from UK with a hope that situation will have improved much at home country but I was shocked and couldn t sleep normally when I watched the terrific news of Farkhunda, he said. Barakzai added the government should form a commission or anti-terrorism court inside the Supreme Court that is meant to deal only with terror charges and lynching incidents. The government shouldn t provide space to people (civilians) to become judiciary, legislature, and executive because it is the job of the government and not civilians to award punishments to people, he suggested. If lynching becomes a common practice, security situation will worsen and more precious lives will be taken away by mobs, he said. T 13 militants killed in raids AT News Report KABUL: As many as 13 Taliban militants were killed in crackdowns carried out by security forces in different parts of the country. The Interior Ministry said in a press release on Monday that the Afghan National Police (ANP) in collaboration with the Afghan National Army (ANA) and the National Directorate of Security (NDS) operatives conducted joint military operations against Taliban militants in different parts of Nangarhar, Sar-i-Pul, Kandahar, Uruzgan, Logar, Ghazni, Paktia, Farah and Helmand provinces. At least 13 rebels were killed in the military operations, the source added. According to the Interior Ministry, four Taliban militants were arrested and handed over to judiciaries for further inquiries. A number of weapons and ammunition were recovered by the ANP cops during the crackdowns. The rate of spontaneous returns of undocumented Afghans has increased from an average of 59 a day in 2014 to 651 in 2015. PHOTO: AFP Haqani Network weapon depots seized The National Directorate of Security (NDS) Afghanistan s intelligence agency has seized two depots belonging to the terrorist Haqani Network. A statement issued by the NDS on Monday states that one depot was seized in Pakhtoon Abad area of the pro- vincial capital while the other one was seized in Chahardiwal area of Andar District. The statement adds that both depots belong to Mawlawee Ismail, a commander of Haqani terrorist network. The statement further adds that there were eight different types of heavy and light weapons, 13 anti-vehicle landmines, 75 kilograms of other explosive materials, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and wireless systems in the depots. According to the statement two binoculars were also recovered from the depots. NDS statements usually do not contain information about the exact date of the incidents but their statements come after recent achievements. Haqani terrorist network, which according to Afghan officials is based in Pakistan, is blamed for several deadly attacks in Afghanistan. (KP) labad, where they receive a repatriation grant of $200 each, mine awareness education, and medical attention. Those without documents are registered and referred to the transit centre of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) near the border when they enter Afghanistan. Due to limited resources, however, the IOM can only provide approximately 10% of the most vulnerable population with basic humanitarian assistance. Read: Afghan refugees return to malnourished country An IOM official said that many unregistered Afghan returnees reported that they had left Pakistan to escape harassment following the Peshawar attack. Every day, more than 30,000 people cross the Torkham border. Read: 2,000 unregistered Afghans deported since APS attack Pakistani officials should not be scapegoating Afghans because of the Taliban s atrocities in Peshawar, Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine says. It is inhumane, not to mention unlawful, to return Afghans to places they may face harm and not protect them from harassment and abuse. 3 Jawzjan police killed in predawn firefight with Taliban SHIBRGHAN: Three Afghan National Police (ANP) personnel and a militant were killed in a predawn a clash in the Aqcha district of northern Jawzjan province, an official said Monday. The firefight was triggered by a militant attack on a security post at midnight, provincial police chief Brig. Gen. Faqir Mohammad Jawzjani told Pajhwok Afghan News. He said three policemen and a rebel were killed during the clash. The attackers managed to flee after reinforcements arrived at the site. A resident of the area, Asadullah, said the fire exchange lasted until 4am. He added civilians had suffered no casualties in the incident. But Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed killing five policemen and seizing their weapons. (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.