People Eat Grass to Quench Hunger in Bamyan

Sunday 0 comments

TN
Almost sixty percent residents of Yaka-wolang district Bamyan province in Afghanistan are facing starvation with some families reportedly relying on consumption of fodder, officials said.

Muhammad Nasir Fayaz district chief of Yaka-wolang told media, agriculture crop were affected by different infections the very reason faced the locals to hunger and posed great threat to their lives.

Ten elders of distant areas of Yaka-wolang turned to him to complain the situation and said a dozen families were eating grass due to lack of foodstuff.

"Great number of people would die unless the government and international community heeded to address the issue," he warned.

List of the families that were badly affected by hunger were dispatched to Red Crescent department in this province to attract their attention for assistance, Fayyaz added.

Muhammad Sadiq Aliyar director of Red Crescent Department in Bamyan said: "We do not reject the situation and we have also received several applications for help from districts of the province," he added:" we survey the vulnerable areas and provide assistance after the survey."

They had insufficient foodstuff in hand and would request welfare NGOs for assistance before the winter closes in, he added.

Not only people in Bamyan but also great numbers of families in distant areas of Badakhshan, Samangan, Sar-e-pul, Ghor and Ghazni were consuming grass to quench their hunger
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Giant Buddha statue found in Afghanistan

Wednesday 0 comments

UPI
Archaeologists in Afghanistan said they discovered a giant Buddha statue near the ruins of the Bamiyan Buddhas, which were destroyed by the Taliban in 2001.

The archaeologists said the newly discovered statue measures 62 feet tall and features the Buddha in a sleeping position,

the BBC reported Monday. They said the statue dates back to the third century.

A local Bamiyan official said the statue has been badly damaged, but some of the features --including its neck and right hand -- are in good condition. He said officials are moving to protect the statue and it may go on public display by next year.
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Smuggling of Historical Monument Prevented in Afghanistan

TN
The chairman of the Historical Monuments Protection Department in Kandahar Region of Afghanistan, said that they prevented smuggling of Buddha monument with 2,000-year old history from the country. He said that the historical monument was withdrawn from smugglers in Sanzeri village of Kandahar Region.

Smugglers of antique monument were arrested when they tried to sell Buddha monument at $200,000, Trend News correspondent reported from Kabul.

Majority of historical work was taken out of the country and sold during five-year power of the Taliban rebels in Afghanistan.

Officials said great Buddha’s statue with the height of 19 meters, was discovered in Bamyam Region of Afghanistan.

According to Najib Ahraz, the chairman of the Historical Monuments Protection Department of Bamyam Region, the French and Afghani archeologists found Buddha’s monument during exploration work.

Ahraz said that the discovered Buddha’s monument belonged to the 3rd or 4th centuries. “Right hand and neck part of the monument did not suffer, whilst some parts of the statue were damaged,” Ahraz said. He added that the discovered rare monuments would be exhibited in 2009.

Bamyan city is one of historical cities of Afghanistan, located in the centre of the country. This city was a center of Buddhists in the first century.
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The world should not fail in Afghanistan

TDN
Though Afghanistan has come a long way from its terrible past, the Afghan National Army and NATO still face a fierce insurgency from the Al-Qaeda supported Taliban

A total of around 52,700 international troops are currently taking part in the war and reconstruction operations in Afghanistan under the umbrella of the International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF. In August 2003, NATO took command of the ISAF and thus it became the first NATO engagement outside of Europe. At present the international forces operate in Afghanistan under the United Nations Security Council resolutions.

The mission in Afghanistan, contrary to the war in Iraq, is truly international in nature. A total of 40 nations from across the world contribute troops to the ISAF. Turkey is one among those countries. The United States and United Kingdom contribute the largest numbers, 23,550 and 8,530 respectively. Germany contributes 3,370, Canada 2,500, Italy 2,350, Netherlands 1,770 and Turkey 760. Among the others are Spain, Australia, Belgium, Norway and France. Those that do not contribute troops are supporting the operations politically and many of them contribute economically to the re-construction of Afghanistan. India, among others, is one such country.

The globalized world:

Gone are the days when events in a country thousands of miles away had little bearing on the security of other countries. In today's globalized world, the international community cannot afford to stay detached from weak and failing states. Afghanistan is a classical case in point. The channels of globalization do carry the negative consequences of the failed states to the doorsteps of the developed world.

In 1979, the then USSR troops entered Afghanistan and installed a communist regime in that impoverished country. Millions of Afghans fled to Pakistan and Iran and started armed resistance against the Soviets with the help of the United States, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and other like-minded countries. The United States supplied weapons to the resistant groups based in Pakistan. The money and weapons were channeled through the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan. Training camps were established for these resistance groups on Pakistan's territory. Thousands of Afghans sacrificed their lives in the U.S. war on communism. Eventually the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan in 1988. The defeat in Afghanistan was one of the factors in the collapse of the USSR.

When the strategic goals of the United States were met in that part of the world, it left the war-ravaged country to single-handedly deal with the post-war problems, without grasping the potential of that country to turn into a haven for international terrorism and drug-dealers. The 10 years of war had destroyed its already minimal infrastructure, its capital Kabul was devastated and its economy was in shatters. The armed groups, constituted and armed by the United States and its allies for the purpose of fighting the Soviets, turned against each other. Afghanistan plunged into a devastating civil war that consumed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Afghan men, women and children.

The coming of the Taliban:

In the mid-1990s another force emerged soon to be known as the �Taliban,� or Religious Students. With the help of Pakistan, the group achieved quick victories against the warlords. By 1996, the Taliban had entered Kabul. The stories of the Taliban are famous. They banned female education, stoned to death many men and women for �adultery,� compelled the people to grow beards, amputated people's hands and legs for minor theft and destroyed the historic Buddhas in the city of Bamyan.

Though they were indulging in all kinds of human rights violations, the international community belatedly made its reservations known when the world came to know that Osama Bin Laden had moved from Sudan to Afghanistan. The United States put all kinds of pressure on the Taliban to hand over Osama Bin Laden, but the Taliban refused saying that the Sheikh was their �guest.�

And then came the unfortunate events of 9/11. It was established that Osama's Al-Qaeda was involved in the attacks. The United States wanted Bin Laden to be handed over. Upon refusal, the United States moved in concert with its allies across the world, against the Taliban. It was a matter of days that the Taliban were on the run and an internationally mandated government under President Hamid Karzai was seated in Kabul.

The international community is now fighting in Afghanistan for a cause. This should have been done immediately after the withdrawal of the Soviet troops from Afghanistan in 1988. In that case Afghanistan would never have become a breeding ground for terrorists and the 9/11 would perhaps never have happened. But as is said, better done later than never, the mission in Afghanistan needs to be pursued whole-heartedly and with commitment. The emergence of a stable, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan is necessary for a durable peace in the world.

Some countries have sent their troops to Afghanistan but they would like their troops to stay in the relatively peaceful areas, resisting their dispatch to the trouble zones in the South and East where Canadian, American and British and a few others troops are chasing the terrorists. The troops of these countries incur higher casualties than their other partners. The ones less committal cite their domestic pressures in case their troops die. These governments need to engage their peoples in a dialogue and convince them on the urgency of fighting terror in Afghanistan.

War for a cause:

Failure in Afghanistan is not an option. Many say that the Afghan mission is adversely affected by the useless war of Bush in Iraq. They say that the attention needed to be focused on the war in Afghanistan, but is diverted to Iraq. I agree with that assessment. As the violence in Iraq is decreasing substantially, the United States and Britain need to divert their troops and other resources to Afghanistan. Though Afghanistan has come a long way from its terrible past, the Afghan National Army and NATO still face a fierce insurgency from the Al-Qaeda supported Taliban in the southern and eastern parts of Afghanistan.

These elements would like to pull Afghanistan back into its pre-9/11 situation so as they can plan and execute 9/11-style attacks not only in the USA, but anywhere in the world where people do not agree with their world view. This is a war for a good cause. Everybody needs to take part in the fulfillment of this cause.
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