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Afghanistan's Hazaras Protest Over Pastures

Monday 0 comments

ANC News

More than 2,000 mainly ethnic Hazaras, many of them livestock farmers, marched through the Afghan capital Kabul Sunday to demand authorities stop nomads from using their grazing lands.

The demonstrators, some of whom travelled to the city from poverty-hit central Afghanistan, alleged that ethnic Pashtun nomads, called Kuchi, are using their pastures for animals to graze on.

"We're demonstrating to demand our rights. We want the government to stop Kuchis grabbing our pastures," a protester named Ahmad Kamal Natiqi told AFP as others shouted "Down with Kuchi."

The Kuchi, estimated to number 2.4 million, move around Afghanistan in search of pastures for the animals on which they depend.

The nomads - leading caravans of camels, sheep and donkeys - are due to arrive in central Afghanistan in coming weeks, moving up from the warmer south in a centuries-old migration.

They are mainly from Pashtun tribes that dominate southern and eastern Afghanistan and sometimes clash with other ethnic groups as they travel.

Armed clashes between the Kuchis and settled Hazaras reportedly left several people dead in central Wardak province last year.

There are fears that low levels of rain and snow over winter will mean drought this year, which would put extra pressure on Afghanistan's farmers.
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Afghanistan from a different viewpoint

Saturday 0 comments

3,28, 2008
Julie Crawford
Surrey Now

The Kite Runner

Directed by Marc Forster. Starring Khalid Abdalla, Homayoun Ershadi, Zekeria Ebrahimi, Ahmad Khan Mahmidzada and Shaun Toub
8 (out of 10)
What most of us know about Afghanistan has been culled from grim, minute-long sound bytes from TV news. Of course, a book and a movie can't claim to give a complete picture either, but Marc Forster's The Kite Runner, based on Khaled Hosseini's best-selling novel, does widen our view of the country.

The book is about human capacity for shocking violence, loyalty and forgiveness. Forester (Monster's Ball, Finding Neverland) remains faithful to its themes, and pushed for the decision to have the actors speak in their native tongues.

It's the 1970s in Kabul and young Amir (Zekeria Ebrahimi) lives in luxury with his widower father (Iran's Homayoun Ershadi). Amir's best friend is Hassan (Ahmad Khan Mahmidzada), the servant's son. Amir is a Pashtun but Hassan is a Hazara, which means that they are friends but they are not equals.

This inequality results in a dramatic act of violence, which breaks the boys' friendship forever. The Soviet invasion of 1979 hastens their separation, and guarantees the two lose touch for good.

Flash forward to 2000 where a grown Amir (United 93's Khalid Abdalla) gets a call from his father's close friend Rahim Khan (Shaun Toub), who insists Amir must return to Afghanistan, saying: "There is a way to be good again."

Amir returns to a brutal Afghanistan he doesn't recognize: even kite-flying, the boyhood pastime of Hassan and Amir, has been banned by the Taliban.

Fine performances by actors young and old result in a powerful emotional connection to the film, and Forster does an excellent job of creating an authentic sense of time and place. It's a moving rendering of Hosseini's work.

Special features include a commentary with the director, writer Khaled Hosseini and producer David Benioff. A Words From The Kite Runner segment features a discussion with the author, and what made the practising physician turn to writing full-time. The Images From The Kite Runner featurette focuses on the complex shooting and casting processes, and we learn of the struggles Marc Forster had in trying to make the film as authentic an experience as possible.
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Her son killed for a gold ring, an Afghan mother wants justice

Friday 0 comments

AFP

Even Mother Nature was cruel on the day 15 years ago when rampaging thugs chopped off Marzia's fingers for a gold ring and shot dead her nine-year-old son when he cried out to object.

It was a bone-chillingly cold morning, she recalls, when militia loyal to Pashtun warlord Abdul Rab-Rasoul Sayyaf -- now a parliamentarian -- captured her village, west of Kabul and dominated by ethnic Hazaras.

Poverty-stricken Afshar, a complex of mudbrick houses at the foot of a barren and rocky mountain, was crushed in the orgy of murder, rape and looting.

In a post-assault attack on the village, gunmen smashed into her simple house, says the illiterate housewife in her 40s. They demanded a gold ring she was wearing.

"I couldn't take it off. One of them stepped forward with a bayonet and said 'I will take it off,' and chopped my fingers," she says, holding up a hand missing the thumb, fore and middle fingers.

Her son Samad cried out. "When he chopped my fingers, my son jumped towards me and wailed 'Oh, nanai (mother)'. Another man turned his gun and fired at him," she says, her lips quivering.

"My son died in my arms," she says, wiping away tears with the palm of her butchered hand.

The number of dead in what has become known as the Afshar Massacre is not clear: a United Nations report says 300 civilians, almost all ethnic Hazara Shiites, were killed but villagers say even more were slaughtered, some decapitated.

Hundreds of Hazara men were rounded up and corralled into forced labour -- or just disappeared. Villagers claim 1,200 men were taken away.

One was Marzia's husband, Sayed Mohammad.

Sitting near his wife in their one-room home, he says he was accused of being a combatant, beaten, and forced to dig trenches and wash dishes for his captors for six months before he was freed, half-paralysed and mentally ill.

The February 1993 Afshar campaign was one of the worst episodes of the 1992-1996 civil war that erupted when internationally supported militias that had driven out the Soviet occupiers turned on each other.

The ethnic-based factional fighting -- in which all sides are accused of atrocities, including the Hazara -- killed around 80,000 civilians in Kabul alone, according to rights groups.

An almost daily barrage of rocket and artillery fire reduced large parts of the attractive capital to rubble.

The conflict was ended when the Taliban Islamic militia took power in 1996, initially welcomed for restoring calm after the chaos. But they too brought terror before being ousted in a US-led invasion late in 2001.

"The Afshar Massacre is one of the worst brutalities of the civil war," says Horia Musadeq from the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.

"It is just one example of hundreds of incidents Afghans suffered. Hundreds of civilians were killed, women were raped and many men were captured, held and tortured," he said.

A 2005 Human Rights Watch report implicates Sayyaf -- now an ally of President Hamid Karzai -- and other figures such as Burhanduddin Rabbani, president at the time and now also in parliament.

"The Afshar campaign was marked by widespread and serious violations of international humanitarian law," it says, and calls for "justice-seeking mechanisms to sideline past abusers from political power".

Karzai in late 2006 signed a Peace, Reconciliation and Justice Action Plan that seeks to "establish accountability" -- which some fear could see a backlash from strongmen worried about having to face a judicial process.

Just weeks later the parliament voted in a bill that would give groups and factions amnesty against prosecution. Its position on individuals is vague.

Karzai admitted at a meeting in December, at which Marzia was among several victims who pleaded for justice, that this was a concern.

"There are tyrants in our land," he said. "We must move with lots of caution so as not to cause lots of noise and more human rights violations."

The United Nations has meanwhile expressed disappointment at the delays in implementing the action plan, which also provides for investigations of atrocities and memorials for those killed.

Marzia says she wants justice, even if only from "great God".

Responding to such calls is vital for Afghanistan to recover from its three decades of war and to revive the national spirit, Musadeq says.

"We can't survive as a nation unless we give justice to war victims. Can you imagine that those who have killed her or others' children sit in the parliament, live in palaces and drive Landcruisers?" she asks.

"When Sayyaf speeds past a victim in his Landcruiser, kicking up dust, think how it feels. It feels really bad."
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Rebuilding Afghanistan

March,27,2008
by Mladen Rudman
Daily News

Choctaw grad is a U.S. Foreign Service officer working in Bamyan Province

New Zealanders and Americans are helping Afghans in impoverished Bamyan Province move toward safer, more comfortable lives.

David J. Jea, a 1994 Choctawhatchee High School graduate and now a U.S. State Department Foreign Service officer, is part of a New Zealand Defense Force Provincial Reconstruction Team providing everything from warm clothing to graded roads to villagers in the Hindu Kush province
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The effort is part of a countrywide push by the International Security Assistance Force to rebuild or develop Afghanistan’s infrastructure, while it trains Afghan soldiers and police to fight insurgents.

Working in Bamyan, where winters bring road-clogging snow and summers bring dust and wind, means Jea facilitates projects and serves as a messenger to the American embassy in Kabul.

“Every day is different,” he said in a recent telephone interview from Bamyan City. “Every day has its own frustrations and its own rewards.”
Implementing the Security Assistance Force’s efforts to disarm illegal groups can be frustrating.

Helping stock a girl’s high school with books or a village in Yakawlang district improve its water well are rewards.

Jea also is helping Bamyan preserve its natural heritage. For example, there’s an effort to develop land around Bamyan’s deep, blue Band-i-Amir Lake into a national park.

Bamyan is mostly populated by the Hazara ethnic group. Its people are predominantly Shiites in a country where Sunnis are the religious majority. Hazaras were persecuted and even murdered by the Taliban when they were in power.
The New Zealand Provincial Reconstruction Team is in Bamyan to prevent similar problems and expedite construction or reconstruction of schools, medical clinics and other facilities.

Jea, 31, has measured the attitude of the Hazara toward the “Kiwi” — the nickname for New Zealanders — and Yank Provincial Reconstruction Team, which operates from a headquarters in Bamyan City and three forward bases.

“Bamyan is very safe. We haven’t had a major security issue here,” Jea said. “I can see there’s a lot of gratitude and a lot of urgency.”

He said the Hazara often get frustrated because they believe their mountainous province, although stable militarily, has been ignored by the Afghan government and international donors. Villagers also wonder what will happen when the Security Assistance Force withdraws.

For those reasons, Jea keeps the big picture in mind.

“We have to be sure that the central government can keep Afghanistan functioning after the bricks and mortar have been laid,” he said.

Jea, whose parents live in Fort Walton Beach, helped prepare himself for the assignment by tapping the experience of Okaloosa County Judge and retired Army Reserve Brig. Gen. Patt Maney. Maney served as a senior advisor to the American ambassador to Afghanistan for about 17 months in 2004 and 2005.

His Afghanistan tour was cut short when he was wounded by a roadside bomb. He earned a Purple Heart.

Maney noted that Jea is the senior U.S. diplomat in Bamyan, a province with an estimated population of 500,000.

The judge said the role of Provincial Reconstruction Team is essential to success in Afghanistan. He added that Jea must walk a fine line between helping villagers help themselves and making them dependent on foreign aide.

“I think David should get credit for being willing to step out (to assist) in the manner of those Foreign Service officers who served in Vietnam,” said Maney. “There are not a lot of creature comforts or a heavy security presence (in Bamyan). … It really is a beautiful place, but it’s also a place that has virtually nothing. He really is working in an austere environment.”
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Pop 'Idol' sparks controversy in Afghanistan - Feature

Thursday 0 comments

From earthtimes

Kabul - The Afghan version of "American Idol" show sparked a new round of controversy in Afghanistan, as thousands people participated in voting and millions of viewers watched it on TV, while conservative clerics condemned it as "un-Islamic."Around 300,000 people voted by text message for the two male finalists, while more than 10 million people watched the third season of "Afghan Star" show on Friday night on Tolo, the country's most popular TV channel.

Nineteen-year-old Rafi Nabzada, a Tajik from the northern province of Balkh, was declared the hottest new pop singer on Friday after the six-month show, a national contest held among some 2,000 contenders.

"Today I am very proud because I got this position by the votes of my beloved countrymen," said the boyish favourite Nabzada after being declared the winner.

Hamid Sakhizada, a 21-year-old from the Hazara ethnic minority, who trilled to Afghan traditional rhythms amid cheers and catcalls of music fans during the last competition, was gracious in defeat.

"Whether are from Bamyan or Kandahar, we are brothers," he said.

Both finalists received 8,000 dollars cash plus return-air-tickets to Dubai and India and contracts for recording deals.

Third place went to Pashtun contestant, Lema Sahar, a 20-year-old girl and the first female contender to finish third since the show was launched in 2005.

Sahar is from southern Kandahar province, the most conservative region in the country and the birthplace of Taliban militants, whose government was toppled in a US-led military invasion in late 2001.

During the six-year reign of the ultra-Islamic regime, women were forced to wear a head-to-toe veil and were not allowed to appear in public without male members of their families accompanying them.

The regime that claimed to have applied the "pure Islamic rules" also banned any type of visual broadcastings and music, the offenders of which were subjected to punishment that included whipping and imprisonment.

"I am proud to have reached to this position," Sahar told a press conference a day before the final show.

"I have been threatened, including several phone calls during the night," the shy-looking Sahar said. "But I don't lose my confidence, because I reached to the third position by the votes of my people and I know I will succeed in my decision."

Sahar was not the only girl in the show. Setara Hussainzada, a Tajik female contestant from western Herat province, who came eighth, was forced to flee from her home due to death threats after she was seen on the stage dancing during her performance last month.

Afghanistan had numerous singers and musicians including women, who fled the country en masse after communist-backed government collapsed in 1992 and was succeeded by the Taliban regime which came to power after 10 years of struggle against Soviet troops.

Six years after the Taliban regime's ousting, and amid international efforts to introduce democracy, conservative clerics condemn the TV show as "immoral." Hardliners have demanded that the show be banned, mainly objecting to the performances by women.

The national council of religious scholars sent a statement to President Hamid Karzai in early January demanding a ban of several "immoral and un-Islamic" TV programmes, singling out the Afghan Star.

The clerics charged that the show was "designed to encourage immorality" and was against the Afghan "custom and tradition."

However, show host Daud Sideqi rejected the Islamic conservatives' claims. "Music has always been part of our culture. Those, who oppose the show, they only do it because they have their own political purposes behind their opposition.

"If we look to the nearest Islamic countries around us like Pakistan, Iran, and Tajikistan, they all have singers, including women singers," Sideqi said. "We know after many difficult years, these things take time until the people accept them as the realities of our society."

A senior Afghan government official, who requested anonymity, meanwhile said, "The government has no objection against programmes like Afghan Star show.

"But we are worried that the extremist groups would use this as tool to show to the people in rural areas that we are encouraging these kinds of Westernized programmes, which they deem it as un- Islamic," he added.
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Woman Vies to Become First 'Afghan Star'

By JASON STRAZIUSO
AP

In a first for post-Taliban Afghanistan, a woman from the conservative Pashtun belt is one of the top three contenders in the country's version of "American Idol."

Conservative detractors decry the fact an Afghan woman has found success singing on television, while others — younger Afghans — say the show is helping women progress. Under the Taliban regime that was overthrown in 2001, women were not even allowed out of their homes unaccompanied, while music and television were banned.

With her hair tucked under a wispy blue headscarf, Lima Sahar brushes off her critics, saying there can be no progress for women without upsetting the status quo."No pain, no gain," she told reporters Wednesday in Kabul.

Sahar beat out 2,000 other hopefuls who auditioned for the third season of "Afghan Star." On Friday, the six-month-long TV show will name the final two contestants, based on votes sent in from viewers via text message. The format is the same as "American Idol," although the shows are not connected.

Afghanistan's conservative cleric's council has protested to President Hamid Karzai over "Afghan Star" and Indian dramas shown on Tolo TV, the country's most popular station.

"In the situation that we have in Afghanistan right now, we don't need a woman singer. We don't need `Afghan Star.' We are in need of a good economy, good education," said Ali Ahmad Jebra-ali, a member of the council. "If Lima Sahar wins 'Afghan Star,' how can she help the poor? This is not the way to help the Afghan people."

Haji Baran Khan, a farmer from Kandahar — the Taliban's spiritual birthplace and the city Sahar now calls home — said a Pashtun girl singing on TV goes against the country's culture.

"She is also affecting the minds of other good girls. She should stop singing," said Khan, whose three sons and two daughters told him about Sahar's success.

Sahar says she's just the latest in a long tradition of Afghan artists — albeit in a more modern form.

"Artists are historical and cultural in our country. Artists have been around a long time," Sahar told a news conference this week. "I came by the vote of the people of Afghanistan."

Several hundred supporters lined up to get the three finalists' autographs at an event this week in Kabul. One of the fans, Shohabidin Mohammad, called "Afghan Star" part of a democratic revival for Afghanistan.

"Women's and men's rights are equal. There are no problems," said Mohammad, dressed in a bright colored shirt, brown hipster hat and a gold necklace that dangles a tiny Koran.

The three finalists represent each of Afghanistan's three main ethnic groups: Pashtuns, Hazaras and Tajiks. Mohammad, who is ethnic Hazara, said he doesn't believe ethnicity should play a role in the vote. But, he acknowledged somewhat sheepishly, he will vote for the Hazara finalist.

Standing beside Mohammad was Abass Nariwal, a fan of Sahar's. Both are ethnic Pashtuns. Another of her fans, Nematullah Khan, is a 25-year-old student at Kandahar University.

"She took a bold step. She has a lot of courage," Khan said. "Whether she wins or not, she's a good example for our youth."

"Afghan Star" has become one of Afghanistan's most popular TV shows, gathering large crowds around TVs in restaurants and homes.

The singers perform in front of a studio audience and three judges, and past winners have been given recording deals. A woman finished fifth in the show's first season, but no female has risen as high as Sahar. The other two finalists are men.

The winner this year will take home around US$5,000 (euro3,230) — a king's ransom in Afghanistan.

Daud Sadiqi, the show's host, said "Afghan Star" has been a runaway hit that shows the world the "peaceful face of Afghanistan."

Another finalist, Hameed Sakhizada, a 21-year-old Hazara with a mop of black hair, said that before the show he was "an ordinary person going to work."

"But now I feel like I'm the representative of a nation," Sakhizada said.

The other finalist — and perhaps the odds-on favorite judging by the number of fans seeking his autograph this week — is Rafi Naabzada, a 19-year-old ethnic Tajik wearing a white leather jacket, who calls the show "a symbol of unity."

"'Afghan Star' belongs to all Afghans," he said. "My idea is not to get votes from just my tribe. I think that attitude is now finished — he's a Tajik or he's a Pashtun," Naabzada said. "Of course we still have special support from those ethnic groups."

That is what bothers Mohammad Qasim Akhger, an independent political analyst. He says the most talented singers aren't necessarily the ones who get voted through. He singled out Sahar as having little talent.

"Now there is one Pashtun, one Hazara and one Tajik, so now what will happen is that nobody will care about their talents, they will just vote for their tribe," he said. "If Lima Sahar is not talented enough, it doesn't matter for them (Pashtuns). They are just voting because she is Pashtun."

Even gender loyalties don't seem to be a factor. When the crush of autograph seekers surrounded the singers this week, all the women made a beeline for Naabzada. One fan, Shabana, who goes by one name, was dressed in a pink shawl and bright pink lipstick. She said she was supporting Naabzada over Sahar because he was the better singer.

Would she support a woman? "Yes," Shabana said. "But on condition that she has talent."
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Troops off to Afghanistan

By JONATHON HOWE
stuff.

Afghanistan's Bamiyan City is home to over 60,000 people, the Bamiyan budhas and from April a contingent of Linton soldiers.

Colonel Darryl Tracy will command the 138 New Zealand soldiers going to Afghanistan next month.

Concerns have been raised about the rising Taliban threat in the war-torn country, but Col Tracy said the Taliban were not active in Bamiyan.

"As of yet we haven't seen the Taliban or insurgents operating in the Bamiyan province. But there are certainly criminally motivated groups operating."

But the potential for the Taliban or al-Qaeda to enter the province was always there, he said.

"We are not out there hunting Taliban, that's not our mandate. Our mandate is to assist the Bamiyan local authorities across all spectrums. Part of that mandate does have security."That's just one part of the New Zealand Defence Force's continual monitoring of that situation, to make sure that we can appropriately meet some of those threats, if they eventuated up in Bamiyan," Col Tracy said.

He would not comment on the coalition's handling of Afghanistan, but did confirm the rise of insurgent activity there.

"That activity is predominantly in the southern provinces, which is not an area where we operate."

Bamiyan's Hazara populations were well-disposed towards the New Zealand soldiers, he said.

"The Bamiyan province is fairly homogenous in being Hazara. They have been one of the more exploited cultures of the Afghanistan wider population, so they are very much enjoying the security. They want their children to have education, they want to have medical facilities, they want to be able to work and raise their children in relative peace."

Col Tracy will be leaving behind his wife Tracy and their three sons Sean, Luke and Michael.

"It's never an easy thing to separate from your wife and children for a period of time."

The troops will deploy from the Ohakea Air Force base on April 9.
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Fearless in the face of adversity

March 05, 2008
By Catherine Masters
nzherald.co.nz

The talk has been of massacres and destruction, of broken roads and poverty, of fear and polluted water.

Dr Habiba Sarabi has remained a calm and charming figure, steadily responding to an array of questions similar to those asked by other journalists, questions she has patiently answered all week in her slightly broken English, during her visit to New Zealand.
In a room on the 21st floor of an Auckland hotel, with its sweeping views of the Auckland Harbour Bridge and sunny sparkling harbour, Dr Sarabi has suddenly had too She has only skimmed the surface. Her story is that of a woman who has faced down an adversity New Zealanders can only imagine with horror.
Dr Habiba Sarabi was the first woman
to govern a province in Afghanistan.


Dr Sarabi was raised outside of Bamyan in a time when, although many people did not want their girls to be educated, they were not killed for doing so.

She studied at Kabul University and became a doctor. She lived in Kabul when the Taleban took over and, as an educated woman, found herself in grave danger.

She took her three children, one of them a girl, and fled to Pakistan. Her daughter was 10 at the time.

The family had already lived through the Soviet invasion; they knew the noise of rockets "lunging" from one side of the city to the other.

But when the Taleban came, there was no other choice but to leave. Dr Sarabi returned, though, to set up an underground school for girls. She entered the country under cover of the burqa, a garment which represented oppression but allowed her freedom.

Wearing the burqa was still a "very bad experience". Dr Sarabi wears glasses but the burqa with the mesh covering the eyes made that impossible, so she was forever tripping over.much.

A comment about the tendency of Aucklanders to moan about their traffic woes and harbour bridge results in Dr Sarabi agreeing how incredibly lucky New Zealanders are.

"God bless you and save you and I wish you'll be lucky for [a] long time," she said, then turned away.Soon, it was apparent she was fighting tears. This ground-breaking politician was overcome with emotion. She got up and left the room but soon returned and brushed away apologies."No, no, no, it's okay," said the doctor who made history by becoming the first woman to govern a province in war-torn Afghanistan.

Later, she would say of the brief interlude when her country's plight became overwhelming: "Of course, we have many bad experiences ... sometimes we can be emotional."

This relentless fronting to the media is necessary because, although lives have improved in Dr Sarabi's province of Bamyan, the long way to go is daunting.

Without the presence of New Zealand troops, Bamyan would not be the relatively safe province it is, she says.

Dr Sarabi was in New Zealand for two reasons.

One was to offer a heartfelt "thank you" for sending our troops to protect and help rebuild the province.

The other was not exactly to beg, although she may not disagree this is what she is doing, but to put "fuel on the fire" of our country's positive relationship with Bamyan. What the province desperately needs is still more help, she says.

Bamyan is in the central highlands region of Afghanistan, a remote and isolated area with dizzying changes in temperature. It is also mountainous and beautiful.

The name is not known for this so much because Bamyan is where the Taleban went to such painstaking lengths to blow up giant, ancient Buddhas carved into the cliffs.

It is home to the Hazara people, mainly Shia Muslims, who were despised with a vengeance by the Taleban.

Dr Sarabi told of the suffering of the Bamyan people. "Taleban thought that Hazara people are not Muslim so they torture. There were several massacres in Bamyan, so they demolished all the houses and burnt houses, so very, very bad time, the people suffered a lot."
Yet the garment allowed her to work in her underground school "and sometimes I could bring the journalist under the burqa. Believe me, I did such a thing".

Classes would be held in people's houses but they would keep moving around to throw the Taleban off the trail.

Still, some of the teachers were caught. She recalls one woman who was stopped by the Taleban, whose husband was put in prison for allowing his wife to do such a job.

Though she could have stayed in safety in Pakistan, Dr Sarabi has always felt a sense of responsibility to help women, to "rescue" the lives of impoverished and oppressed people.

Rescuing lives is what still motivates her now she is governor of Bamyan.

"Sure, that's why I'm there. I'm always for getting more money, getting more aid for Bamyan, and this is because of Bamyan people, you know.

"In my country, the people who are in the high-ranked position, they could save a lot of property for themselves but I do not have anything, because this is my responsibility, to work for the people, to rescue them."

These days, while girls' schools burn in other parts of the country, in Bamyan it is safe to send your daughters to school.

The top priority now is road reconstruction and clean water, she says.

She is trying to figure out how to grow the economy of a dry, hilly area without great soil, an area which depends on agriculture and livestock.

Tourism is an option, and she says New Zealand tourists would be welcome in Bamyan. The tricky part is that to get there they have to go through Kabul.

The governor's adviser, Amir Foladi, reiterates the importance of the presence of the New Zealand military, who create a safe environment for reconstruction work.

He explains that, though the area is relatively safe, there are still warlords and power struggles. There are still criminals and poppy smugglers.

There are few trained soldiers and the new police force has very limited capabilities and equipment. And there are still some - a very few, he stresses - people who want to support the Taleban."That's why when we say Bamyan is the safest place, it doesn't mean there is no need for a military."

The international community is putting its priority on security in the south, "so sometimes it is discouraging people, that 'why we are not receiving any more attention or enough attention according to our needs [they think] okay, let's fire some rockets somewhere, maybe there will be attention"'.

Everyone laughs but this is the reality.

The very real fear is what may happen to Bamyan when the New Zealand troops leave.
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Insecurity hindering return of Afghan refugees to their homeland, says UN agency

Tuesday 0 comments

UN News Centre 27 February 2008

Many Afghan refugees living in neighbouring Iran and Pakistan are reluctant to return to their homeland due to the deteriorating security situation there and difficulty in sustaining their new lives, a senior official with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said today.

Erika Feller, UNHCR's top protection official, has been meeting with refugees and the authorities in Iran, which is currently hosting some 920,000 Afghans who have fled violence in their country over the course of the past 20 years.“What has struck me during this visit is the variety of situations Afghan refugees are living in and the fact that the lack of security in Afghanistan is topmost in influencing their decisions to return home,” Ms. Feller said, as she wrapped up her five-day mission.During the peak of the refugee returns in 2004, there were up to 5,000 people going back to Afghanistan every day; that was the same number of returnees in all of 2007.

“So, we are at a turning point and have to reflect on the way forward with the Iranian authorities for those remaining here,” noted Ms. Feller.

The refugees Ms. Feller met with cited lack of security, employment, education, health clinics and access to land in Afghanistan as some of the main concerns associated with returning home. Female Afghan refugees, who can work informally and move around freely in Iran, fear they would face restrictions in Afghanistan.

“Investing in education, the skills and capacity of the refugees is really important so they can make a real contribution back home in Afghanistan to rebuilding their country, or – if they go to a new country – in restarting their lives,” she stated.

The Assistant High Commissioner for Protection lauded Iran's “very solid track record” in providing assistance to Afghan refugees, who generally have access to basic health care and education and have not been forced to return to the war-torn nation. “I heard many times how refugees feel part of this culture with a number being born here and knowing no other life,” she said.

Ms. Feller discussed the situation of the refugees and their concerns with the Government's Bureau for Aliens and Foreign Immigration Affairs. She hopes to conduct similar visits to Afghanistan and Pakistan in the months ahead.
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RIGHTS-AFGHANISTAN: Women Speak Out On Sexual Abuse By Relations

By Tahir Qadiry
IPS

Violence against women perpetrated by a member of the woman’s family or someone known to her appears endemic in Afghanistan.

Few women are able to protect themselves against such violence, often by close relations, or speak out against their abusers.

The United Nations agency for women, UNIFEM, said a recent survey revealed that out of 1,327 incidents of violence against women in Afghanistan, 30.7 percent were related to physical violence; 30.1 percent to psychological violence; 25.2 percent to sexual violence; and 14 percent a combination of the three.

According to the survey, 82 percent of incidents reported were committed by family members, nine percent by those in the community and 1.7 by state authorities.

Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) registered 1,199 cases of sexual and gender-based violence in 2006.

Qazi Sayed Mohammad Sami, head of AIHRC in Afghanistan’s nine northern provinces said: "Very recently, we have had two cases of sexual abuse." The first case was in Sar-e Pol Province, where a grandfather sexually abused his grand daughter. Sami said the AIHRC assessed the case and informed the concerned officials who detained the man. But he was not punished to the extent he deserved to be, he added.

The second case involved a 21-year-old woman from Balkh’s Dehdadi district, 15-km from the capital city Mazar-e-Sharif, who has accused her father of rape. "He was detained and investigation is still under way. I should say that such cases are rare in northern Afghanistan," Sami said.

IPS met with Shogofa, who has dared to speak out against her father, a mullah (prayer leader). Under Islamic law (Sharia) those who sexually abuse a woman are to be harshly dealt with.

"My father is a mullah," she said. "Everyone told me that I was lying. They said how could a mullah do this?"

Shogofa, who has three sisters, said her father has always been violent. He would physically abuse their mother and the girls. When their mother failed to produce a male child, their father forced her to "propose" a second wife for him. "He would punish her (mother). She did not have any way. Eventually, she proposed a girl for my father and he got married for a second time," she said.

Two years after that marriage, he began making sexual demands of Shogofa. "My father used to kiss me and hug me, but I thought it was a father’s sympathy," she said.

It did not stop with Shogofa’s marriage or the birth of her daughter.

The young woman said that when she told her husband, Nehmat, that her father was demanding sex, he told her to carry a tape-recorder with her.

"My father asked me to come with him upstairs. I went there. He came very close to me and put two guns to my two sides and said that if I shouted, he would kill me," she recalled. "He raped me. Having done it, he went to the bazaar and asked me to get ready for another session that night".

But Shogofa had recorded his voice and had something to prove to her husband and other relatives.

Her husband waited with the family for her father to come home, to hand him over to the police.

"When Shogofa’s father came home and saw everyone was upset, he knew what had happened. He tried to escape, but we managed to catch him, have him arrested," said Nehmat.

Shogofa’s 14-year-old sister, who did not want to be named, also said that their father had attempted to rape her many times, but did not manage. "My father used to ask me to watch pornographic films. He sometimes hugged me very tightly, I was afraid," she said.

According to Shogofa, her father has changed since he bought a digital dish antenna that gives him access to hundreds of TV channels. "He was watching pornographic films from evening to mid-night. It changed his behaviour," she said.

In a letter to women’s organisations and authorities in Balkh province, Shogofa said she would commit suicide if her father is not hanged or imprisoned for life. "I do not want to see him anymore. I kindly ask the prosecution department to punish my father. If I see him, I will recall what he did to me," she told IPS.

Malalai Usmani, head of the Balkh women’s department, said her officials were working round the clock to ensure justice would be done.

"He should be stoned to death," said Qari Azizollah, an intellectual and prayer leader. Calling the incident "shameful and cowardly" he told IPS: "I have heard of a girl being raped. But a father raping his daughter!"
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AFGHANISTAN: Ousted By Iran, Afghan Refugees Languish At Home

By Anand Gopal
IPS

Thousands of Afghan refugees, forcibly repatriated by Iran, have been living in makeshift camps across Afghanistan.

Many of the displaced, who fled the Soviet invasion and subsequent civil war, have returned to their home country to find a dearth of jobs, shelter and government programmes to help them reintegrate.

Hoden Makhtab, 40, a mother and deportee from Tehran, says: "We had lived in a house, but we left everything we owned when the (Iranian) government returned us here. There are eight people in my family. We came back here six months ago but the Afghan government has not given us any help. They haven't even visited us."

Makhtab speaks to IPS while standing next to her new home, a small cloth tent supported by wooden stays that shudder in the wind. She lives with close to 400 other families in between the construction projects of the Chamany Babrak section of Kabul, where a clutch of tents sit in an ankle-deep mud pit. There is no running water or electricity here, only dirt-dappled adults and half-naked children. The sprawling camp is home to refugees from neighboring countries and other cities in Afghanistan. Some claim to have been deported from Pakistan, where they lived and worked during the war years. There are even some Pakistani refugees here, fleeing inclement weather and civil strife in their home country.

But the lion’s share is from Iran, where authorities have expelled thousands of Afghans in the recent months. Most of the residents here arrived from Iran and erected tents just six months ago, mirroring a process occurring in other major Afghan cities. Aid agencies say that there are hundreds of camps like Chamanay Babrak sprouting all over Afghanistan, housing thousands of deportees and pointing to the possibility of a burgeoning humanitarian crisis.

A shivering Sadaf Ismat, deportee from Iran six months ago, tells IPS, "My son-in-law was killed in an earthquake in Iran. We thought the government would help us, but instead they forced us to come here."

"I am sick and cannot eat," she says, as she shows visitors her tongue, discoloured from an untreated infection. "We have a big family but I don't know what will happen to us. There is no work for anyone and I am so sick I cannot even beg."

In a country struggling to overcome decades of war and insurgency, jobs are scarce. While some residents here are able to find wage work for a day, most are forced to beg. The returned refugees lack wood to protect against the bitter Kabul winter -- causing widespread sickness -- and rising food costs has meant that many go to sleep hungry.

Both the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Afghan government have programmes in place to help displaced persons who are voluntarily repatriating, but none for those expelled from other countries.

Like Makhtab, others here accuse the Iranian government of forcibly evicting them. "I went to Sheraz, Iran, 20 years ago," Fazel Ghrias tells IPS, as he furnishes a Tehran-issued refugee ID card. "We lived in tents in Iran, but the government helped us. Then one day (six months ago) they said 'your country has freedom now, you can go back’." Ghrias claims that Iranian soldiers forced the refugees to board trucks at gunpoint, and then ransacked the tents, taking all the money they could find.

"The soldiers told us," he continues, that "'if you don't go back to Afghanistan, we will kill you.' Then they burned the houses of those who refused to leave."

UNHCR estimates that close to one million Afghans have returned from Iran since 2001 and that in the last year Iran deported 360,000. According to the Afghan Ministry of Refugees and Returnees Affairs (MRRA), in the first two months of this year already 17,000 Afghans have been expelled, despite an agreement between Kabul and Tehran to curtail deportations during the winter months.

UNHCR and the Iranian government both claim that those expelled were unregistered Afghans in the country illegally seeking work and should be considered economic migrants, not refugees. However, in the camps of Chamany Babrak most tenants are able to produce Tehran-issued refugee ID cards, indicating registered status.

In addition, some NGO reports suggest that Iranian soldiers often evict refugee settlements wholesale, without checking for registration status.

Camp resident Muzafar Khoram, 54, deported six months ago from Sheraz, says: "I was working near my house one day when the (Iranian) soldiers came, without warning. We had ID cards but the government didn't pay any attention to this. We didn't want to return, but they forced us, screaming 'get out of Iran!' They would not even let us collect our belongings. They forced us on to trucks, first the men and later the women and children."

UNHCR spokesperson Ahmed Nader Farhad says that his agency only considers those who voluntarily repatriate as refugees. Those expelled, therefore, fall outside of the UNHCR mandate and go without any significant aid.

"They are not Iran's and not our government's responsibility," Abdul Qader Zazai, chief advisor to Mohammed Etibari, the MRRA minister, tells IPS. Etibari said recently in a statement that the Afghan government does not have the ability or resources to absorb the thousands of deported and is asking the Iranian authorities to stem the tide of expulsions.

This appears to offer little consolation to the Chamany Babrak camp dwellers. "We are so poor and we need help -- that is our main problem," says Khoram. As he speaks a water tanker trundles through the thick mud -- the residents pool together their daily earnings to buy water -- as young children scatter from its path. "We need food and wood," he continues. "Especially in winter, we don't have what we need. We haven't received oil, flour or bread. There are 10 people in my house. We are all sick. I don't know what to do."
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Five Afghan deminers shot dead

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AFP, March 24, 2008

After nearly three decades of war, Afghanistan is one of the world's most mined countries.
KABUL — Gunmen killed five Afghan mine clearers in an ambush on their convoy in northern Afghanistan, their UN-funded company said Monday, in one of the bloodiest attacks on non-government workers in months.

The attackers halted a convoy of workers for Afghan Technical Consultants (ATC) in the northern province of Jawzjan as they drove back to their base camp after mine clearing operations in a remote area, their director said.

They opened fire into the first vehicle and shot at the others, which included an ambulance, as they turned around and sped off, director Kefayatullah Eblagh told AFP.

"Three people stopped the vehicle and started shooting at them without saying anything," he said.

"Five people were killed and seven injured."
It was the worst attack on the company in its 18 years of operations in Afghanistan, he said. "It was terrible."

After nearly three decades of war, Afghanistan is one of the world's most mined countries.

Several companies are working with UN and other international funding to rid it of the devices, which kill or maim scores of people every year.

Police said the attackers had stopped one vehicle by shooting out a tyre and the others were able to escape.

"Then they made five deminers come down and shot them dead," said the deputy police chief of adjoining Balkh province, Abdul Rauf Taj.

Eblagh said the dead men, who included a driver and a section leader, were aged between 30 and 40 and came from various parts of Afghanistan.

It was not known who the attackers were, he said.

"I don't think they were targeting Afghan deminers," he said, adding that the attackers may have thought the convoy belonged to an non-government organisation -- some of which have been attacked in the north.

Insurgents from the extremist Taliban group, which was in government between 1996 and 2001, have killed dozens of people associated with the new administration -- including non-government workers, doctors and teachers.
Most of their attacks take place in the south and east of the country.

There have however been several incidents in the north, where factional rivalry, warlordism and criminality also have a hand in the violence.

The Taliban says it is expanding its operations in that area and there was some insurgency-linked incidents in the area last year, including in Jawzjan which borders Uzbekistan.

In the past few days, the head of a district in Jawzjan and a highway police commander in northern Kunduz were murdered in incidents the Taliban claimed to have carried out.

But deminers have also been targeted in the spiralling violence in Afghanistan.

In August last year the bullet-riddled bodies of three mine clearers were found dumped in a village in the southern province of Kandahar, which sees a lot of Taliban activity, after they had been missing for several days.

A month earlier, 13 members of a demining team were kidnapped in the eastern province of Paktia by unknown men and released after a week. It is not known if the kidnappers were linked to the Taliban.

And in April last year, dozens of Taliban militants attacked a US-funded mine-clearing team in the south, killing three deminers, three guards and one female passer-by.
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A Young Girl Kidnapped in Baghlan Province

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PAN, March 22, 2008

The people of Baghlan say that cases of kidnappings and robberies by illegally armed men has increased on a large scale.

BAGHLAN: A girl was kidnapped by unknown armed men in the Nahreen District of Baghlan province after the kidnappers had beat her family.

The parents of 16-year old Guldana claimed that she had been kidnapped by a group of five unknown, armed men in the middle of the night in the New City area. Mullah Mohammad Gul her 60-year old father told PAN that one of the men had broken into their home and together with the other four men had beaten them, tied them up and then kidnapped their daughter. He also added that they had cried a lot but no one had come to their help.Guldana’s father said that their home is just fifty meters away from the Police Station of Nahreen but the police had not come on time to rescue his daughter from the kidnappers.

One of the neighbours, Haji Mohammad Afzal, also said that the parents, little sister and aunt of Guldana had been beaten and then she had been kidnapped; and complained about the police not arriving on time.

On the other hand, Mohammad Anwar the Commander-in-Chief of the Police of Nahreen said that Guldana probably had connections with the kidnappers and had planned to run away with them from her home. He added that seven men had been arrested regarding this matter and that investigation is continuing to make things clear.

Afghanistan is a source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children trafficked for the purposes of commercial sexual exploitation and involuntary servitude. Afghan children are trafficked internally and to Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Zimbabwe for commercial sexual exploitation, forced marriage to settle debts or disputes, forced begging, debt bondage, service as child soldiers, or other forms of involuntary servitude.
US State Department Trafficking in Persons Report, June 12, 2007

A week back the principal of a school was also kidnapped by unknown men in Nahreen. According to Qais Muhr Ayin, the former Head of Education of Baghlan province, the principal was freed after 60 thousand Afghanis had been given to the kidnappers.

The people said that the principal had been kidnapped by the same men who had kidnapped Guldana. They claimed that cases of kidnappings and robberies by illegally armed men had increased on a large scale. About two months back in crossfire between the police and these armed men in Nahreen a police officer had been killed. Read the full story

Iraq: the Refugee Crisis Five Years On

Thursday 0 comments

19,march,2008
human rights first

Five years into the war in Iraq, more than two million Iraqis are refugees outside of their country, and more than two million are displaced internally but unable to flee across the borders. Iraqis have been targeted for persecution and forced from their homes for virtually every reason imaginable. Women who encouraged their peers to participate in the constitutional referendum were threatened with death and driven out of the country. Sunni families searching for the bodies of their loved ones at the morgue in Baghdad have been kidnapped and brutalized. The churches, villages, and homes of Iraqi religious and ethnic minorities have been bombed and burned down. Doctors, dentists, hairdressers, members of parliament, professors, men, women, and children have fled, abandoning property, careers, and their communities in fear.Refugees in the region and internally displaced persons (IDPs) inside Iraq urgently need humanitarian assistance, but the U.N. refugee agency may have to start cutting its assistance programs in June because the international community has failed to respond to its appeal for $261 million. According to the United Nations, up to 100,000 of the most vulnerable refugees urgently need resettlement, but the United States—the global leader in refugee resettlement—has committed to taking only 12,000 this year.

Perhaps worst of all, for Iraqis today, fleeing their country is no longer an option. It is a principle of international law that refugees not be turned back at the border. Jordan—a very small country—allowed some 500,000 Iraqis to enter, but began imposing restrictions in 2005 and effectively closed the border in January 2007. Syria kept its border open until October 2007, but now imposes a strict visa regime that excludes many refugees. Both countries have been overwhelmed and dismayed at the international community’s failure to share responsibility for the crisis.

On the fifth anniversary of the war, Human Rights First calls on the international community to fully fund the U.N. refugee agency’s appeal for Iraqi refugees and to provide bilateral assistance to countries hosting Iraqi refugees. We also ask President Bush to acknowledge the refugee crisis publicly and direct his agencies to take the lead in providing resettlement to the most vulnerable Iraqis and humanitarian aid to refugees and IDPs.

Human Rights First would also like to share the stories of three Iraqis we interviewed in Amman, Jordan, in September. The refugees’ names have been changed for their protection.

*** *** ***

Sami, a father of three and a Sunni Muslim, fled Iraq after an assassination attempt against him and a mortar attack on his home.

“The Jaish al Mehdi began to wage war against the other militias in my neighborhood. On March 17, 2007, a mortar round hit our home. My younger daughters were playing in the yard. Hana was killed immediately. Yasmin, who is 10, was hit by the explosion. Her body is full of shrapnel now. She’s blind in one eye, and paralyzed below the waist. I couldn’t get any help from the government hospitals in Iraq because we are Sunni, so we fled to Jordan. Now, we can’t afford her medical care. An NGO is helping us pay for some physical therapy. They’re doing their best, but the funds are limited. I need 500 JDs for MRIs and kidney tests and I can’t pay. We have no savings left, and I’m not allowed to work here in Jordan. With the proper treatment she might be able to walk again. I used to have goals for myself, but now my only goal in life is to save this child. I would travel to any country in the world that would give her treatment.”

Khalid worked as an interpreter with the 3rd U.S. Cavalry in western Iraq. He showed us his bullet scars.

“After October 2003 I could no longer move freely because of my work as an interpreter. Extremists followed me. They shot at my car, and tried to bomb my house—my sister was injured. I have a scar from where one of their bullets grazed my head. Eventually, they kidnapped my younger brother on his way to college. They left a threat for the rest of us. It said, ‘We will kill all the men in your family and rape the women.’ Then I knew I had to disappear. I asked our commander for help escaping, but he just told me to wait until March, and so I fled to Jordan. For Iraqi refugees like me, yesterday was better than today, and today is better than tomorrow will be.”

Jana is a 12-year-old child from one of Iraq’s religious minorities, a Gnostic group called the Sabaeans.

“It was like hell in Iraq. Before the collapse of Saddam’s regime, nobody told us we were Sabaean. But after the collapse, the other children would call us infidels and point their fingers. They used to spit in our faces. We complained to our teachers. Our teachers told us, ‘You should be Muslims. You are not supposed to live in this country anymore.’ It got worse. They tried to kidnap me and my brother. They abducted many kids in my neighborhood. They kidnapped a girl I knew and threw her in the river. I was very frightened. We came to Jordan on July 11, 2005.”
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Canada doubles Iraqi refugee quota

20,march,2008
United Press International

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, March 20 (UPI) -- The Canadian government used the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq to announce it will double the number of Iraqi refugees it accepts this year.

Canadian Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley made the announcement Wednesday in Vancouver, British Columbia, where she said Canada will accept 1,800-2,000 refugees in 2008, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., reported.
Previously, the country was accepting about 900 displaced Iraqis each year, Finley said.

She said the majority of Iraqis have been arriving in Canada from Syria and Jordan. New refugees will be proposed through private sponsorships and by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, the report said.

Canada's resettlement target for the entire Middle East was also increased by more than 50 percent for 2008 to 3,300 people, Finley said.

UNHCR Representative Abraham Abraham, said Canada takes in 10,000 to 12,000 refugees from 70 difference countries every year, which is about 10 percent of all refugees resettled globally.
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Schizophrenic refugee cleared of wife's murder

20.march,2008
ABC

A Sudanese refugee who admitted killing his wife at their Newcastle home, in the New South Wales Hunter region, has been found not guilty of her murder on the grounds of mental illness.The 43-year-old man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, hit his 40-year-old wife on the head with a hammer and a pipe in July 2006.

The couple's one-year-old daughter was found lying next to her with blood on her clothes.

The woman was taken to hospital but died.

The man later handed himself in to police. He said he had been told in a dream to kill his wife or she would kill him.

Justice Graham Barr accepted the man was suffering from schizophrenia. He said the man's delusional belief robbed him of the ability to know what he was doing was wrong.

The judge ordered that the man be detained in the psychiatric ward of the Long Bay Prison hospital until his case is assessed by the Mental Health Review Tribunal.
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Poland plans to send more troops to Afghanistan

19,march,2008
Reuters

WARSAW,The Polish government said on Wednesday it planned to send 400 more troops and eight helicopters to strengthen NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Poland, the biggest ex-communist NATO member, has so far contributed about 1,200 troops to the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) fighting the Taliban and backing the Kabul government.

"It was proposed that the (Polish) force will reach 1,600 soldiers and military personnel," the government said in a statement after a cabinet meeting.
Polish troops are scattered across Afghanistan and in return for boosting troops numbers, Warsaw wants its entire contingent to be based in one province, saying it will raise the effectiveness of the force.

The United States is heading a campaign, ahead of an April NATO summit in Bucharest, for what it calls a fairer sharing of the burden in the fight against Taliban insurgents. Poland, along with Britain, Canada and others supported the campaign.

The final say on whether the troops will go lies now with President Lech Kaczynski, supreme commander of Polish armed forces. (Reporting by Patryk Wasilewski)
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Same game, new rules in Afghanistan

Mar 21, 2008
atimes
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

KARACHI - After more than six years, coalition forces in Afghanistan are preparing for an all-out offensive against the Taliban centered on their safe havens straddling the border with Pakistan.

This, allied with intensive North Atlantic Treaty Organization and US operations already this year, has led to much speculation on whether the Taliban will launch their annual spring offensive, with even senior NATO officials suggesting the Taliban will instead bunker down in a war of attrition, much as they did during a rough phase in 2004.

This will not be the case, according to Asia Times Online's interaction with Taliban guerrillas over the past few weeks.
But instead of taking on foreign forces in direct battle in the traditional hot spots, the Taliban plan to open new fronts as they are aware they cannot win head-on against the might of the US-led war machine.

The efforts of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and its 47,000 soldiers from nearly 40 nations will focus on specific areas that include the Bajaur and Mohmand tribal agencies in Pakistan, as well as South and North Waziristan in that country, and Nooristan, Kunar, Paktia, Paktika and Khost provinces in Afghanistan. The ISAF is complemented by the separate US-led coalition of about 20,000, the majority being US soldiers. This does not include a contingent of 3,600 US Marine Corps who this week started arriving in southern Afghanistan. They will work under the command of the ISAF.

For their part, the Taliban, according to Asia Times Online contacts, will open new fronts in Khyber Agency in Pakistan and Nangarhar province in east Afghanistan and its capital Jalalabad.

This move follows a meeting of important Taliban commanders of Pakistani and Afghan origin held for the first time in the Tera Valley bordering the Tora Bora mountains in Afghanistan. (Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders famously evaded US-led forces in the Tora Bora soon after the invasion in 2001.)

Pakistan's Khyber Agency has never been a part of the Taliban's domain. The majority of the population there follows the Brelvi school of thought, which is bitterly opposed to the hardline Taliban and the Salafi brand of Islam. The adjacent Afghan province of Nangarhar has also been a relatively peaceful area.

Conversely, the historic belt starting from Peshawar in North-West Frontier Province and running through Khyber Agency to Nangarhar is NATO's life line - 80% of its supplies pass through it. From Nangarhar, the capital Kabul is only six hours away by road.

Over the past year, the Taliban have worked hard at winning over the population in this region and have installed a new commander, Ustad Yasir, to open up the front in Nangarhar.

New dimensions to the Afghan struggle
After seven years of the "war on terror" and the Iraqi experience, both "sides" have become more pragmatic. Slogans such as "shock and awe", "crusade" against Islamic extremism and "intifada" catch the headlines, but they are not getting the job done. Both sides have refined their approach aimed at achieving specific goals and targets. If NATO has acquired excellent knowledge of the Taliban's network, the Taliban and al-Qaeda have also excelled in gathering information on NATO and its allies.

Al-Qaeda has evolved from an organization that generally only allowed in Arabs and its ideology now accommodates indigenous factors. Today, Pakistani non-Pashtuns, popularly known as Punjabis, are the Pakistani franchise of al-Qaeda. They receive macro policies from the al-Qaeda shura (council) comprising Arabs, but are independent in the implementation of these policies - although an Arab in still in overall charge.

The same goes in Iraq, where al-Qaeda is now a local organization with its hub spread between Mosul, Diyala and Baquba.

At the same time, the "war on terror" extends beyond US-British dominance. Although there are several disagreements at the operation level within NATO in Afghanistan, some partners, such as France, cognizant of the revival of the enemy's strength, have greatly enhanced their input into intelligence resources.

French intelligence is directly involved in fresh moves to track the most wanted targets, including Taliban commander Sirajuddin Haqqani, Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, chief of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Tahir Yaldeshiv, besides bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri.

New funds have been allocated for clandestine operations by French intelligence in Pakistan's North and South Waziristan regions, as well as in Balochistan province, to track high-profile targets with the aim of assassinating them. This is being done in coordination with NATO forces in Afghanistan.

According to Asia Times Online investigations, French intelligence has infiltrated a network of donors who had been arranging money for the Iraqi resistance and the Taliban.

Underlying these efforts is the belief that the war cannot be won through the use of naked violence alone. The militant camps have reached a similar conclusion: their actions now are much more nuanced and calibrated and they realize there will be no quick victory.

A smooth supply of money and arms from various sources as well as thousands of new recruits have rejuvenated their cause and allowed the militants to better plan their operations and carefully select their targets. They have established good rapport within the security forces at an individual level and use these contacts whenever it is essential.

Italian job
Last weekend's attack on an Italian restaurant in the Pakistani capital Islamabad shows how deeply al-Qaeda has made inroads into the Pakistani security agencies and as a result is receiving first-hand information.

The al-Qaeda attack injured, through a time bomb, four US Federal Bureau of Investigation agents, including a senior official of counter-terrorism coordination with the Pakistani Special Intelligence Agency.

The restaurant is co-owned by an Italian woman who is the wife of a man believed to be the main financial backer of anti-Taliban Shi'ites in the northern areas of Pakistan.

More such attacks are expected.
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Longer Afghan missions eyed

20,march,2008
The Star

MacKay says extending 6-month stints possible as manpower shortages hamper Afghan mission

OTTAWA–Longer deployments for Canadian troops in Kandahar – perhaps as long as a year – are being considered as the military struggles to meet the manpower demands of a mission that has been extended by two years.

Defence Minister Peter MacKay said yesterday from Kandahar he is not ruling it out, but added the decision rests with senior commanders.

"I rely very heavily on the military assessment of that," MacKay said yesterday as he wrapped up his visit. "We're not ruling anything out, but of course these are operational decisions where I'll take that up with the chief of defence staff."

Retired general Lewis MacKenzie said the forces could have to introduce longer deployments to meet the demands of keeping 2,500 soldiers in Afghanistan at a time, through to 2011.

"It's a matter of resources. ... I think they're going to have to look at it," MacKenzie said yesterday. "It's a pretty frequent subject of discussion because they are facing the dilemma of just not enough troops."

MacKenzie said the army has an effective infantry corps of about 5,000, once leaves, injuries and other absences are accounted for.

Out of Canada's 2,500 soldiers in Afghanistan at a time, typically 800 to 1,000 are front-line infantry corps.

MacKenzie said the force should consider deployments of nine months, even a year.

Front-line Canadian troops now serve a six-month rotation with typically a three-week vacation; headquarters staff are sent for between nine months and a year.

Senior U.S. commanders have said the six-month rotations could be an impediment to NATO success in Afghanistan.

American soldiers serve 15-month deployments, though the Pentagon is reducing that to 12 months to ease the strain on overburdened soldiers.

"What does 15 months mean? The American soldier ... develops a relationship with the terrain, with the indigenous people and their leadership, and with the enemy. And they have sufficient time to exploit that relationship to their advantage," said top NATO commander Gen. Dan McNeill, an American.

Each new Canadian deployment is accompanied by a period of "instability" as the new troops get used to the local geography and dangers, said Brian MacDonald of the Conference of Defence Associations.

"If it takes them one month to do that, then you have one month at less than 100 per cent effectiveness followed by five months of effectiveness," he said.

"If you're able to do a nine-month rotation, you have one month of stability followed by eight months of solid performance."

MacDonald said extending deployments was a "logical move." But the other side of the argument is the effect on soldiers' morale, as well as their physical and mental health if they spend too long in the conflict zone.

"You always have a trade-off between troop exhaustion if you go beyond six months," said Kenneth Calder, a deputy minister of defence from 1991 to 2006.

Fears that the Canadian Forces might be stretched too thin were bolstered with the statistic that one in five soldiers being deployed to Kandahar was a reservist.

MacDonald said that figure has jumped to between 25 per cent and 30 per cent with the most recent deployment. Part-time soldiers leave the military at a higher rate than professional soldiers, taking with them valuable training and experience.

A year ago, Gen. Rick Hillier, the chief of defence staff, said the six-month tour lengths are "about right."

But MacKenzie said the rotation lengths are a holdover from United Nations peacekeeping missions.

"Everybody that did a lot of peacekeeping got into this routine of six-month rotations, which is really quite inefficient when it comes to an operational theatre," he said.

The Canadian military has made it no secret that the prolonged Afghan mission, already extended once by two years, is straining its resources.

For example, it has been deploying sailors and air force personnel to Afghanistan to help bolster the ground forces.

And it has meant that the pledge by then-defence minister Gordon O'Connor to limit combat troops to one deployment in Afghanistan to avoid wearing them out has gone out the window as well.

Canada's latest casualty – Sgt. Jason Boyes, killed in a bomb blast on Sunday – was on his third tour in Afghanistan.

"You just can't sustain that for very long," MacKenzie said about the repeat tours.

He said the idea of longer deployment has surprising support among families, despite the hardship of the longer absences.

Some families say the current practice of having a soldier return home on vacation in the middle of a tour can bring its own troubles.

"They said it's really disruptive. He's gone for a month, then he comes home and then he goes back again. It disrupts life at home," MacKenzie said.

Longer deployments would mean a greater financial reward, since troops enjoy generous tax benefits for the time they are deployed.

But the change would upset the whole cycle of the military in Canada, meaning significant changes to things like training schedules, post-deployment postings and career courses.

"It would not be impossible, but it would certainly be challenging," MacKenzie said.
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U.S. officer says he nearly ordered execution of Khadr in Afghanistan

19,march,2008
The Canadian Press

WASHINGTON — A U.S. Army officer was going to have Canadian Omar Khadr executed after a July 2002 firefight in Afghanistan but was stopped at the last moment by Special Forces troops, according to a diary account.

The witness excerpt, contained in legal briefs released Wednesday by the U.S. Defence Department, confirmed that a second terror suspect was alive when the grenade that killed Sgt. Christopher Speer was thrown.

Khadr, 21, is being held in Guantanamo Bay, charged with murdering Speer. The U.S. government has maintained he was the only one who could have done it because all the other combatants were dead.Not so, said the officer, who described an American soldier having Khadr in his sights "point blank."

"I was about to tap (identity blacked out) on his back to tell him to kill him but the SF guys stopped us and told us not to."

The officer also described the death of the other al-Qaida fighter.

"I remember looking over my right shoulder and seeing (redacted) just waste the guy who was still alive. He was shooting him with controlled pairs," or rapid execution-style firing.

Last month, another witness identified only as OC-1 provided the first testimony in a mistakenly released document that there was a second fighter alive.

The soldier said he killed the fighter before spotting Khadr, who was slumped against a wall facing away from him. He said he shot Khadr twice in the back.

The Pentagon has said American soldiers fired on Khadr in self-defence.

Khadr, who was 15 years old at the time, had two huge exit wounds in his upper left chest.

"(He's) missing a piece of his chest and I can see his heart beating," wrote one officer included in a legal motion.

Defence lawyer Lt.-Cmdr. William Kuebler related that Khadr's wounds "were infected, swollen and still seeping blood nearly seven months after the firefight."

He was still being treated in hospital 10 months later, said Kuebler, adding the circumstances of Khadr's capture and the death of the other fighter may constitute war crimes.

The events could have provided U.S. soldiers with the motive to alter details to protect themselves, he wrote.

Kuebler alleges that an original report on the firefight written a day later by the commander for the Khost region of eastern Afghanistan, identified only as Lt.-Col. W, said the person who threw the grenade that killed Speer also died.

It was later doctored to say Speer's attacker was "engaged" by U.S. forces, in a bid to make Khadr look guilty, said Kuebler - a charge the military denies.

The prosecution acknowledges a memo was updated, but simply to "accurately reflect a fact known to all parties ... that contrary to what was initially believed to be the case, the accused survived his injuries in large part due to the medical attention provided by U.S. medics on July 27, 2002."

In an interview, Kuebler said it's time the Canadian government take action on getting Khadr home because the prosecution's case is getting weaker all the time.

"We have another account that says it was a myth that Khadr alone was alive," said Kuebler.

The defence contends Khadr was abused so badly and in and such terrible medical shape that any damaging statements he made during early interrogations shouldn't be considered.

His chief interrogator for three months at the U.S. facility in Bagram, Afghanistan, identified as Sgt. Joshua Claus, has been given immunity from prosecution for any possible abuse of Khadr in return for his testimony at the Canadian's upcoming murder trial.

Claus was court-martialled and discharged from the army after another badly beaten prisoner at Bagram died in December 2002.

"We think Khadr's been mistreated in a variety of ways," said Kuebler. "However you characterize it, it was illegal."

In an affidavit released earlier this week, Khadr said he was forced to confess to placate interrogators who shackled him for hours, dropped him and threatened him with rape.

Canadian officials who later visited him in Guantanamo told him he was lying about being innocent and said there was nothing they could do for him, said Khadr.
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Cheney: Afghanistan needs NATO help

20,March, 2008
By DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press

Vice President Dick Cheney on Thursday called the U.S. commitment to Afghanistan "firm and unshakable" and said members of NATO need to step up their commitment to help it continue to rebound from years of tyranny and war.

Problems in Afghanistan will be a key topic at the NATO summit early next month in Romania. NATO's force is about 43,000-strong, but commanders seek more combat troops for areas in southern Afghanistan where Taliban and al-Qaida fighters are the most active.

"America will ask our NATO allies for an even stronger commitment for the future," Cheney said, standing alongside Afghan President Hamid Karzai at his heavily guarded presidential palace.
Cheney, who is on a 10-day overseas trip, also said that neighboring Pakistan, like other sovereign nations, has an obligation to control its territory and ensure that it's not a sanctuary for insurgents and terrorists.

"They have as big a stake as anyone else in dealing with the threat that sometimes emerges from those areas along the border," Cheney said during a visit that was not announced in advance.

He said he has no reason to doubt Pakistan's commitment to dealing with problems emerging from the border area if terror groups are allowed to operate there because the Pakistani government itself is a target for the al-Qaida and extremists.

"You've seen a number of devastating attacks against the people and government of Pakistan, including of course the tragic assassination of former Prime Minister (Benazir) Bhutto," he said.

Cheney flew from Oman to the Afghan capital, then took a helicopter to the dusty presidential compound where he greeted Karzai with a hearty handshake. The two strolled down a deep red carpet, reviewing troops before heading inside for their talks.

"During the last six years, the people of Afghanistan have made a bold and confident journey, throwing off the burden of tyranny, winning your freedom and reclaiming your future," he said. "The process has been difficult, but the courage of the nation has been unwavering. The United States of America has proudly walked with you on this journey, and we walk with you still."

Cheney advisers said the vice president would urge Karzai to continue to work with Pakistan, in the wake of its recent elections, and stay focused on the problems of extremists and terrorists moving back and forth across the Afghan-Pakistan border, using the mountainous region as a safe place to plot attacks.

The vice president also was to push Karzai to take steps to extend Afghanistan's governance beyond Kabul and conduct successful elections next year. The discussion also was to address ways the Afghan government can curb corruption and deal with rising production of poppies, which are used to make narcotic drugs that fund insurgent operations.

More than 8,000 people died in Afghanistan last year, making it the most violent year since 2001 when the U.S. invaded Afghanistan to oust the hardline Taliban regime after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Karzai hailed progress in improving security forces, saying the Afghan army is getting stronger "day by day," but added that international support will be needed for years to come. "Some day, Afghanistan will be fully in charge of the security of this country," Karzai said. "That is not going to be anytime soon."

He stressed progress in rebuilding. "We have taken significant steps - from not having even one kilometer of a paved road, now we have more than 3,000 kilometers of paved highways and other roads," he said. "Go to schools, go to hospitals, go to lots of other reconstruction activities in the rebuilding of Afghanistan. ... So thanks to you, the international community, for having giving us all of that. Please continue."
Troops from Canada, Britain, the Netherlands and the United States have done the majority of the fighting against Taliban militants. France, Spain, Germany and Italy are stationed in more peaceful parts of the country.

Canada, which has 2,500 troops in Kandahar province, recently threatened to end its combat role unless other NATO countries provide an additional 1,000 troops to help the anti-Taliban effort there. Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay said he expected a pledge for troops before or during the summit April 2-4 in Bucharest, Romania.

The U.S. contributes one-third of the NATO force, and also has about 12,000 other U.S. troops operating independently from NATO. The Pentagon says that by late summer, there will be about 32,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan - up from about 28,000 now.

The bulk of the increase is the 3,200 Marines that President Bush has agreed to send. About 2,300 troops of the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, have begun arriving at their new base in Kandahar, the Taliban's former power base.

After the news conference with Karzai, the vice president took a 20-minute helicopter ride to Bagram Air Base, encircled by rugged brown terrain turning green with the season. Spring is the start of the fighting season, which is determined by weather.

At the base, Cheney received a classified briefing, awarded medals to five troops and witnessed the re-enlistment of six others. He also enjoyed a prime rib dinner. Troops at the base said it was not a special menu for the vice president, but that it was a special day: the Afghan new year.
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Bamyan (the place of shining light)

From BAMYAN OFFICIAL WEBSITE

Afghanistan and the history of Bamiyan:

Afghanistan‘s history can be traced back to when the land was once called “Ariana”.

Afghanistan was influenced by different cultures and civilizations. Situated at a crossroad of civilizations, Afghanistan’s unique culture was born from a mixture of indigenous and foreign elements.



Bamiyan means “the place of shining light”. The rolling hills of the Bamiyan valley are lined in variegated colors. The central valley of Bamiyan is located at 2,500 meters above sea level. Two rivers flow into the valley from sources in the Kuhe-e-Baba: The Kakrak River to the east, and the Foladi River to the west. The principle archaeological sites are located in the long east-west central valley of Bamiyan and in the Kakrak and Foladi river valleys.



Bamiyan’s central cultural monuments were the two Buddha statues carved at the eastern and western ends of a high cliff facing the central valley. Some thousand caves are also cut into the cliff face and decorated with a rich variety of murals. The Buddhist art of Bamiyan, which enjoyed a renaissance in central Afghanistan after the collapse of the earlier Gandharan culture, spread to and influenced various countries along the Silk Road.
Cultural and Archaeological Values of Bamiyan:

The Cultural Landscape and Archaeological Remains of the Bamiyan Valley was inscribed on the “List of World Heritage in Danger” and the World Heritage List at the 27th session of the World Heritage Committee in 2003. The property is in a fragile state of conservation having suffered from neglect, military action, and dynamite explosions. In 2003, the major dangers included: risk of imminent collapse of the Buddha niches with the remaining fragments of the statues, further deterioration of still existing mural paintings in the caves, looting and illicit excavation.





4-7th centuries , Bamyuan seen by Xuan Zang

The name Bamyan first appeared in historical records around the late 4th century . The first detailed description of the region did not appear until around the year 630 , when a Chinese monk named Xuan Zang visited Bamyan for about 15 days , on this way to India , In this travel record ,Da Tang Xi Yu Ji he mentions the kingdom "is situated in the midst of the Snowy Mountains . The people inhabit towns either in the mountains or the valleys , according to circumstances ."The description reveals that the people of Bamyan probably loved in caves dug into the cliffs . Xuan Zanf also mentioned that the Bamyan kingdom "produces wheat and few flowers of fruits . Its suitable for cattle ,and affords pasture for many sheep and horses ." Thus , by the seventh century , the landscape of Bamyan consisted of thousands of caves dug into the Great Cliff and large grain field in the flat land below.

Two statues of Buddha were also reported in details in Xuan Zanag's , Da Tang Xi Yu Ji . He notes that the West Buddha's "golden hues sparkle in every side , and its precious ornaments dazzle the eyes by their brightness ." This indicates that the statues of Buddha were lavishly decorated .Furthermore , Xuan Zang's description mentioned that there were 50 to 60 Buddhist temples with several thousand monks. When hs visited Bamyan in the early seventh century , Bamyan was at its speak as a Buddhist religious center, with the sratues of Buddha and numerous cave-temples.

Xuan Zang also wrotes that "the people remain faithful to the three Treasures (Buddha , law and Priesthood ) at the top , down to various gods and respect them most sincerely ", which suggests that different religions besides Buddhism were also practiced in Bamyan . When Xuan Zang visited Bamyan the area was very prosperous as a transportation crossroad , connecting many different areas of Afghanistan and beyond.



8-13 Centuries in Bamyan

Between the 8-9th centuries :

The Islamic period

In the early eight century , the Silla monk Hui Chao visited Bamyan , and described it as an area where Buddhism flourished . At the same time , he wrote that the area was not subject to any other countries and not been invaded , thanks to Bamyan's strong army . Not long after Hui Chao left Bamyan , however , the king of Bamyan surrendered to the abbasid caliphate . After this time Islam gradually spread over . The latest scientific analysis has revealed that some of the Buddhist mural paintings of Bamyan date back to the early fifth century . At least until this period , Buddhism , Islam and other religions coexisted in the region . During the late ninth century , the Saffarid dynasty (861-910) demolished many Buddhist temples and statues and statues / From that time, Buddhist cultural in bamyan gradually declined.

After the Saffarid period , Bamyan was ruled by various Islamic dynasties including the Samanids , the Ghaznavids and the Ghurids . According to the Arabic and Persian historical texts , Bamyan remained a major city with a fortress under Islamic rule. The prosperity of Bamyan came to an end in 1221 when the Mongol armies , lead by Chinggis Khan invaded . During the battle in Bamyan , the Mongols destroyed the strong fortress completely . The ruins of the fortress are now known as shahr-I Gholghola . After the Mongol destruction of the fortress , Bamyan rarely appeared in historical texts until the 198th century


19-20centuries

In the 19th century , Bamyan reappeares in the historical record . Many expeditions entered the region . In the early 19th Century . Alexendar Burnes and Charles Masson visited Bamyan and sketched the statues of Buddha . In the late 19th century based in Xuan Zang's Da Tang Xi Yu Ji scholars such as Talbot ,Simpson , and Mailtland investigated the Bamyan area.

In the early 20th century , the Delegation Archeologique Francaise en Afghanistan DAFA began the first full-scale archaeological investigation of Bamyan.

Under the supervision of Alfred Foucher , Andre Godard and Josef Hackin , DAFA researched the mural painting and architecture of Bamyan in great detail , and published two comprehensive reports and several articles.

In the late 20th century , Japanese teams from Nagoya ,Kyoto and Seijo Universities visited the area with Zemaryalai Tarzi of the Institute of Archaeology in Afghanistan . In addition to archaeological and art history investigations ,conservation and restoration of the Bamyan site was carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India.

Owing to such long-term international investigations and research , Bamyan became known as the crossroad of civilizations from India, Persia and Central Asia. After 1979 , the country descended into a state of the war , which contributed to preventing further academic research at the site . In 1997 , the Taliban regime took over the Bamyan valley and threatened to demolish the site.


2001 t0 the Present in Bamyan

The demolishment and the illegal exportation of cultural heritage

In march 2001 , the eyes of the world were on Bamyan as the Taliban dynamited its monumental Buddha statues. They were destroyed following decree proclaimed by Mullah Omar in February 2001 ordering the destruction of all non-Islamic statues and tombs considered offensive to Islam.

When Mullah Omar announced this decree ,UNESCO immediately issued appeals to Taliban leaders through the international press , exhorting them to preserve Afghan cultural heritage . The Director- General addressed a personal letter to the Taliban leader on 28 February . He also obtained the full support of many Islamic countries for UNESCO's activities to save the Afghan cultural heritage.

On 1 march a Special Representative of the Director –General left for Islamabad ,Kandahar ,Kabul , the united Arab emirates , Qatar and Saudi Arabia . A number of Muslim religious leaders from Egypt ,Iraq and Pakistan intervened at the request of UNESCO , issuing "fatwas" against the Taliban's order. The Director-General personally contacted the Presidents of the Egypt and Pakistan ,as well as of the Organization of the Islamic Conference , all of whom tried to use the Taliban to cancel the order.

Following these interventions , a delegation of 11 international Muslim leaders went to Kandahar to try convince the Taliban that the Koran does not prescribe the destruction of statues . Nevertheless , all these political and religious interventions proved to be in vain , and the Taliban destroyed not only the statues of Buddha at Bamyan , but also a large number of statues throughout Afghanistan.

After the destruction , in December 2001 , an international conference of "Ulema" , Islamic religious leaders , was jointly organized by UNESCO . The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) , The Islamic Scientific ,Educational and Cultural Organization (ISESCO) and the Arab League Educational , Scientific and Cultural Organization (ALESCO) , to examine the position of the Muslim world towards the preservation of Islamic and non Islamic heritage. This conference resulted in a clear declaration of principles in favor of the protection of cultural heritage, including statues , that can be appealed to in the future.



UNESCO Safeguarding Project-1:

UNESCO responds firmly to the challenge of rehabilitating Afghanistan’s endangered cultural heritage. The safeguarding of all aspects of cultural heritage, both tangible and intangible, including museums, monuments, archaeological sites, music, art, and traditional crafts, is of particular significance in terms of strengthening cultural identity and a sense of national integrity.

Entrusted by the Afghan Government to coordinate all international efforts aiming to safeguard Afghanistan’s cultural heritage, the organization established an International Coordination Committee (ICC) in 2003. Chaired by the Afghan Minister of Information and Culture, it consists of Afghan and international specialists. The aim is to raise funds and to issue concrete recommendations to allow the efficient coordination of actions to safeguard Afghanistan’s heritage to the highest international standards in key areas, such as the development of a long-term strategy, capacity building, the implementation of the Conventions for World Heritage, and Preventing the illicit Traffic of Cultural Property, national inventories and documentation, as well as the rehabilitation of the National Museum in Kabul, and the safeguarding of the sites of Jam, Herat and Bamiyan.

Much Discussion has taken place in Afghanistan and all over the world about the future of this site, revolving around the question of whether the two statues of Buddha should be reconstructed. The 107 Participants at the First International Seminar on the Rehabilitation of Afghanistan’s Cultural Heritage, organized by UNESCO in March 2002, as well as the ICC, clearly recognized that the first emergency priority is to stabilize the cliff face with its niches and caves. Noting that the decision whether to engage in the reconstruction of the Buddha statues is a matter to be settled by the government and people of Afghanistan, it was agreed that reconstruction is not a priority as long as humanitarian aid for the Afghan people is urgently needed. Furthermore, it was emphasized that the authenticity, integrity, and historical importance of this great site need to be memorialized in an appropriate way, and that reconstruction of the statues therefore requires further careful consideration.

The Preservation of the Bamiyan site is one of the most important UNESCO projects in Afghanistan, for which more that $1.8 million have been generously donated by the Government of Japan. The following activities have been undertaken within this project.


UNESCO Safeguarding Project-II


Preparation of Preliminary Master Plan:

It was considered essential to develop a Master Plan to ensure the overall preservation of this large site. National Research Institute for Cultural Properties , Tokyo (NRICP), has carried out archaeological soundings and explorations of the Bamiyan valley and its surroundings in order to specify the archaeological zone and the cultural area to be protected from settlements, agriculture and town development and so on. As a next step, it is essential to develop the Master Plan on the bases of NRICP’s input and in incorporating it into national legislation. The German University of Aachen cooperates in this field under funding provided by the Government of Germany through ICOMOS.



Preservation of Mural Paintings:

Professors Akira Miayaji and Kosaku Maeda, who made the full inventory of these important Buddhist paintings in the 1970s, participated in the preparation mission in October 2002. Their analysis was that 80 to 85 of the paintings have disappeared during the war, through neglect, theft, and voluntary destruction. NRICP has documented and recorded the remaining mural paintings in the Buddhist caves. All fragments of paintings scattered on the floors have been collected, inventoried, and conserved. The access to 25 selected important caves has been banned and the caves closed with walls and locked doors. Armed guards have been hired to protect the site. It is important to note that since these measures were taken no further thefts took place. Further analyses of the fragments are required to develop a plan for their long-term conservation.


Consolidation of Cliffs and Niches:

Due to the imminent risk of collapse of the upper Eastern part of the small Buddha niche and the overall instability of both niches, the consolidation of the cliffs and niches was a priority task, as they shape the general appearance of the site and contain the original staircases and several caves. The backs of the two niches still include remains of the Buddha such as arms and shoulders. No scaffolding could be placed in front of the small Buddha niche, due to the slope and the loose ground. It was therefore decided to work with mountain climbers. In autumn 2003 and spring 2004, the Italian firm RODIO successfully implemented the first phase of emergency consolidation. The emergency stabilization of the remaining areas at both niches now has to be ensured.


Conservation of Fragments:

One particular difficulty in conserving the fragments of the Buddha is the large size of some of the fragments and the steep slope in front of the small Buddha. Two ICOMOS expert missions organized by Aachen University of a total of four months were dispatched to Bamiyan in June and October 2004. A protective shelter for the conservation of the fragments of the large Buddha statue was constructed. The experts started to clear the niches of the fragments and to store them in the shelters. Bearing in mind that the stone material, which holds important information on the history of the Buddha statues, is decaying rapidly it is essential to continue the conservation of fragments during the coming years.


Topographical Map and 3-Dimensional Model of Bamiyan:

The Japanese company PASCO has successfully produced a map and a 3 dimensional relief model of the site. All experts involved in the Bamiyan project appreciated its high quality.


What's the world heritage? World heritage sites are places of outstanding universal value to humanity and are part of the heritage of all humankind. Responsibility for future generations.

As of April 2005, 788 sites have been identified and inscribed on the World Heritage List. They are protected by the cooperative efforts of the international community in the framework provided by an international treaty, the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage , which was adopted by UNESCO in 1972.

The Cultural Landscape of the Bamyan Valley

A cultural landscape is links nature and culture. Cultural landscapes can be included in the World Heritage List when interactions between people and natural environment are evaluated as being of outstanding universal value.

"The cultural landscape and archaeological remains of the Bamyan Valley" represent the artistic and religious developments which from the 1st to the 13th centuries characterized ancient Bactria . Integrating various cultural influences into the Gandhara school of Buddhist art .The area contains numerous Buddhist monastic ensembles and sanctuaries, as well as fortified edifices from the Islamic period.

Protecting of the Bamyan Valley

Undue haste in the pursuit of the development of the valley will result in the irreparable loss of its natural and cultural value. Current efforts to protect the cultural heritage of the valley are of utmost importance for future generations. The valley's protection can be achieved only by the cooperative efforts of all partners concerned , including people living iv Bamyan , with support from the international community.

Justification for Inscription on the World Heritage List

Criterion (i)

The Buddha statues and the cave art in Bamyan Valley are an outstanding representation of the Ganharan school in Buddhist art in the central Asian region.

Criterion (ii)

The artistic and architectural remains of Bamyan Valley , and important Buddhist centre on the Silk Road , are an exceptional testimony to the interchange of Indian , Hellenistic ,Roman, Sasanian influences as the basis for the development of a particular artist expression in the Gandharan school. To this can be added the Islamic influence in a later period.

Criterion (iii)

The Bamyan Valley bears an exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition in the Central Asian region , which has disappeared .

Criterion (iv)

The Bamyan Valley is an outstanding example of a cultural landscape which illustrates a significant period in Buddhism.

Criterion (vi)

The Bamyan Valley is the most monumental expression of the western Buddhism . It was an important centre of pilgrimage over many centuries . Due to their symbolic values , the monuments have suffered at different times of their existence , including the deliberate destruction in 2001 , which shook the whole world.
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