Articles found April 5, 2012
Help for land-mine victims in Kabul
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After three decades of war, Afghanistan is littered with land mines. A nonprofit employs disabled land-mine victims to make demining equipment, and funds rehabilitation clinics.
By Olivia Katrandjian, Contributor, Arthur Nazaryan, Contributor / March 30, 2012
Haroon Hamdard edged toward a suspected explosive device lying in a field in western Afghanistan. His job as a demining worker was to identify such devices and figure out how to render them harmless. But the young worker stumbled. His foot hit a rock that tumbled forward and detonated a small bomb. Mr. Hamdard was left in critical condition, and lost his right arm. He was fitted with a barely functioning prosthetic arm. The married father of one was unemployed for the next six years. Hamdard finally got a job at Spark, a workshop in Kabul funded by a US nonprofit where people who have been disabled by land mines make demining equipment. Sale of the equipment funds rehabilitation clinics, one of which will finally outfit Hamdard with a better prosthetic arm.
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Bin Laden’s relatives sentenced to 45 days in prison
Zarar Khan ISLAMABAD, Pakistan— The Associated Press Monday, Apr. 02, 2012
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Pakistani court on Monday convicted Osama bin Laden's three widows and two of his daughters of illegally entering and living in the country and sentenced them to 45 days in prison, with credit for time served, their lawyer said.
The five women have been in detention since last May when U.S. commandos killed the al-Qaeda chief at the walled three-story compound in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad where he had been living with his family for six years.
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U.S. to Amend Afghan Plane Bid Terms, No Full Re-Do
By REUTERS Published: April 2, 2012
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force said on Monday it would amend, rather than re-do, the terms of a potential $1 billion competition to supply light attack planes to Afghanistan.
Privately held Sierra Nevada Corp and Brazil's Embraer beat out Hawker Beechcraft to win the deal in December. But the Air Force canceled the initial contract award, valued at $355 million, when it discovered an error while preparing for a lawsuit filed by Hawker, challenging the decision in federal claims court.
The service gave no details of any proposed changes.
Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Wesley Miller said the service was still working out details, but expected to release the amendment this month. He added that a separate investigation into the acquisition process was ongoing.
Only Sierra Nevada and its rival for the contract, Hawker Beechcraft, would be allowed to submit bids, he said.
The Air Force last month abruptly terminated the contract with Sierra Nevada for 20 Super Tucano light attack planes, after it discovered inadequate documentation for the award while preparing for the Hawker lawsuit.
The service announced on March 23 that it was extending an investigation into the contracting error.
The incident has been big news in Brazil, where government officials were caught off guard by Washington's cancellation of the plane order. The issue may come up when Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff visits Washington next week.
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NATO denies accelerating Afghanistan troop withdrawal
AFPAFP – Mon, 2 Apr, 2012
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NATO's chief denied on Monday that the alliance was speeding up the withdrawal of combat troops from Afghanistan as he sought to clear up "confusion" over the pullout planned for the end of 2014.
Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen insisted that NATO was sticking to the timeline agreed at the Lisbon summit in November 2010 after recent comments from Western and Afghan officials indicated that 2013 was a new target.
"There is nothing new in all this but maybe it is necessary to clarify these timelines because sometimes they are mixed up in a way that creates some confusion," Rasmussen told a news conference.
"We will stick ot the Lisbon roadmap and complete transition by the end of 2014," he said.
Rasmussen explained that to complete the transition of security responsibility to Afghan forces nationwide by the end of 2014, control of the last provinces must be handed over in the middle or the second half of 2013.
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New Afghan envoy mounts charm offensive
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Ambassador admits he is facing an uphill battle to maintain Canadian interest
By JEFF DAVIS, Postmedia News April 3, 2012
After more than a decade of development donations, Barna Karimi, the newly arrived Afghan Ambassador to Canada, holds no illusions about Canada's declining interest in - and cash flow for - Afghanistan.
"Donor-recipient relationships always end," Karimi said. "After any donor honeymoon in a society, a donor fatigue comes."
Afghans are looking forward to a day not so far in the future, Karimi said, when the two countries will meet on even ground, as international peers.
"There will be a time when we will be standing up on our feet, and our relationship will be beneficial for both countries," he said.
But that day is not here yet, and the 38-year-old ambassador said he understands he will have to fight an uphill battle to maintain Canada's interest in, and financial commitment to, Afghanistan.
With Canada's war weariness in mind, Karimi said, Afghan President Hamid Karzai instructed him to mount a charm offensive.
He said he was chosen for his skills in public relations, and directed to boost support for Afghanistan's continuing journey toward full statehood.
"(Karzai) very clearly instructed me to improve ... the image of Afghanistan among the Canadian public and media," he said.
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Leaving Afghanistan to the bad guys
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April 04, 2012
Overnight in Afghanistan a new man was appointed to run the province of Oruzgan, where Australia’s soldiers are based: Amir Muhammad Akhundzada.
It is the one part of the country for which we are most responsible and Amir Muhammed Akhundzada is its new governor.
This is a man who, when he was a deputy governor in a neighbouring province, the British government got rid of. Why? Because of his links to drug traffickers.
His last boss, a minister in president Karzai’s government, used to have a torture chamber in the basement of his house, and the Canadian government refused to work with him.
Now Amir Muhammad Akhundzada is the most senior government official, to whom we will hand over the pointy end of Australia’s military and aid effort in a year or two. By the way, this man was also blocked from running in Afghan elections because of his links to the drug trade, which is, of course, what funds the Taliban.
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Three NATO troops killed in one day in Afghanistan
AFPAFP – Wed, 4 Apr, 2012
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Three international troops were killed in separate insurgency incidents in Afghanistan in one day, the NATO-led coalition force said.
The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said one service member was killed by an improvised explosive device in the south of the country, one by a similar blast in the east and one by an insurgent attack in the east.
All three incidents happened on Tuesday, with the last statement released on Wednesday. They did not give further details.
"It is ISAF policy to defer casualty identification procedures to the relevant national authorities," each statement said.
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Canadian embassy hosts blood drive in Kabul
Sunday, 01 April 2012
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KABUL – (Apr. 1)
Wakht News Agency
Canadian embassy to Kabul hosted the first-ever blood drive, benefiting Afghans, the embassy said, calling the drive as a great success which resulted in 100 units of blood donated to help Afghan people.
“Volunteers from various communities and VIPs including Afghan public health minister, Sorayya Dalil and Canada’s charge de affairs, Shelley Whiting took part in the drive to support Afghan blood bank,” the embassy said in a statement.
“Donating blood is very safe and takes less than 20 minutes,” charge de affairs Whiting was quoted by the statement as saying. “It is also a tangible way in which Canadians, Afghans and the international community can reach out a helping hand.”
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