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[Denver Post]
http://tinyurl.com/idad
Jul 28, 9:56 PM EDT
Afghan Warlords Threatening Vote
By TODD PITMAN
Associated Press Writer
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Warlords are creating "a climate of fear"
in Afghanistan that is threatening efforts to draft a new constitution and
could derail national elections expected next year, a human rights group
said.
In a report released Monday night, Human Rights Watch accused soldiers and
police loyal to powerful warlords - many of whom are in the government - of
kidnapping, extortion, robbery and the rape of women, girls and boys. The New
York-based group also detailed numerous death threats against Afghan
journalists and low-level politicians who criticized authorities.
"If allowed to continue with impunity, these abuses will make it
impossible for Afghans to create a modern, democratic state," the group
said.
President Hamid Karzai's administration has been struggling to rebuild this
war-shattered country and extend the central government's authority beyond
Kabul, the capital. Most of Afghanistan is controlled by warlords who rule as
they see fit and have private armies of their own.
Most of those now in power were backed by the United States and its allies in
the war that toppled the Taliban in late 2001 and many still work as allies
alongside American troops now in the country.
Karzai appointed many of the warlords as governors because they already
controlled areas in the lawless wake of the Taliban's collapse.
His government is supposed to draft a new constitution in October and
government officials are traveling through the countryside to solicit public
views on what the charter should contain. National elections to choose a new
head of state are scheduled for next June.
Presidential spokesman Jawid Luddin said both processes are on track and the
government is doing all it can to cut down on rights abuses. He said it is a
difficult job in a country where few members of security forces have received
training on respecting human rights.
"It's obviously a gigantic task. We still have a long way to go, but
we're
moving forward to the extent it's possible for the government," Jawid
said.
The U.S. military command at Bagram air base north of Kabul did not respond to
an e-mail request seeking comment on the Human Rights Watch report.
Most abuses detailed in the 101-page report were "ordered, committed or
condoned by government personnel in Afghanistan - soldiers, police, military
and intelligence officials and government ministers," the rights group
said.
Testimony from victims and witnesses implicated soldiers and police serving
senior officials, including Defense Minister Mohammed Fahim, Education
Minister Yunus Qanooni, former President Burhanuddin Rabbani and Abdul Rasul
Sayyaf, a powerful former leader of guerrillas who fought against the Soviet
occupation in the 1980s.
The report also details abuses against women and girls and says threats,
violence, political intimidation, attacks and "resurgent religious
fundamentalism" are keeping countless women indoors or out of work and
millions of girls out of school.
The report focuses on southeastern Afghanistan and documents abuses it says
were committed "in virtually every district" in the region in the
first six months of this year.
The group said it previously documented similar violations in Kandahar in the
south, Mazar-e-Sharif in the north and Herat in the west, each
controlled by powerful warlords nominally working with the government.
Human Rights Watch called for increasing the 5,000-soldier international
peacekeeping force and extending its area of operation outside Kabul, a move
few - if any - foreign powers support.
At the same time, the group urged Karzai's government to "sideline and
pressure abusive leaders" who it said have "essentially hijacked the
country."
Brad Adams, executive director of the Asia division of Human Rights Watch,
said the overall human rights situation appeared to be worsening, in part
because of U.S. and other allied support for warlords.
"External support for warlords is destabilizing Afghanistan," Adams
said. "The United States and the United Kingdom, in particular, need to
decide whether they are with President Karzai and other reformers in Kabul or
with the warlords. The longer they wait, the more difficult it will be to
loosen the warlords' grip on power."