News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News
News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News


 

 

 





 


 


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  • September 2, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    The All-Time 10 Worst Military Contracting Boondoggles
    Mother Jones: After three years, the bipartisan Commission on Wartime Contracting completed its business this week. In its final report to Congress (PDF), it estimates that the federal government has lost between 31 and 60 billion USD to contractor fraud and waste since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq started.      Full news...

  • August 31, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan Local Police Defect Over Pay
    IWPR: A local policing venture in Afghanistan’s northeastern Kapisa province is faltering as men leave the force because their wages have been cut. The men are part of the Afghan Local Police, originally village militias that have been brought under a centralised command structure since last year. They remain distinct from the regular Afghan National Police, ANP.      Full news...

  • August 30, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Heratis Angered at Afghan Security Forces
    IWPR: Khadija sat by the grave of her only son Sayid, crying bitterly as her her husband attempted to comfort her. “A month ago, my son was coming out of school and crossing the road when a police Ranger vehicle hit and killed him, although the traffic light was red and vehicles were supposed to stop,” said the bereaved father, who lives in Herat in western Afghanistan.      Full news...

  • August 29, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    US “wasted 30bn USD on Afghanistan and Iraq” over decade
    BBC News: The US government has wasted 30bn USD (18bn Pounds) in contracts in Afghanistan and Iraq over the last decade, according to a bi-partisan spending commission. The commission on wartime contracting blamed an over-reliance on contractors, poor planning and fraud for the waste. It had evidence of lax accountability and inadequate competition, it said.      Full news...

  • August 26, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    WikiLeaks: US links Australia’s Afghan partner to drugs
    The Age: The United States government believes Australia’s strongest local partner in Afghanistan, who has received direct payments from Canberra, is involved in the narcotics trade that fuels the insurgency. Until last year, the Australian government paid Matiullah Khan for his armed men to work with Australian special forces.      Full news...

  • August 24, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Billions spent on Afghan police but brutality,corruption prevail
    Reuters: An Afghan policeman shot dead taxi driver Mohammad Jawid Amiri six month ago, for no apparent reason. According to a Kabul police official, the shooting was an accident, and the offending policeman is now behind bars. That’s news to the family of 27-year-old Amiri. They say the only contact with the policeman they had since the shooting was when his family offered a sheep and three bags each of rice and flour as compensation...      Full news...

  • August 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan: Failing war breeding poverty
    Green Left Weekly: On August 19, a Taliban suicide squad attacked the Kabul offices of the British Council, a government-funded institution that “promotes educational and cultural relations” between Britain and other countries. The August 20 Guardian said at least 12 people were killed, including a New Zealand SAS soldier and three “security contractors” working for multinational security outfit G4S.      Full news...

  • August 20, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Lawmaker Accused of Drug Smuggling
    TOLOnews.com: Abdul Zaher Qadir, a lawmaker representing Nangarhar in the House of Representatives, has been accused of drug trafficking, a spokesman for counternarcotics department said on Saturday. The counternarcotics department has called on Abdul Zaher Qadir, who also leads the coalition to support law, to answer some questions.      Full news...

  • August 17, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    360M USD Lost to Insurgents, Criminals in Afghanistan
    The Associated Press: After examining hundreds of combat support and reconstruction contracts in Afghanistan, the U.S military estimates 360 million USD in U.S. tax dollars has ended up in the hands of people the American-led coalition has spent nearly a decade battling: the Taliban, criminals and power brokers with ties to both.      Full news...

  • August 12, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Blatant corruption is a way of life in Afghanistan
    Postmedia News: Just off embassy row in the centre of Kabul is a neighbourhood called Sherpur. It’s also spelled Sher Poor, but that’s simply an irony. Because, aside from the streets, which in some places rival rutted mountain passes, there’s nothing poor about Sherpur. Behind the stone and concrete walls that frame Sherpur’s neighbourhood blocks are marbled villas and mansions.      Full news...


  • August 7, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghans remain sceptical that they will see peace in their time
    The Independent: “I was born into war. I sometimes curse my parents. Why did they have children in war?” asked Faiz, an earnest young man from Kabul working as an interpreter in Helmand. The 28-year-old explained that he never planned to marry or have children until he was sure that they would not have to endure the hardships of conflict. He held out little hope that that would ever happen.      Full news...

  • August 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    World fails Afghanistan despite spending billions
    Reuters: The global community has failed to create a politically stable and economically viable Afghanistan despite pouring billions of dollars into the South Asian nation during a decade-long war against the Taliban, says the International Crisis Group. The Brussels-based think tank said the United States and its allies still lacked a coherent policy to strengthen Afghanistan...      Full news...

  • August 1, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Tale of Two Kabuls
    Examiner.com: Afghanistan’s capital city has experienced a financial and development boom over the past decade, growing in population from 1.5 to 5 million people while gleaming new malls and apartment complexes have sprung up and dot the landscape. But these bastions of the rich are offset by the sharp contrast of crowded shanty towns and squatter settlements where dwell the other Kabul...      Full news...

  • July 23, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Report Finds Vast Waste in U.S. War Contracts
    The Wall Street Journal: The U.S. has wasted or misspent 34 billion USD contracting for services in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a draft report by a bipartisan congressional panel, the most comprehensive effort so far to tally the overall cost of a decade of battlefield contracting in America’s two big wars.      Full news...

  • July 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    At Kabul airport, exodus of U.S. aid goes on
    The Washington Post: Kabul’s international airport has long been seen as a virtual black hole for foreign currency, the perfect venue through which travelers can smuggle out hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. aid that was intended for development projects.      Full news...

  • July 20, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Drug trade menaces Afghanistan despite progress: U.S.
    Reuters: The United States has made headway in building up Afghanistan’s counternarcotics forces, but the war-torn country needs more international help to hold onto those fragile gains, U.S. officials said on Wednesday. Top Defense Department, State Department and Drug Enforcement Administration officials told the U.S. Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control that Afghanistan’s opium poppy cultivation was down...      Full news...


  • June 25, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    While US talks withdrawal, Afghan corruption soars
    Associated Press: The farmer picking apples in the outskirts of Kabul must pay the Taliban $33 to ship out each truckload of fruit. The governor sends in armed men to chase workers off job sites if the official bribes aren't paid. Poor neighborhoods never get their U.N.-provided wheat, long since sold on the black market.      Full news...

  • June 23, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    UN: Afghanistan, Burma Main Producers of Opium
    VOA: A new U.N. report on illegal drugs says Afghanistan accounts for the majority of the world’s production of opium, while trends show production in Burma to be on the rise. The report also found that between 12 and 21 million people worldwide use opiates, with three-quarters of them using heroin. The U.N.’s drug czar, Yury Fedotov, said at the report’s launch Thursday...      Full news...

  • June 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Next Afghanistan battle: Opium
    CNN: Far away from the war, in the remote hills of Badakhshan, there is another battle raging. Trundling into the valleys on dusty roads ripped up by large SUVs, an Afghan task force is heading towards their target: an industry so profitable that many fear it's Afghanistan’s only viable option once the West pulls its troops and money out.      Full news...

  • June 20, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    US-funded Afghan militias “beat, rob and kill with impunity”
    The Telegraph: Residents and officials warn that the rush to recruit local defence forces around Kandahar following the arrival of last year’s surge of American troops had given rise to poorly-controlled armed gangs. They listed armed robberies, thefts and assaults by the militias, saying the groups had become the main worry of many residents in the province’s rural districts.      Full news...

  • June 19, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Fears surface over US-trained local Afghan police
    AFP: A cornerstone US policy to turn Afghan farmers into armed watchmen to keep out the Taliban has hit controversy and been scaled back over allegations of infighting and illegal taxation. In Marjah, the 1,150 trained local police or “arbaki” patrol an area transformed from insurgent hotbed into a mostly peaceful farming district in southern Afghanistan since a military operation 15 months ago.      Full news...

  • June 17, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    The financial scandal that broke Afghanistan’s Kabul Bank
    The Guardian: As he saunters into the shisha bar atop one of Kabul’s most exclusive hotels, the man accused of rivalling only the Taliban in terms of the damage he has done to Afghanistan does not seem particularly haunted by his actions. Nor does he seem worried that he might have to answer for his role in what is, in relative terms given Afghanistan’s tiny economy, the biggest bank collapse in history.      Full news...

  • June 15, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    How U.S. Aid Complicates the War in Afghanistan
    International Affairs Review: When the score is tight at the end of a baseball game, a team’s manager calls in his closer, a relief pitcher reserved for throwing the final outs. In April, President Barack Obama called in his closer for Afghanistan, Ryan C. Crocker, the former ambassador to post-war Iraq.      Full news...

  • June 14, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    UN attempts to whitewash US-NATO civilian killings in Afghanistan
    Empirestrikesblack: A 11 June press statement from the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan slates May 2011 as the deadliest month for Afghan civilians since at least 2007. However this big-hearted announcement conceals a grossly pernicious attempt to cover up US-NATO killings of civilians in occupied Afghanistan.      Full news...

  • June 14, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    A decade on, Afghanistan lacks police force worthy of name
    The Independent: Not a single Afghan police or army unit is capable of maintaining law and order in the war-torn country without the support of coalition forces, the Independent reveals. Almost a decade after international troops were sent in to overthrow the Taleban and help to establish a functioning democracy in Afghanistan, a combination of poor training, lack of numbers, corruption and illiteracy...      Full news...


  • June 10, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan to be handed over to gangsters
    The Sydney Morning Herald: Information in a new report suggests Afghanistan will collapse into chaos – or even more chaos – when America and her allies pull out in 2014. A huge proportion of the aid money being poured into the country now is going either to corruption or to prop up people and institutions who will not last five minutes once the foreign aid tap is turned off.      Full news...

  • June 10, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    “Iran caught 10 times trying to send arms to terrorists”
    The Jerusalem Post: Iran has been caught red-handed in 10 different attempts in recent years to transfer weaponry to terrorists throughout the Middle East, including a recent case, in April, when a shipment of advanced missiles was caught en-route to Taliban forces in Afghanistan, according to a United Nations report obtained Thursday by The Jerusalem Post.      Full news...



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