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June 8, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Reuters: Afghanistan is making progress weeding out children from its police forces but is only starting to tackle persistent allegations of sexual abuse and may still have minors serving informally, UN officials said Tuesday. Peter Wittig, Germany’s ambassador to the United Nations and head of a mission to Afghanistan looking at protection of children in war, also said... Full news...
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June 7, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: Police arrested three people accused of raping a teenage girl in the northern province of Takhar, officials said on Tuesday. The 15-year-old was gang-raped by five men in the Tash Tamshoq village of Kalifgan district on Monday night after they forced their way into her house. The alleged rapists tied up her mother and raped the girl... Full news...
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June 7, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: A family member of two lawmakers has been arrested by counternarcotics police with 52.7 kilograms of opium in northeastern Badakhshan province, an official said on Tuesday. Hedayatullah, the brother of Mariam Kufi and Fauzia Kufi, two female parliamentarians from the northeastern province, was arrested along with three others companions on Monday for allegedly carrying the opium in a car... Full news...
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June 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: Two young girls were killed while a third survived strangulation in eastern and southeastern Afghanistan, officials said Monday. The body of one girl was found in the Mohammad Khel area outside the capital of Khost province, the Quick Reaction Force commander said. Full news...
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June 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Radio Cadena Agramonte: The war in Afghanistan costs US taxpayers two billion dollars a week, according to calculations made by the Department of Defense Monday. The information appeared in the digital edition of The New York Times, on a study of the US government to cut its military presence in Afghanistan. Full news...
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June 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
IWPR: As the Afghan government prides itself on boosting budget revenues, it has been accused of using methods that hurt people on modest incomes while letting large businesses off some or all their taxes. In an interview for IWPR, finance ministry spokesman Aziz Shams said domestic revenues reached 1.8 billion US dollars in the last fiscal year, which runs from March to March. Full news...
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June 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
IRIN: Clashes between government forces and the Taliban have displaced at least 12,000 people in Afghanistan’s remote northwestern province of Faryab, creating a dire need for water, sanitation and other essentials, the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS) warns. Full news...
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June 3, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Herald Sun: ALMOST 10 years after September 11, most Australians think the war on terror is endless and will not be worth the cost. A survey by the US Studies Centre in Sydney shows 63 per cent of Australians see no end in sight. Only one in five Australians thinks the war, including battles in Afghanistan and Iraq, is being won, compared with almost one in three Americans. Full news...
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June 3, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Globe and Mail: Smoke billows above coils of razor wire after an earth-shaking explosion kills one of Afghanistan’s most powerful generals. The next day, a young officer with a neatly trimmed beard accepts a new job during a brief ceremony in the wood-panelled office of a southern governor. A strongman dies and another rises. The bloody politics of Afghanistan travelled full circle with the... Full news...
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June 3, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
CNN: A new report warns that billions of dollars of U.S. taxpayers’ money may be wasted because of the inability of Iraq and Afghanistan to keep American-financed projects running. The report released Friday by the Commission on Wartime Contracting comes as the Obama administration is poised to withdraw militarily from Iraq by the end of the year and to begin its drawdown in Afghanistan this summer. Full news...
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June 3, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
GlobalPost: Those who think that Afghanistan’s problems began and ended with the Taliban should take a look at a recent declaration by the country’s Council of Religious Scholars, known here as the Ulema Shura. The Shura meets with President Hamid Karzai on a bi-weekly basis to advise him on religious matters. At the latest session, which took place on Thursday morning, just before Karzai flew off to Italy for the country’s 150th birthday party, the esteemed mullahs presented the president with a statement... Full news...
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June 2, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
The New York Times: WITHIN a 40-minute drive of this city stands the 11th-century Bost Arch. A former gateway to Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand Province, the arch is today a national historic site; it even appears on the 100-Afghani note. The arch withstood centuries of invasions, but today it’s a crumbling mess of inept supports and clumsy renovations. Full news...
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June 1, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
BBC News: The BBC Afghan service has acquired recently-shot video evidence of a man being publicly whipped by a judge as a punishment for drinking alcohol. The lashing was carried out inside a courtroom in Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar Province in eastern Afghanistan. Such punishments are legal under the Afghan constitution but are rarely implemented. Full news...
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June 1, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Wakht News Agency: United Nation High Commission for Refugees UNHCR had expressed concern over the internally displaced people in Afghanistan according to the reports provided by this office and the World Bank in Kabul, Herat and Kandahar provinces. Research said unemployment, lack of shelter and poverty were the main challenges faced by the internally displaced individuals... Full news...
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May 31, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: UNICEF Representative Peter Crowley on Wednesday said Afghanistan continued to be plagued by conflict and remained one of the world’s most dangerous places for children. There is intensified fighting and increased suffering now at the start of the new “fighting season” in Afghanistan, with renewed hardship for children, Crowley said in a statement on International Children’s Day (June 1). Full news...
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May 29, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: A teenager girl alleged on Sunday she was raped by her neighbour in the northern province of Sar-i-Pul. She was sexually assaulted two days ago in the Qazi Kinti village on the outskirts of Sar-i-Pul, Shakiba told Pajhwok Afghan News. “My mother took my sister to Kabul for treatment and my father also went to work. My other sister went to school. My neighbour Mirwais entered my house,” she said. Full news...
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May 29, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Mail Online: Fourteen women and children have been killed after Nato warplanes bombed their homes in south-west Afghanistan. Six others were wounded in the attack, according to local reports, after the airstrike in Nawzad district, in the country’s volatile Helmand province. Two women, five girls and seven boys were among the dead, said Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial government. Full news...
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May 29, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
The Telegraph: The brochures offering pampered life in state-of-the-art apartments could be selling dream properties in any Western capital. And the ornate towers and palm trees shown in artists’ impressions would look at home in the boulevards of a Gulf emirate. However the chic apartments they advertise will not be built in London, Dubai or New York, but in one of the world’s poorest countries, wracked by a violent insurgency. Full news...
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May 28, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: Eight schools for girls have been closed in the central province of Logar due to threats from Taliban, an official said on Saturday. Two schools were closed in provincial capital, Pul-i-Alam, and six others in Baraki Barak district, Education Director Abdul Matin Jafar told Pajhwok Afghan News. Full news...
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May 28, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: As many as 112 people were killed in an airstrike by NATO-led troops in the remote eastern province of Nuristan, a senior official said on Saturday. Twenty-two policemen, 20, civilians and 70 Taliban fighters were among the dead, Governor Jamaluddin Badr told Pajhwok Afghan News, quoting a probe into the incidents. Full news...
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May 27, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
The Nation: In average, 10 incidents of armed conflicts and 39 consequent deaths were reported in three main South Asian states - Afghanistan, India and Pakistan - on every day of last month. Every fourth victim of violence was a civilian. Afghanistan continued to be worst hit state by violence in the region as about half of the incidents as well as resultant deaths were reported in the country. Full news...
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May 26, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: NATO-led troops shot dead three civilians in central Maidan Wardak province, an Afghan official said on Thursday. The deaths took place in Lala Khel area of the province, Shahidullah Shahid, the governor’s spokesman, told Pajhwok Afghan News. Full news...
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May 25, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
AFP: Militants cut off the nose and ears of an Afghan civil servant, then shot him dead near the capital apparently because he worked for the government, police said Wednesday. Omid, a 30-year-old who like many Afghans went by only one name, was kidnapped in Puli Alam, the capital of Logar province, 60 kilometres (40 miles) south of Kabul, on Tuesday. Full news...
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May 25, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Reuters: Taliban gunmen have killed the headteacher of a girls’ school near the Afghan capital after he ignored warnings to stop teaching girls, government officials have said. Khan Mohammad, the head of the Porak girls’ school in Logar province, was shot dead near his home on Tuesday, said Deen Mohammad Darwish, a spokesman for the Logar governor. Full news...
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May 25, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
The National: The checkpoints on Kabul’s streets and concrete barricades around its key buildings are a reminder of the war Afghanistan has been in since 2001. But beneath some of its bridges are signs of another war - the battle against HIV. During a recent afternoon, aid workers weaved in and out among the hundreds of drug addicts who gather daily under a bridge in the Pul-e Sought-a neighbourhood of the city to smoke and inject heroin. Full news...
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May 23, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: Some policemen are collecting the opium tax from farmers while others are smuggling the drug in Deh Raud district of central Uruzgan province, residents alleged on Monday. Checkpoint commanders charge the tax from opium growers in different areas of the district, a member of Deh Raud District Council told Pajhwok Afghan News on condition of anonymity. Full news...
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May 22, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
PAN: In violation of an agreement with Kabul, Iran continues to execute the Afghan refugees on death row in the neighbouring country, an official alleged on Sunday. Two more Afghans were executed in Sistan city of Baluchistan province, which borders Afghanistan, on May 7, the official told Pajhwok Afghan News on condition of anonymity. Full news...
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May 22, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Philly.com: My Thursday column was about the most powerful man in Kandahar, President Hamid Karzai’s brother Ahmed Wali Karzai. I promised to write more of my interview with AWK, as he’s called, because this one powerbroker personifies so many of the contradictions that are bedeviling U.S. and NATO forces in Aghanistan. Full news...
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May 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
Spiegel Online: Germany’s military, the Bundeswehr, has released new and explosive details about a violent altercation between demonstrators and German soldiers in northern Afghanistan on Wednesday that left 12 dead and dozens wounded, including two German soldiers. In a statement posted on its website Friday morning, the military contradicted its earlier claims and admitted that German soldier had deliberately fired upon the demonstrators. Full news...
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May 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
BBC News: During the inquest into the murders of five British soldiers by a rogue Afghan policeman, a disturbing picture emerged of the way the Afghan National Police (ANP) operated with British troops. Among the British soldiers’ roles was to train and mentor many of the men, but it became clear from the outset of the inquest that they were shown little respect. Full news...
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