Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

Kabul requests India to launch exclusive satellite for Afghanistan – Economic Times

NEW DELHI: The Afghanistan government has requested India to launch a special satellite exclusively for its use, three months after India launched the South Asian Satellite. The Afghan Ministry of Telecommunications and Technology recently made such a request to the Indian government, officials in the Afghan government told ET.

Afghanistan minister Syed Ahmad Shah Sadat recently met Indian Ambassador Manpreet Vohra in Kabul to make the request. It is not yet clear if Kabul wants to use a dedicated satellite to track terrorist hideouts. The minister and the Indian envoy discussed opening of a terminal for Afghanistan in the South Asia Satellite, another special satellite and India-assisted small development projects.

A MoU would be signed soon to let Afghanistan benefit from South Asia Satellite. Two of the 12 transponders will be provided to Afghanistan and the satellite will be used in areas of telecommunications, television services, agriculture, mines and other sectors. A special satellite station in Kabul is also under construction.

In May this year, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani had joined other South Asian leaders in welcoming the launch of a South Asian Satellite by India for South Asian nations, calling it a major step in regional cooperation.

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Kabul requests India to launch exclusive satellite for Afghanistan - Economic Times

Inside Zan TV: Afghanistan’s first all-female station – The Guardian

A camerawomen films footage for a Zan TV show. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock

After a city-wide billboard campaign featuring a group of young women standing with arms folded, the womens media network Zan TV launched in Kabul, Afghanistan, three months ago, with a panel discussion about the right to vote and a Facebook cover photo that read: We mirror you all. Zan, meaning women in Arabic, is the first TV station in Afghanistan to be made for and run entirely by women. Its a radical initiative for a country where the television industry is run solely by men and where just 16 years ago, journalism and even access to education for women were banned. We want women to have an active role in politics and society, says Nasrine Nawa, 26, Zans director of news programming. Were empowering them to lead independent lives outside the home.

Nawas mission is to train the next generation of female Afghan journalists. Fifty women aged 17 to 28 work for Zan; half are qualified, half are learning on the job. Many trained journalists are jobless because most TV stations wont employ women, so we do. We also want to train young women who might not have access to education because of where they live or their family, says Nawa. Zan also employs 10 men to train women in operating cameras and editing film. It posts jobs on its Facebook page, which had an average of 8,000 likes a day in May.

The TV station was founded by the media entrepreneur Hamid Samar, who saw a gap in the market when going through dozens of job applications from women at another TV station. The Afghan media landscape is already packed, with about 70 satellite TV stations, and competition for ratings is rife. Zans task is to build an audience by developing cutting-edge shows on the issues affecting millennial Afghan women, such as negotiating Islam as a feminist, reproductive rights, managing finances and careers. The most popular shows are the Daily News show hosted by Yasamin Yarmal and a weekly evening show that features conversations with radical Afghan women such as the politician and activist Fareeda Kuchi Balkhi, from Afghanistans nomadic Kuchi tribe. Zan also runs a daytime cookery programme on how to make speedy healthy meals. In the evening, the hour-long entertainment show In Focus recently showcased an all-female orchestra.

What makes us stand out is that we talk about everything that has touched womens lives, says Nawa. Women have been a marginalised community for so long in Afghanistan. We want to prove they have the power to take control and change their lives, if they want.

For a new TV station, the ratings are impressive. According to Samar, an average of 90,000 people are tuning into the morning news programme.

Mehria Azali, 22, is a journalist and presenter at Zan. She is keen to introduce a strong female narrative to the Afghan news agenda and explore issues such as underage marriage, rape and access to education. During the Talibans rule, women were wanted in the home to satisfy male needs, she says. Things have got better, but rights for women are still very bad, especially outside Kabul. When they watch TV, Afghan women dont see issues that affect them being talked about. We want to change that.

In 2015, research by the NGO Global Rights found that nearly nine out of 10 women in Afghanistan were subjected to physical, sexual or psychological violence. Now, Nawa and her team are talking directly to those women. A lot of abuse towards women is hidden by police, so we have a whole programme about justice for women, says Azali. She is looking for a lawyer to come in and talk about rape within marriage. We want to lead by example of what women can be, she says. Increasing their economic potential by showing them a new set of options.

Azali and Nawa also want to challenge the Afghan view of feminism. Some TV stations in Afghanistan prepare reports about the abuse of women, says Nawa, but they dont report everything as they dont want to be accused of being feminist. Most forms of womens empowerment are seen as divisive and anti-men, but we want to remove the negative attitude to womens issues in this country.

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Inside Zan TV: Afghanistan's first all-female station - The Guardian

Trump’s attention span creates challenges for Afghanistan policy – MSNBC


MSNBC
Trump's attention span creates challenges for Afghanistan policy
MSNBC
There's no reason to believe the war in Afghanistan, now in its 16th year, is moving in the right direction. NBC News had a good report last week on Donald Trump's growing frustration over the state of the conflict, his team's inability to produce a ...
McMaster: Trump has made 'a number of decisions' on AfghanistanThe Hill
National security adviser attempts to reconcile Trump's competing impulses on AfghanistanWashington Post
McMaster defends US war strategy in AfghanistanPress TV
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Trump's attention span creates challenges for Afghanistan policy - MSNBC

Dozens of civilians killed in ‘brutal, inhumane way’ in Afghanistan – The Independent

Insurgents attacked a village in the northern Afghan province of Sar-e Pul, killing as many as 50 people, including women and children, according to officials.

Zabihullah Amani, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said the fighters, who included foreign militants, attacked a security outpost in the Mirza Olang area of Sayaad district overnight, torching 30 houses.

He said fighting was still going on but as many as 50 people, including children, women and elderly men, most of them members of the largely ShiaHazara community, may have been killed, according to local village elders.

"They were killed in a brutal, inhumane way," he said.

Seven members of the Afghan security forces were also killed as well as a number of insurgents.

Many details of the attack, including the identity of the insurgents, were not immediately clear.

Mr Amani said they were a mixed group of Taliban and Isis fighters but the Taliban itself denied any involvement, dismissing the claim as propaganda.

Although the Taliban and Isis are usually enemies, the allegiance of their forces is sometimes fluid, with fighters from both groups sometimes changing sides or cooperating with militants from other groups.

A senior government official in Kabul said that security forces, including Afghan Air Force attack aircraft, were being sent to the scene.

Fighting has intensified this year across Afghanistan, with dozens of security incidents recorded every day.

In the first half of the year 1,662 civilians were killed and 3,581 injured, according to United Nations figures.

Reuters

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Dozens of civilians killed in 'brutal, inhumane way' in Afghanistan - The Independent

‘A coalition of killers’: The ex-warlords promising Afghanistan’s … – Washington Post

MAZAR-E SHARIF, Afghanistan Afghan President Ashraf Ghani likes to say that he has the worlds most difficult job, and no one doubts that he is at least in the running. But amid the plethora of problems he faces, it might come as a surprise that his first vice president, whom he selected, is one of the biggest.

Then again, Abdurrashid Dostums name is synonymous with volatility and brutality. For decades, the former plumber, wrestler and oil refinery worker has led northern Afghanistans ethnic Uzbeks, first as a ruthless and reckless militia commander, now as a politician. The U.S. State Department, in cables released by WikiLeaks, once called Dostum a quintessential warlord, and Ghani himself termed him a known killer.

That didnt stop Ghani from making a deal with him. In the last presidential election, Dostum promised and delivered to Ghani the crucial Uzbek vote, propelling the unlikely duo to a narrow victory. But what was convenient a year ago is now quite the opposite. Instead of helping Ghani unite the country, Dostum has revived a sense of indignation toward Afghanistans ethnic Pashtun majority and cobbled together an insurrection in the multiethnic north.

Ghani and Dostums fragile compact began to unravel when the vice president was accused last December of ordering an elderly political rival to be manhandled and sodomized with a Kalashnikov. It was the second time he had been charged with a similar offense. After the first instance in 2008, Dostum went into a long exile at his lavish home in Turkey. Since refusing to cooperate with the attorney general in May, he has been out of Afghanistan, mostly in Turkey again.

Dostum claims the charges are a form of blackmail, aimed at stripping him of his authority. His followers contend that Ghani used Dostum for votes and is consolidating power into a cabal of ethnic Pashtuns. They say the government neglects and even encourages the deterioration of security in the minority-dominated areas in the north where the Taliban and the Islamic States regional affiliate have wrested control of numerous districts and launched a string of suicide bombings and kidnappings.

Last month, Dostum attempted to fly from Turkey to the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif, but the government prevented the plane from landing once it learned who might be on board. At a meeting of Dostums followers in late July, two of his closest aides expressed hope that he would return any day, probably by barging across a nearby land border with either Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan. His return, they said, would mark the beginning of a massive wave of protests.

[Trumps crude view of Afghanistan wont solve U.S.s longest-running war]

Dostums co-conspirators call themselves the Coalition for the Salvation of Afghanistan. They have not always been friendly with each other. Foremost among them is Tajik warlord-turned-provincial-governor Attah Mohammed Noor against whom Dostum fought vicious battles in the early 1990s. They are joined by Mohammad Mohaqiq, an ethnic Hazara leader and deputy to the governments chief executive, and Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani, a member of Noors Jamaat-e- Islami party. Together they claim to represent Afghanistans three largest ethnic minorities, although the depth of their support among the public, let alone within their own parties, is yet to be put to the test.

They insist that they are not calling for the collapse of the government, only that Ghani relinquish power to officials and cabinet ministers hailing from various parties and ethnicities, Dostum prime among them. A key demand is that the criminal case against Dostum be dropped and his return to Afghanistan expedited. Their rhetoric is menacing.

We see this as a tyrant government, Noor said in an interview at his opulent office in Mazar-e Sharif. He said that the coalition is negotiating with the government but that if coalition members arent heeded, that could change. We may have to take control of administrative buildings and airports to put pressure on and paralyze the government, he said.

Noor took aim at the U.S. government, too, which coalition supporters see as taking Ghanis side in what should be an internal political dispute.

We were the ones, not Ghani, who helped the U.S. fight the Taliban, he said. It is wrong that the U.S. should use us when they need us and then throw us away like empty Pepsi cans. They shouldnt support a group of five individuals against everyone else, he added, referring to an earlier claim that all government decision-making is channeled through Ghani and four others, all Pashtuns.

[What would happen if the United States totally disengaged from Afghanistan?]

The allegations of unscrupulousness fly both ways. Ghanis office has been dismissive of the coalition, saying that its members outrage stems not from any illiberalism on his part but from the fact that his firm stance on eliminating corruption has cut off strongmen such as Noor and Dostum from systems of patronage. Ghani, a Western-educated former World Bank employee who gave up U.S. citizenship to run for president, has emphasized transparency as a way of shoring up Afghanistans corruption-riddled institutions.

For the first time, powerful people feel that their wrongdoings will be accounted for through a proper apolitical, independent judiciary and they feel threatened, said Haroon Chakhansuri, a deputy chief of staff in Ghanis office.

The rift risks exacerbating ethnic polarization, especially with coalition leaders claiming that Ghani is brazenly limiting power, not just to Pashtuns, but also to a small group of confidants from his clan and all under the nose of American advisers who espouse inclusive governance.

On the other side, the lack of any major Pashtun leader in the coalition has made Pashtuns in the north uneasy about the coalitions intentions.

This coalition is nothing but a coalition of killers, said M.W. Matin, a doctor in Mazar-e Sharif who plans to run for office in next years parliamentary elections. But the tragedy is that Ghani had to bring a killer like Dostum into his office just to win.

For some Uzbeks, Dostums violent past is a source of pride. They believe him when he claims to be descended from an ancient line of Uzbek emperors. His face looks out from dozens of giant billboards over Mazar-e Sharifs drab grid of streets.

We say that Ghani has a money bank but Dostum has a people bank, said Sher Aqah Tataroghla, a 23-year-old student living in a hostel that is mostly Uzbek. In the past we couldnt even speak Uzbek in public, but now youll see it on signs around the city. One hundred percent of us are behind him.

Tajiks in Noors party and Hazaras in Mohaqiqs do not seem to be uniting behind the coalition as uniformly as Uzbeks. Those leaders command more limited cachet in their communities, with followings that pale in intensity compared with Dostums. Stoking that sense of ethnic solidarity mobilized through voting blocs as well as people in the streets may well be the crux of the coalitions ultimate strength. Without it, many Afghans may find it difficult to see its leaders as fighting for anything but themselves.

Its not for salvation as they say, it is about their money and their pride thats how politicians are all over the world, right? said Moqaddas Rahim, 28, who has been unemployed for four years after serving as an interpreter for U.S. forces. He knows how to use a computer and speaks six languages, including fluent English with a distinctly southern twang.

To be a good Afghan, you cant trust your government, he said. Look, Im hopeless, man not about my God but about my country. Here, the worst criminals become the most powerful people.

Sayed Salahuddin contributed to this report.

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'A coalition of killers': The ex-warlords promising Afghanistan's ... - Washington Post