Wednesday, 21 January 2009

Karzai Blames US On Civilian Deaths, Drugs


Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Tuesday accused his Western allies of not doing enough to stop civilian deaths in the "war on terror" and failing to cut opium production in areas patrolled by foreign troops.
Addressing the opening session of parliament, Karzai called for a rethink in the international strategy aimed at rooting out extremists and cracking down on drug farming in Afghanistan, and in the way billions of dollars in reconstruction aid are spent.
"We don't accept civilian casualties in our land in the war on terrorism," Karzai told about 300 parliamentarians and guests, including representatives of the United Nations, embassies and foreign military forces.
"We have never complained about our police being martyred - thousands of our police have been martyred. We have never complained about the deaths of our soldiers - hundreds have died," the president said.
"If thousands are killed in the war on terrorism... we will accept that. But we don't and will never accept civilian casualties in our land," he said, to shouts "Allah Akbar" (God is the greatest) from parliamentarians expressing approval.
Civilian casualties from international military operations against Taliban and other insurgents have strained relations between Kabul and its backers
The United Nations says roughly 2,000 civilians were killed in 2008, with more than half in insurgent attacks, implying that several hundreds died during foreign and Afghan troop operations.
Karzai and other critics say civilian deaths risk turning Afghans against international intervention in their country.
"We want our allies to rethink their military operations... We want change in military operations, we want effectiveness in the 'war on terror'," he said.
His criticism comes just two days after the head of NATO, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, charged that the current Afghan authorities were almost as much to blame for the country's dire straits as the resurgent Taliban.
Karzai also accused his international allies of not doing enough to curb the drugs trade. Afghanistan produces more than 90% of the world's illegal opium and uses most of it to make heroin destined for Europe and elsewhere.
The president said that opium poppy production was highest in areas with heavy deployments of international troops. 'Where the government of Afghanistan has no authority, poppy cultivation is high," he said.

1 comment:

  1. Obama will just continue Bush's policies re Israel and Afghanistan. Dont be fooled by the Gitmo BS:

    http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/01/26/israel/

    ReplyDelete