News Update Place

July 2, 2007

US criticised over Afghan deaths

Filed under: American, Asia — News Update @ 8:23 am

Recent air raids by the US-led coalition and Nato have killed more civilians than Taliban fighters, an Afghan human rights group has said.

The claim by the Afghanistan’s Independent Human Rights Commission came after at least 45 civilians reportedly died in an attack at the weekend in southern Helmand province.

An Afghan rights group urged US-led and Nato forces to deploy more foot soldiers against the Taliban

An Afghan rights group urged US-led and Nato forces to deploy more foot soldiers against the Taliban

The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) acknowledged that there were some civilian casualties but said the death toll was much lower.

The rights group said on Monday that the US and Isaf should deploy more foot soldiers against suspected Taliban rather than using air raids.

“Air operations have killed more civilians than Taliban,” Nader Nadery, a commissioner with the human rights group, told Reuters news agency.

“Certainly, reduction of air operations decreases civilian deaths for it is difficult to distinguish between military and non-military people.”

Human shields

Spokesmen from Nato and the US-led coalition have argued that many of the deaths are a result of the Taliban using civilians as human shields.

US killing afghan child's
US forces said the latest air raid was launched after an attack on a US-Afghan patrol

Civilian deaths have sparked protests demanding the expulsion of foreign troops from Afghanistan and the resignation of Hamid Karzai, the president.

Karzai has repeatedly urged foreign forces to better coordinate operations with his government and warned that such mistakes could harm his government.

He has also launched an investigation into the air raids at the weekend, in which local officials say 62 suspected Taliban fighters were also killed.

The US military said that the raids were a response to an attack on a joint American-Afghan patrol and any civilian casualties were the result of Taliban fighters hiding among civilians.

Justice system

Meanwhile, Karzai was in Italy on Monday for a two-day conference aimed at strengthening Afghanistan’s justice system amid the violence.

Experts say the challenges to establishing the rule of law after more than 25 years of violence are enormous, ranging from rebuilding courts and offices to training magistrates.

The conference will also try to provide concrete steps to improve co-ordination among law-enforcement officials and tackle corruption.

“We need to have a plan for the next five years, perhaps not necessarily a comprehensive, full-blown strategy, but we need to have some sort of a plan that talks about where we’re going to be in five years,” Geralyn Busnardo, an official with the Rome-based International Development Law Organisation said.

“That was something that was not well done for the past five years.”

The International Development Law Organisation is working to establish the use of private attorneys to represent individuals in criminal or civil cases - something there is no history of in the country. There are now about 200 such lawyers.

The Rome conference includes regional powers such as Pakistan, along with foreign ministers from European countries, Nato and EU representatives, and delegations from the US, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

Portugal ‘confident’ over EU treaty

Filed under: EUROPE — News Update @ 8:20 am

Portugal, which has taken over the presidency of the European Union, says it is confident a new reform treaty can be quickly passed despite Polish-led doubts on voting procedure.

Jose Socrates, the Portuguese prime minister, admitted that a “misunderstanding” with Poland over EU voting would still have to be overcome.

Socrates said that the summit in Brussels on June 21-22 had given a “clear and detailed” mandate for a new treaty to make EU decision-making easier and end the crisis caused by the French and Dutch rejections in 2005 of an EU constitution.

The 27 EU leaders agreed an outline for a treaty which must now be completed by Portugal.

But Poland, which had threatened to veto the Brussels accord, is again asking for clarification.

Minority votes

Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the Polish prime minister, said that the Brussels summit had agreed a mechanism that would allow countries to block contested decisions for up to two years if it had sufficient minority votes.

The text adopted in Brussels talked only of “a reasonable delay.”

Socrates said that the issue would be “quickly overcome.” Portuguese officials said privately however that a solution with Poland could still drag on.

That could mean the treaty may not be sealed before the next EU summit, which will be held in Lisbon in October.

An inter-governmental conference that will draw up the treaty is to start work on July 23. Portugal will submit a draft treaty to the conference.

Ratification

Luis Amado, Portugal’s foreign minister, said: “If there are problems of interpretation on what is written in the mandate, there will have to be a new political discussion.”

These talks would take place at an EU foreign ministers’ meeting in the Portuguese city of Porto in September.

Amado said: “That is when we will see if there are clouds on the horizon.”

Because of the doubts, Portugal has not planned a time or place for an official signing of the treaty - which would launch its ratification by individual countries.

Al-Aqsa Martyrs commander shot dead by Israel

Filed under: MIDDLE EAST, Top Stories — News Update @ 8:18 am

Israeli soldiers have shot dead a local comander of a Palestinian armed group linked to the Fatah faction of Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, in the West Bank.

Mohammed Abu el-Heija of the the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades was killed in the gunfight in the Jenin refugee camp, Palestinian security sources said on Monday.

Al-Heija was an al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades<br />
commander in the West Bank
Al-Heija was an al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades commander in the West Bank

“A Fatah member opened fire on soldiers conducting a routine operation in Jenin, and they returned fire and killed him, wounding another armed Palestinian,” an Israeli military spokeswoman said.

She said the Palestinian was armed with a M16 assault rifle with a telescope.

“During the incident, an explosive charge was thrown and the Israeli force came under fire,” she said.

Israeli raids

Palestinians said al-Heija was considered to be close to Zakariya Zubeidi, a high-profile al-Aqsa leader in the camp who has long been on the Israeli army’s wanted list.

“We, at al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, will continue to defend the Palestinian people until the last drop of our blood,” Zubeidi told Al Jazeera.

Israel has indicated that it will continue to pursue Palestinian fighters in the West Bank despite pledging to support Abbas and the new emergency government which effectively only controls that territory.

Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian prime minister in the cabinet appointed after Hamas took full control of the Gaza Strip, has said Israeli raids undermine the Fatah’s intention to disarm groups in the West Bank.

Israel has conducted several raids around the West Bank town of Nablus over the past two days targeting fighters from the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades.

« Older Posts

Powered by WordPress