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Afghanistan
Karzai tells Mullah Omar to hang it up
2006-01-09
President Hamid Karzai said that a few hundred Taleban fighters have reconciled with the government and suggested militant leader Mullah Omar should “get in touch” if he wanted to talk peace. In the context of escalating violence, including suicide attacks, the remarks by Karzai in an interview Sunday with The Associated Press were seen as a softening of the government’s previous policy of not negotiating with top leaders of the hard-line militia. Despite the spike in bloodshed, the US-backed leader said the Taleban’s resistance was fading although he expected suicide attacks to continue in Afghanistan “for a long time.” Karzai said a booming drug trade presented a greater threat to Afghanistan than terrorism and endangered its future.

Karzai, 48, who won a five-year term as the war-battered nation’s first democratically elected leader in 2004, invited all Afghans, “Taleban or non-Taleban,” to help rebuild the country, and said that includes Omar. “If he wants to come, he should get in touch with us,” the president said, indicating he was open to the possibility of talks with the reclusive militia leader despite his most-wanted status. “But I don’t think he will come. He has so much on his hands against Afghanistan. We don’t even know as to where he is hiding,” Karzai said. “He has to first give us an account as to what he’s done.”

Karzai, who appeared upbeat during the interview at his heavily guarded palace in the snowy capital, Kabul, said hundreds of Taleban members who are “not associated with terrorism” already have participated in a government reconciliation program. He said the hunt for Omar and bin Laden, who are believed hiding in rugged mountains on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, would continue. “I am sure we will find them one day.”

The president said terrorism has been “relegated to little more than a nuisance” when compared with the scourge of drugs facing the country. Afghanistan is the world’s biggest producer of illegal narcotics, yielding enough opium to make about 450 tons of heroin last year - sparking warnings the country is fast becoming a “narco-state.” The problem has criminalized the economy, tainted the country’s image, hindered the development of strong government institutions and undermined young people’s lives, Karzai said. He claimed criminal gangs, including some from Europe, threaten to kill farmers if they don’t cultivate poppies. “We have reports of the mafia, from the rest of the world, coming and actively encouraging drugs in Afghanistan,” Karzai said. “They are not only from Russia, they are in Europe, they are in Afghanistan, they are in the neighbors of Afghanistan, they are everywhere.” He said some senior Afghan officials were involved in the illegal trade, but he rejected criticism that he has not been tough enough in dealing with them. “We have not been given any evidence so far against anyone,” Karzai said.

Separately, Karzai said NATO-led troops taking over security in southern Afghanistan must not use aggressive tactics, including air strikes or searches of people’s homes, without government permission. NATO is expanding its operations from the country’s relatively stable north and west into the volatile south, where Taleban-led militants are active - a move that will allow the United States to reduce its troop presence in the region. “We do not want bombing of our villages. We do not want searches of our homes,” Karzai said. “We don’t want our civilians harassed anymore.”
Posted by:Dan Darling

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