If any govt compromises on national unity, sovereignty and Durand
Transcription
If any govt compromises on national unity, sovereignty and Durand
Eye on the News . THURSDAY JULY 16 . [email protected] 2015 -Saratan 25, 1394 HS Truthful, Factual and Unbiased www.afghanistantimes.af If any govt compromises on national unity, sovereignty and Durand Line will face resistance, Karzai tells Ghani AT News Report KABUL: As rumors are doing rounds in media that former president Hamid Karzai is becoming a threat to the political stability of the country by trying to undermine the National Unity Government and become a third time president, Karzai and the President Ashraf Ghani held a meeting the other day where Karzai told Ghani that he has no intention to return to power. Karzai said that any government including the NUG, if compromises on national unity, sovereignty of the country, and Durand Line, will face stiff resistance from him. Meeting of the two leaders was focused on the intelligence sharing deal signed between the intelligence agencies of Afghanistan and Pakistan. According to a source, Karzai told President Ghani he stood against the NDS-ISI deal because he considered it against the sovereignty of Afghanistan. The accompanying delegation of Hamid Karzai was comprised of Zarar Ahmad Osmani, Rangeen Dadfar Spanta, Sadeq Mudaber, Khaliq Farahi and Karim Khoram. The delegation of President Ghani was comprised of National Security Advisor Hanif Atmar, Akram Khpalwak, the president s advisor in financial affairs Omar Zakhelwal, the acting Minister of Defense Karzai has no intention to bring down NUG: MPs AT News Report KABUL: Lawmakers and civil society activists said that Karzai has no intention to bring down the National Unity Government (NUG), led by President Ashraf Ghani. This comes at a time that the Chief Executive of Afghanistan, Abdullah Abdullah, without mentioning any specific name said that no one should dare to bring the government down. Aref Rahmani, an MP from Ghazni province, said that he was confident that Karzai will never become a threat to the political sta- bility of Afghanistan. Karzai is well aware of the fact that Daesh and the Taliban will replace the government, if collapsed, he added. Quoting a western diplomat, the Guardian has recently alleged that Hamid Karzai was trying to undercut Ghani s government, with the intention of bringing it down. Obaidullah Barakzai, a lawmaker from Uruzgan, blamed the government of incompetence. He said that corruption has increased manifold as compared to Hamid Karzai s government. Ahmad Reza Merzai, a civil society activist, the government has become weak to the extent that it can be shook by just one article published in a foreign media outlet. He said that leader of the NUG should have discussed the issue with Hamid Karzai instead of creating the panic. Roohul Amin another activist said that by hurling such statements, the leaders of the national unity government are trying to deceive people. They are trying to blame Karzai for their weaknesses, he added. Masoum Stankzai. According to the source, the talks were held in a brotherly environment. Iran, world powers agreement is in the interest of the region: Karzai AT News Report KABUL: Ex-President Hamid Karzai said that the unclear deal reached between Iran and six world powers is in the interest of the region and entire world. Hamid Karzai expressed his pleasure over the agreement. Karzai felicitated the government and people of Iran on this great victory. Karzai hoped that the agreement will restrain world powers from using economic sanctions as a weapon in foreign policy. Major world powers and Iran formally reached a historical agreement aimed at ensuring that Iran does not obtain the nuclear bomb. Vol:IX Issue No:340 Price: Afs.15 www.face book.com/ afghanistantime s www.twitter.com/ afghanistantimes This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Next talks to discuss Taliban demands: Ghani KHOST CITY (Pajhwok): President Ashraf Ghani on Wednesday said the second round of peace talks due in the next two weeks would focus on Taliban s demands and problems. Ghani, who arrived in southeastern Khost province days after a suicide car bombing killed 33 people, was talking to local officials here. Mubariz Zadran, the Khost governor s spokesman, told Pajhwok Afghan News that the president was accompanied by a highlevel delegation on his visit to the province. He was accompanied by Borders and Tribal Affairs Minister Gulab Mangal and a number of his advisors and officials, he said. Ghani participated in a memorial service for the 33 people killed in the suicide attack last Monday. The service was held in the Sheikh Zayed University where local officials, tribal elders and family members of the victims were present. Governor Hakam Khan Habibi assured the president that the people of Khost were united in supporting the government and he was committed to serving his people and improving stability. The governor also urged the president to equip security forces with advanced equipment, improve the Ghulam Khan Port, build a standard airport in the province and resolve the issue of electricity. The president, who announced financial assistance for families of the victims, extended his deep condolences to them. Ghani pledged to work systematically for development of Khost province which he called as strategically important and vowed to convert it to a trade hub during his leadership. In a reference to the recent peace talks, the president said the Afghans after 14 years had been able to talk face-to-face with the Taliban. He said the meeting between the government and Taliban officials in Islamabad was a big achievement and the first step to start peace talks. He said the second phase of the talks would start in the next 15 days, but did not mention a possible venue for the talks. Ghani said the second round would discuss demands and problems of the Taliban and solutions to them. Taliban supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar on Wednesday also favoured the peace talks as legitimate in a message on the eve of Eidul Fitr. If we look into our religious regulations, we can find that meetings and even peaceful interactions with the enemies is not prohibited, the Taliban leader said. Latest peace talks create rifts among Taliban ranks KABUL: Some political and military affairs experts say the latest peace parlays have created rifts among the Taliban, but others believe the differences are not much serious. Rumors about differences among Taliban ranks started circulating soon after the Afghan government and Taliban representatives held talks in China and then in Pakistan. Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban s overall spokesman, had rejected the two-day meeting in the northwestern Chinese city of Urumqi, but he had issued an ambiguous statement about the talks in Murree near Islamabad. However, some sources said no one from the Taliban s political office in Qatar had attended the one-day talks in Murree. But national security advisor to Pakistani Prime Minister Sartaj Aziz had said the talks had Taliban leadership approval and that more Taliban leaders would join the next round of talks. Pakistan foreign secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry recently told the Pakistani senate that though the Afghan government was interested in the peace talks, the Taliban were divided into two groups over the parlays. He had said one group of the Taliban was ready for the talks and the second was not. In Kabul, political affairs expert Javed Kohistani confirmed differences among the Taliban, saying the rebels had split into three groups over the issue. He told Pajhwok Afghan News the Doha office was under influence of Mullah Mohammad Omar s friends to a great extent, but it seemed Omar was under immense pressure from Pakistan and close observation as those attending talks at different venues had the backing of Islamabad. He said Omar s Doha office was one group, Mullah Mohammad Hassan Rahmani and his supporters was another group, which has been taking part in talks, and the third group was young battlefield commanders each of whom had his own view and had serious differences among them. Another political expert, Dr. Faiz Mohammad Zaland, said the peace talks which had been initiated with Pakistan s mediation might have caused differences among the Taliban ranks. However, he believed the Taliban s cautious statement following the Murree talks showed the differences would be resolved until the next round of talks and the Taliban would appear for the next round with a unified stance. Zaland also said it was possible the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan had started efforts to create differences among the Taliban ranks. I think this will hurt the Afghan peace process because it is not in the interest of the two countries. However, political commentator Eng. Yunas Fakor said the Taliban were puppets in outsiders hands and they lived in a foreign country so it would be wrong to expect that they would hold similar views. He said the US, other western countries and the Qatari government had been pushing for the establishment of the Doha office and there could be differences between the Doha office (Taliban) and those living in Pakistan, but the differences were mostly about power. These differences are not important for us. What is important is that Pakistan has produced them for talks and has promised to do it again. But political science teacher and expert Najib Mahmood rejected all sorts of differences among the Taliban. He also rejected if there were many hands that divided the Taliban into various groups. Mahmood told Pajhwok Afghan News the Qatar office was symbolic and only those Taliban representatives could take part in talks who enjoyed Pakistan s support. Journalist Sami Yousafzai said the US and the western world did not want differences among the Taliban when it came to the peace process. Meanwhile, a Taliban source confirmed differences among the movement, but called the differences as racial. He said such differences existed even when the Taliban ruled Afghanistan. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the Taliban source said during the Taliban regime, attempts had been made to create differences among Mullah Omar, Mullah Rabbani, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor and Mullah Dadullah. Mullah Dadullah was mysteriously killed and Mullah Omar did not reconcile with Mullah Rabbani until the latter s demise. After the collapse of the Taliban regime, the movement s central leadership council was limited for unknown reasons, but Mullah Abdul Razaq, the then interior minister, and some other friends like Mullah Nooruddin Torabi, Mullah Saeeduddin Saeed, Mullah Abdul Manan and others tried to resolve the matter through dialogue. The source said the issue could not be resolved and several senior leaders were ousted from the movement. Mullah Abdul Razaq and his friends invited a large number of Taliban leaders in 2003 and formed his own group after contacts with some foreign countries. He not only criticised Mullah Omar s leadership, but also gained support of many Pakistani scholars in this regard. The source said though the differences were tribal, but there existed some hidden hands that fu- eled the differences. During the Taliban regime, the source said, some foreign governments and non-governmental organisations had hand in creating differences between Mullah Omar and other Taliban leaders. A number of Pakistani religious scholars had influence over Mullah Omar s office and personality. But despite all this, Wahid Muzhda, a political expert who worked in the Foreign Ministry during Taliban s rule, acknowledged there must be some differences among the Taliban, but the differences were not serious. He said participants of the Murree talks had called for complete withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan as a precondition for peace talks. The withdrawal of foreign troops was the main demand of Taliban under Mullah Omar s leadership, he said. The demand itself proves it there are no serious differences. But another political expert Qazi Mohammad Hassan Haqyar held a different view about the differences among the Taliban. I have no evidence to say there exist deep differences among the Taliban ranks. He said difference of opinion existed in every organisation. If Mullah Mohammad Hassan Rahmani or other Taliban leaders arrived at the negotiating table, it did not mean they had shunned the movement or did not recognize Mullah Omar s leadership, he added. He said Mullah Rahmani, Maulvi Abdul Jalil Akhund, Mullah Torabi, Maulvi Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor, Maulvi Kabir and others had been living in Pakistan which wielded influence over them. However, Haqyar denied any differences among the Taliban. There can be differences in views. But all those I mentioned do not say they are separated from the Taliban or they do not recognize Mullah Omar as their leader. About two weeks ago, former Taliban s ambassador to Pakistan Maulvi Abdul Salam Zaeef told a research seminar that according to his information, Mullah Omar remained a recognized leader of all the Taliban. He cited some examples in this regard like the swapping of a US soldier with five Taliban leaders of the Qatar office through the Haqqani network and the release of Turkish engineers in central Logar province and others. Pro-Taliban writer and expert Nazar Mohammad Mutmayen in a column had called the Murree talks an attempt to divide the Taliban. He blamed the US for it and said: The US is trying to take revenge from the Taliban of its defeat in Afghanistan. The US has distributed millions of dollars to fuel infighting among the Taliban ranks like the Soviets did with mujahideen. (Pajhwok) MAIMANA: At least 24 people were wounded on Wednesday when a powerful bomb went off in front of a Kabul Bank branch in the capital of northern Faryab province, witnesses said. The explosion took place around 9:00am, jolting parts of Maimana city. Eye-witnesses said the explosives had been planted on a bicycle that went off in front of the Kabul Bank branch near a currency-exchange market. A security official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said many people were wounded in the blast. Dr. Amanullah Ehsan at the Afghan-Turk hospital in Maimana told Pajhwok Afghan News 19 wounded people had been brought to the hospital. They included two policemen, two children and a woman and four of them were in critical condition, he added. But Dr. Sabera Sherzai, deputy public health director, put the number of those injured at 24. Assadullah, 30, who was injured in the blast, said: I was crossing the road when the explosion took place. Security forces were also present at the time. Another wounded person said: Anybody who is responsible for the blast during this holy month of Ramadan is not a Muslim. The explosion occurred when police and other government employees queued up in front of the bank to collect their wages ahead of Eidul Fitr. No group has claimed responsibility for the blast so far. (Pajhwok) 228 held on drug charges in 3 months: CJTF KABUL: The Criminal Justice Task Force (CJTF) on Wednesday said 228 people had been arrested in connection with drugs related crimes during the first three months of the current solar year. CJTF spokesman Ahmad Khalid Mowahid told Pajhwok Afghan News the detainees included foreigners, women and government officials. He said the task force had been referred 184 cases involving 228 suspects during the first three months of the current solar year. He said the individuals had been arrested in 19 provinces including Kabul. Drugs recovered from them included 1.5 tonnes of chemical items used in making heroin, half a tonne of morphine, nine tonnes of opium, 26 tonnes of hashish, 1.5 tonnes of solid chemical materials, two tonnes of liquid chemical materials and 6,000 liters of alcoholic beverages. The suspects included two Iranian nationals, 11 civil service workers, seven women and a number of ordinary people, Mowahid said. He said the cases were under investigation and the relevant courts would decide them soon. He said most of the cases currently being investigated belonged to Kabul, Kandahar and Nimroz provinces. Taliban attack Kamal Khan Dam in Nimroz ZARANJ: Security officials and the Taliban have claimed inflicting casualties on each other following the insurgent group s attack on Kamal Khan Dam facility in southern Nimroz province. Brig. Gen. Delawar Shah Delawar, Nimroz police chief, said Taliban attacked the facility on Tuesday and the ensuing battle continued for several hours. He said the insurgents suffered heavy casualties but did not present any details. A security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said two insurgents were killed and three more were wounded. He added two policemen also suffered injuries. Taliban, however, in their website have claimed overrunning three security posts in Qala-i-Afzal lo- cality of Kamal Khan, killing five soldiers. Two weeks back also the insurgent group had attacked the facility, torching a police post. Kamal Khan Dam has three sections and is being constructed with the financial support of the World Bank at a cost of $100 millions. Work on the second phase of the mega project is underway and upon completion more than 100,000 hectares of land would come under irrigation and 8.5 megawatts of electricity would be generated. Pakistan increases custom tariff on Afghan fruits exports By Akhtar M.Nikzad KABU: Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce and Industries (ACCI) said that Pakistan has increased custom tariff on export Afghan fruit products. It alleged that the move was aimed at damaging Afghanistan s fruit products. This comes at a time that the fruit products have increased by 30 percent as comparing with the past year. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the ACCI, Atiquallah Nusrat, in an interview with Afghanistan Times said that despite numerous challenges before agriculture sector, fruit products have increased by 30 percent this year. He said that lack of market and the problems created by Pakistan have hindered export of fruits to the international markets. Nusrat added that Afghan fruit products are being exported to markets in India and South Asia through Pakistan. He said that Pakistan has recently increased tariff on fruit products of Afghanistan three The SAFTA is an agreement reached between eight members of the South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation, including Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Afghanistan. Nusrat said that increase in export tariff on Afghan fruits by Pakistan will damage economic growth of the country. Afghan markets are full of fruits and we are concerned that high temperature will spoil them, he asserted. He said that Afghan traders are hopeful that access to Indian and South Asian markets through Chabahar port in Iran will work as an alternative to Pakistan s Gwadar port. Stressing on economic importance of Chabahar port, Nusrat urged both Iran and India to accelerate work on the port. Head of fresh fruit exporters union, Nejabat Haidari, said that Afghan traders and farmers have suffered huge losses in the past 20 Afghan traders and farmers. He warned that they will stage protest demonstration if their demands were not met. The Minister of Agriculture and Livestock, Assadullah Zamir, said that they don t have any national or international market for fruits. He said that the Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Livestock (MAIL) in cooperation with the Ministry of Commerce and Industries (MoCI) is working to find international markets for Afghan fruits. Indian ambassador to Kabul, Amar Sinha, told Afghanistan Times that Chabahar port is a very good option for expansion of trade relations between South Asia and Central Asia. Efforts are underway to develop the port. However, we are facing some problems which will be resolved soon, he said. Musafer Qoqandi, spokesman for the MoCI, Pakistan has violated Afghanistan, Pakistan Trade and Transit Agreement (APTTA) by increasing the cus- times. Custom tariff on export of fruit from Afghanistan was Rs2,500 in Pakistan in the past, but the country has now increased it to Rs7,500, he said, adding that the move was violation of the South Asian Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA), which promotes trade and economic growth in the region through reduction of tariff. days. The traders have halted export of fruits to Pakistan recently. Previously they were exporting 300 tons of fruits to the country on daily basis, he said. Haidari said that concerned authorities have turned their blind eye to the issue. He urged the government to spare no efforts in resolving the challenges faced by tom tariff on export of fruits from Afghanistan, without informing Kabul about their decision. We sent a letter to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to take necessary measure to solve the problem. Now, our attaché is talking with Pakistani officials and we hope that the negotiation will result in a fruitful result, he said. Afghan Air Force to equip MD 530F helicopters with rockets The Afghan Air Force (AAF) MD 530F Cayuse Warrior helicopters will be equipped with air-to-surface rockets in a bid to further boost the close air support capabilities of the air force, it has been reported. The US army has awarded a contract worth $13.2 million to add the seven-tube M260 launcher for the 70mm (2.75 inch) rockets to MD-530Fs supplied by the United States to the Afghan Air Force, the IHS Janes defence weekly reported quoting US Department of Defense (DoD). The report further added 19 helicopters in total will have the rocket system added to the Mission Equipment Package (MEP) that already features twin FN Herstal 12.7 mm (.50 cal) Heavy Machine Gun Pods (HMPs). The integration, which will include installation of fixed forward weapon sights, will be complete by 12 July 2016. The Afghan Air Force received the first six armed MD-530s from United States earlier in the month of March this year. Pentagon awarded MD Helicopters Inc. a maximum $44.2 million firm-fixed-price contract last year to develop and provide an armament package for the MD530F helicopters that were already supplied to the Afghan Air Force. Around 17 of the Afghan Air Force s MD-530F helicopter will be upgraded under the contract which is expected to be completed early next year. MD-530F helicopters are designed for high altitude and/or hot weather operations, where thinner air costs helicopters some of their lift. Afghan Air Force is also expecting to receive 20 A-29 Super Tucano light air support aircraft which will help replace the Mi-35 attack helicopter that reaches the end of its service life in January 2016. A-29 pilots and maintainers are currently in the US and have been training since February. UN condemns recent attacks in Afghanistan WASHINGTON: UN SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon has condemned in the strongest terms recent attacks in Afghanistan that killed and injured more than 100 civilians, including women and children. The heinous attacks in Khost and Baghlan provinces and Kabul city occurred near spaces of public assembly, including a bazaar as well as mosque where civilians had gathered to pray, a statement from Ban s spokesperson quoted him as saying on Tuesday. Expressing his solidarity with the people of Afghanistan, Ban conveyed his deepest condolences to the Afghan government and to the families of the victims and wished the injured a swift recovery. Ban calls for the persons responsible for these attacks to be brought to justice. (Pajhwok) Scotland sends 100s of soldiers to help train Afghan forces 5 passengers kidnapped on KabulJalalabad road Hundreds of Scottish soldiers have been deployed to Afghanistan to help train the Afghan National Security Forces who are lonely fighting terrorists on the ground since January this year. According to a BBC report, the troops are from 2 Scots battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland who will serve for seven months under the ongoing British military support mission Operation Toral in Afghanistan. Lt Col Graham Wearmouth, of 2 Scots Battalion is quoted by BBC as saying that the role of the newly deployed forces is different from before. You ve got to look at what went before and yes, it is not without risk of course, and as a British soldier deploying on an operation overseas you would expect that. But it feels very, very different and we are not the ones who are primarily in the lead. It is the Afghans in the lead. We are there in a supporting role, helping them to develop their institutions so that they can then deliver more enduring stability to their own country. He is quoted by BBC as saying. The news agency further states that about 250 of these troops will be stationed at Afghanistan s military college. JALALABAD: Gunmen snatched five passengers from a vehicle and kidnapped them overnight on the Kabul-Jalalabad highway in eastern Laghman province, an official said on Wednesday. Sarhadi Zwak, the Laghman governor s spokesman, told Pajhwok Afghan News the incident took place on Tuesday night around 9:00pm in Qarghai district. He said efforts were underway to rescue the abducted passengers. Nimatullah, a resident of Khairo Khail area, where the incident took place, said unknown gunmen last night started searching vehicles on the road in the locality. Some months back, 13 passengers were kidnapped in Aziz Khan locality on the Kabul-Jalalabad highway, but they were later released. (Pajhwok) This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Mullah Omar endorses political endeavours and peaceful pathways Wolesi Jirga calls on security forces to prevent Pakistani troop infiltration Abdul Zuhoor Qayomi KABUL: The Wolesi Jirga of the parliament on Wednesday called upon the Afghan security forces to prevent Pakistani troops from entering into the Afghan soil. And also lawmakers put their weight behind public uprising in a bid to maintain peace and stability in the country. While showing deep concern over recent deterioration of security situation in the country, the Wolesi Jirga members urged the National Unity Government (NUG) to make its last-ditch efforts to maintain security across the country. They also asked the government to support public uprising in number of provinces, especially in Faryab province as security situation is getting worse there. Meer Dad Khan Nijrabi, chief of Internal Security Committee (ISC) of Wolesi Jirga said that re- ISLAMABAD: Supreme leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Omar, on Wednesday endorsed the political role of his armed movement in his traditional Eid message, just days after senior Taliban leaders held their first and direct talks with Afghan government in Murree. Mullah Omar, whose whereabouts have not been known since 2001, however, did not directly mention the July 7 peace talks brokered by Pakistan. Concurrently with armed jihad, political endeavours and peaceful pathways for achieving these sacred goals is a legitimate Islamic principle and an integral part of prophetic politics, the Taliban s elusive leader said. As our holy leader, the beloved Prophet (pbuh), was actively engaged in fighting the infidels in the fields of Badr and Khyber , he simultaneously participated in agreements beneficial for Muslims, held meetings with envoys of infidels, sent messages and delegations to them and on various occasions even undertook the policy of face-to-face talks with warring infidel parties, Mullah Omar said. The Taliban leadership traditionally issued Mullah Omar s Eid messages but did not after 2007, the year he had issued an audio to leaders after the killing of top Taliban leader Mullah Dadullah in southern Afghanistan in a joint operation by foreign and Afghan forces. If we look into our religious regulations, we can find that meetings and even peaceful interactions with the enemies is not prohibited but what is unlawful is to deviate from the lofty ideals of Islam and to violate religious decrees, the Taliban leader further said. Therefore, the objective behind our political endeavours as well as contacts and interactions with countries of the world and our own Afghans is to bring an end to the occupation and to establish an independent Islamic system in our country, Mullah Omar said. The Taliban leader underscored the importance of the Taliban office in Qatar in aiding the political process but did not oppose the political engagement of other leaders who are not associated with the office but are involved in negotiations. We have established a Political Office for political affairs, entrusted with the responsibility of monitoring and conducting all political activities, he added. Further, for the first time Mullah Omar addressed the issue of labelling the Taliban as Pakistan s agents. Some circles accuse mujahideen of being agents of Pakistan and Iran. This is an utterly unjust verdict because neither our past history nor the present prevailing circumstances attest to this statement and the forthcoming history will also be a witness against these false accusations, the Taliban leader insisted. He said the Taliban have, however, sought cordial relations not only with Pakistan and Iran but also all other neighboring countries. Just like towards the people of Pakistan and Iran, we have been the well-wishers of all masses of all neighboring, regional and world countries and we are determined to pursue this wise policy, he maintained. The Taliban leader also justified the armed struggle as invading troops are still stationed in Afghanistan. Jihad is as obligatory today as it was in the beginning of foreign occupation because our Muslim homeland Afghanistan is still under occupation and both its land and air space are controlled by the invaders, Mullah Omar said. (ExpressTribune) lated security organs facing with lack of security mechanism and also not following suggestion offered to the security organs by lawmakers to help them bring peace and security in the country. The security agencies should put their weight behind public pursing in Faryab province as the Taliban insurgents have killed and arrested lots of upraises there, he said. He also asked for explanation from security organizes over being reluctant in supporting public uprising. Nijrabi said that Islamabad plotting conspiracy against Kabul, and also blast Pakistan for brokering its pledges to prevent Taliban from launching springs offensive in Afghanistan. Obaidullah Barekzai, a representative of Uruzgan province criticized the arrest of Weesa Daily, Chief Editor as he was accused for MoPH opens hospital in Farah AT News Report KABUL: The new civilian hospital inaugurated in Immigration Township of Farah province and laid down foundation stone of another 52 beds hospital for treatment of addicts at the province. Public Health Minister, Ferozuddin Feroz who paid visit to Farah province not only opened the hospital but also watch over all provincial governmental hospitals. He said that Farah is one of the provinces that had only three case of polio during current year. He further said that children in Farhar province should take the advantage of health facilities like other children living in safe environment. The hospital was built with financial support of a Qatar Sheikh, in which 5000 families would be provided with health facilities. It is worth-mentioning that foundation stone of 52 beds hospital for treatment of addicts to be build by financial support of Qatar Sheikh estimated around $180000. The hospital would be complete with one year. No casualties as balst rocks Kabul city KABUL: A bomb blast hit the Khair Khana area of capital Kabul on Wednesday afternoon, but caused no casualties, an official said. Hamayun Aini, the 119 police helpline chief, told Pajhwok Afghan News the blast took place in at around 3:00pm in the limits of the forth police district. He said it was a magnetic bomb placed in a roadside pot. It caused no causalities, but police were investigating. (Pajhwok) publishing NDS-ISI agreement that Pakistan plotting conspiracy against Afghanistan. He added that Pakistan build up terrorist training centers in Helmand and Badakhshan provinces, that s why insecurity growing in the country. Abdul Qadir Zazai Watandost, member of the International Relations Committee (IRC) of the Wolesi Jirga said that Pakistan willingly deployed its border security forces to enter Afghan soil and the government yet to take practical steps in this regard. Though the government wanted to solve the issues through diplomatic channels, and don t allow the Afghan security forces to recapture the areas that fallen at the hands of the Pakistani troops. The first deputy speaker of the Wolesi Jirga, Abdul Zahir Qadir called upon to the Afghan security forces not to wait for diplo- matic efforts, rather take military force to defend the border and national integrity of the country. Qadir said that if the government did not adopt measures to protect the sovereignty of the country, the Afghan masses would take steps to defend the integrity of their country. He also asked the security forces to ensure security of the citizens. President Muhammad Ashraf Ghani should come to the parliament to share information with the members of the Wolesi Jirga over current situation of the country, he said. The security forces should take practical steps to ensure security in Faryab and other provinces. Fawzia Raufi, a representative of Faryab province, said that fighting between Afghan security forces and the Taliban insurgents had been intensifying head of peace talks that recently held in Pakistan. Peace talks must fulfill people s expectations: Survey By Farhad Naibkhel KABUL: Steering Committee of the Afghan People s Dialogue on Peace (People s Dialogue) on Wednesday urged the National Unity Government to prepare the ground to bring the long-term war into a logic end as most the civilians are the victim. In a survey conducted by the People s Dialogue, they asked the NUG to adopt different ways to put a halt to the violence in the country following peace talks that recently held between Afghan delegation and the Taliban representative in Pakistan. And also the government termed peace talks with the Taliban in Murree as positive and in interest of both countries. Though the Afghan masses called the recent Murree peace talks as a positive step, beside every hook and cranny of the country burning in smoke and flame of suicide bombings and terrorist attacks, in which tens of the people are killing and injuring on daily bases, the survey added. Afghan Women Skills Development Center Executive Director, Ms. Mari Akrami said that the people of Afghanistan not only expecting to see the country free of war but also have high expectations from the government to take the principle of justice, the rights of human, women and children into account during ongoing peace negotiations with the Taliban. Briefing the newsmen in Kabul, Ms. Akrami said in the survey that over 6000 people were interviewed in which they have showed concern regarding rampant of corruption, especially in judicial system, violation of human, women and child rights, lack of development projects, unemployment and poverty in the country. Illegal armed groups, ethnical and partially factional conflicts, having no access to the education, and highest civilian casualty rates were the sole concern of the people, she said. The survey further added that the interviewed people also expressed anxiety over the lack of inclusive peace process in the country. The views expressed by the Afghan masses during interview by the People s Dialogue had send to the officials of the NUG as well as to the Taliban representatives, while asking both the parties to undertake the demands of the people including the women and youth in peace talks. Both parties emphasizing on their own point and agenda rather than people expectations, as it s the people who bearing the brunt of prolong war and conflicts, the survey added. It further says that one of the main factors behind failure of the previous peace negotiations during the last five years was the ignorance of people demand in the peace talks. Member of Steering Committee of the Afghan People s Dialogue on Peace, Ahmad Fahim Hakimi said that some members of High Peace Council (HPC) were not interested to put an end to the war. He said that if Afghanistan witnesses for an accountable and judgmental day, so the aforementioned figures will be the first figures, who will be questioned by people. The Afghan People s Dialogue on Peace is an initiative in which ordinary Afghans can express their views through inclusive public discussions on the prospects of peace, reconciliation, security, economic development, human rights and the rule of law. EMERGENCY CALLS Police 100 - 119 Hospitals FMIC Hospital Behind Kabul Medical University: 0202500200-+93793275595 Rabia-i-Balkhi Hospital Pule Bagh-e- Umomi 070263672 Khairkhana Hospital 0799-321007 2401352 Indira Gandhi Children Hospital, Wazir Akbar Khan, Kabul 2301372 Ibn-e- Seena Pul-e-Artan, Kabul 2100359 Wazir Akbar Khan Hospital 2301741, 2301743 Ali Abad Shahrara, Kabul 2100439 Malalai Maternity Hospital 2201377/ 2301743 Banks Da Afghanistan Bank 2100302, 2100303 Kabul Bank 222666, 070285285 Azizi Bank 0799 700900 Pashtany Bank 2102908, 2103868 Air Services Safi Airways 020 22 22 222 Ariana 020-2100270 Kam Air 0799974422 Hotels Safi Landmark 020-2203131 SERENA 0799654000 New Rumi Restaurant 0776351347 Internet Services UA Telecom 0796701701 / 0796702702 Exchange Rate Purchase: One US$ = 60.42Afs One Pound Sterling= 92.90Afs One Euro = 66.62Afs 1000 Pak Rs = 581Afs Sale: One US$ = 60.62 Afs One Pound Sterling= 93.70Afs One Euro= 67.22 Afs 1000 Pak Rs= 589Afs This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES ********** News-in-Brief India s Maoist rebels kill four abducted policemen RAIPUR: India's Maoist rebels have killed four policemen they abducted from a bus in the restive central state of Chhattisgarh, a senior officer said Wednesday. The guerrillas stopped the bus transporting the security personnel as it was passing through the Maoistdominated Kutru village in Bijapur district late Monday. "We have been informed that the four abducted police personnel have been killed by the Maoists. The bodies were thrown on the roadside near a forested area," police superintendent KL Dhruv told AFP. "Police parties have been sent out to the jungles to hunt for the culprits." The bodies were discovered close to the area where they were abducted, raising doubts about the search operations that police said had been launched immediately after the abductions. The rebels, who claim to be fighting for the rights of poor tribal minorities and farmers, have waged a decades-long battle across central and eastern Indian states to overthrow government authorities. The government describes the Maoist insurgency as the country's most serious internal security threat. China pledges $10m special grant to Pakistan ISLAMABAD: China will provide $10 million to Pakistan as per an agreement signed between the Chinese ambassador and secretary economic affairs division of Pakistan, The Express Tribune learnt on Wednesday. Sun Weidong, the ambassador of China to Pakistan, together with Muhammad Saleem Sethi, Secretary of Economic Affairs Division of Pakistan, signed an agreement between the government of the People s Republic of China and the government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan on the special grant, a press release issued by the Chinese embassy said. The signing of the agreement is the implementation of an important outcome of President Xi Jinping s visit to Pakistan in April this year, the press release added. China firmly supports the efforts of Pakistan to safeguard its national security and the Chinese side will continue to provide assistance within its capacity for the reconstruction and livelihood improvements of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata), it said. Iran, world powers deal throws open new avenues for Pakistan ISLAMABAD: Pakistan welcomed on Tuesday the historic deal between Iran and world powers on Tehran s controversial nuclear programme and called for expeditious implementation of the pact. I think it is very good progress in that direction and from our point of view we have a large number of possibilities of energy, Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline and a number of other projects which were affected by the sanctions, Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs and National Security Sartaj Aziz said. Answering a question at a press briefing at the Foreign Office, he said that following the lifting of sanctions Pakistan would move quickly to begin implementing the energy agreements. So as soon as the sanctions are lifted we can very rapidly start the implementation of those agreements and at the same time trade possibilities will expand; right now there are lot of payment difficulties between Iran and Pakistan and more importantly Iran s integration in the region in terms of economy will also lead to political advantages, Mr Aziz said. He expressed the hope that Iran s return to the mainstream would also promote unity of the Muslim Ummah by addressing the underlying sectarian issues. Pakistan welcomes the important comprehensive nuclear agreement reached between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the P5+1, the Foreign Office said in a statement on the deal signed in Vienna. With the conclusion of the deal after more than a decade of complex negotiations the focus has moved to its implementation. Under the agreement, Iran will allow the International Atomic Energy Agency access to verify compliance to the restrictions placed on its nuclear programme and in return sanctions will be lifted. We look forward to the expeditious and smooth implementation of the provisions of the comprehensive nuclear agreement by all its signatories, the FO said. It recalled Pakistan s consistent support for a negotiated settlement of the nuclear issue. As a neighbouring country, we have also reiterated that reciprocal confidence-building measures relating to Iran s nuclear programme auger well for peace and security in our region, the FO said. The deal represents a major opening for Pakistan to benefit from the new business opportunities that would emerge once the Iranian economy is unshackled. Economists believe Iran s reentry into global economy would create business opportunities worth tens of billions of dollars for both local and foreign companies. Pakistan will particularly be interested in finalising its gas pipeline deal and other energy agreements that have long been held up because of the crippling sanctions. Pakistan s cement industry can also benefit from the new situation. NEW DELHI: India's defense ministry has cleared the purchase of military equipment worth $4.74 billion, including four long-range patrol aircraft from US aerospace giant Boeing, an official said Wednesday. The Defence Acquisition Council, which approves big-ticket purchases, also approved an order for 428 air defense artillery guns during a meeting late Tuesday, the official added. The council has cleared proposals relating mainly to purchase of air defense guns and long-range patrol aircraft for the navy, the official said on condition of anonymity. India last year lifted a cap on foreign investment in defense as the government seeks to revamp its ageing military equipment. The right-wing government that came to power last year also wants to boost local manufacturing and end the country's status as the world's largest arms importer. Military purchases had stalled under the previous Congress government, slowing down much-needed investment in the high-profile sector. Bangladesh arrests prime suspect in boy s lynching Sri Lanka rupee steady on state bank dollar sales The Sri Lankan rupee traded steady on Wednesday in dull trade as a state-owned bank maintained its dollar selling rate at 133.80 amid demand for the greenback from importers, dealers said. The rupee fell for the first time in seven sessions on Monday after the staterun bank raised the dollarselling rate by 0.15 percent to 133.80 from 133.60. "Exporters are not selling dollars and there is importer demand," a currency dealer said. The rupee is under pressure as more than 80 billion rupees ($598 million) worth of government securities would mature this week and some foreign investors may exit from treasury bonds, another dealer said, asking not to be named as he was not authorised to talk to the media. Two other dealers confirmed the maturity amount. Dealers and analysts said the central bank may not be able to sustain the rupee's appreciation trend as import demand could pick up due to lower interest rates, while foreign investors continue to sell government securities. Pressure on the currency could also build if exporters stop selling dollars until after the Aug. 17 parliamentary elections, dealers said. DHAKA: Bangladesh police said on Wednesday they had arrested the prime suspect in the brutal murder of a 13-year-old boy that provoked public outrage after video footage of the killing went viral. Authorities said they arrested Moyna Chowkidar, 38, on the outskirts of the northeastern city of Sylhet on Tuesday night, after receiving a tip-off from local residents. Television footage showed hundreds of people celebrating and shouting hang him! as a handcuffed Moyna was taken away in a police van. Moyna is the prime accused in the murder of Samiul (Alam Rajon). He caught the boy and brought him to other culprits, local police chief Akhter Hossain told AFP. He is the seventh person to be arrested over the July 8 killing of the boy, who was tied to a pole and then subjected to a brutal assault in which he pleaded for his life. One arrest was made in Saudi Arabia after officials received a tip from members of the large Bangladeshi expat community in the country. The 28-minute video of Samiul, which was widely circulated after being posted on social media, has prompted deep soul-searching among Bangladeshis as well as a series of protests. Thousands of people demonstrated in Samiul's home city of Sylhet on Tuesday and in a dozen other cities and towns including in the capital, demanding that the killers be sent to the gallows. Samiul was accused by his attackers of stealing a bicycle, although his family says he was innocent. Police said their investigation had found no evidence of theft . The accusation was baseless. He did not steal anything, Hossain said. In the video, the terrified youngster can be heard screaming in pain and repeating: Please don't beat me like this, I will die. At one stage he is told to walk away. But as he tries to get to his feet, one of the attackers shouts: His bones are okay. Beat him some more. An autopsy found 64 separate injuries had been inflicted on the teenager. PTI, MQM battle it out with resolutions in Sindh Assembly KARACHI: Pakistan Tehreek-iInsaf (PTI) and Muttahida Qaumi Pakistanis saw the video [referred to in the resolution] and heard the Movement (MQM) spent Wednesday afternoon moving resolutions against one another in the Sindh Assembly, both inspired by what they say is the other's criticism of the armed forces. The PTI resolution asks the Sindh government to approach the centre against statements made by MQM supremo Mr Altaf Hussain over "interference by a British citizen in the internal affairs of our country", It highlights that the MQM leader has on various occasions made "anti-Pakistan" statements, and demands for his British citizenship to be revoked so he can return to Pakistan and be tried in court. Referring to recent reports about multiple First Information Reports being filed against the MQM chief, PTI member Dr Arif Alvi said, "Don't treat this as a joke. These FIRs are being filed out of desperation." In its resolution, the party also wishes for the British government to investigate the sources and use of funding for the organisation. In what appears to be a rejoinder, the MQM also moved a resolution against Imran Khan in the Sindh Assembly. The resolution, which calls for Khan to be de-seated from the National Assembly, says the PTI leader has made "disrespectful comments about Pakistani Army generals". Speaking to reporters outside the Sindh Assembly, MQM leader Muhammad Hussain said, "All words Imran Khan used in that gathering - 'If we gathered 20,000 people, then Pakistani generals would wet themselves'." The resolution refers to a video of Imran Khan making these remarks which, it says, was recently played on a news channel. It further says that these remarks can be construed as an attack on a state institution and calls for strict action against Khan under Article 6 of the Constitution. It also says that under Articles 62 and 63, his membership of the National Assembly should be terminated. MQM, PTI at loggerheads The PTI and MQM have been in a bitter rivalry since the run-up to the May 2013 general elections. Just a day after the May 11 polls in 2013, PTI held a protest gathering at Teen Talwar in Karachi's Clifton area, against what was described as "massive rigging" in the elections, especially Karachi's NA-250. In a telephonic speech that night, Altaf Hussain had expressed his discontentment over the protest and retaliated against allegations of rigging by the PTI. A week later, PTI's Zahra Shahid was shot dead outside her home in DHA, Karachi. PTI chief Imran Khan at the time openly held Altaf Hussain responsible for the killing. Most recently, the two parties locked horns over by-polls in Azizabad's NA-246 constituency - believed to be an MQM bastion - when PTI's Imran Ismail was pitted against MQM's Kanwar Naveed Jamil. Quake-hit Nepal urges nations to lift travel advisories, hopes to bring back tourists ATHMANDU: Nepal s government has urged other countries to lift travel advisories that discourage their citizens from visiting the Himalayan nation following a devastating earthquake in April that killed thousands of people. Tourism minister Kripasur Sherpa said Wednesday that the government has asked other nations through diplomatic channels to remove the advisories because most parts of the country are safe and unaffected by the earthquake. Sherpa said so far the United States, Britain, Switzerland, New Zealand and Italy have removed their advisories, but that some other European countries have not. Sri Lanka s new GDP data technically correct, but 2012 growth sinister: Cabraal Sri Lanka's newly compiled gross domestic product data may be technically correct and it has shown that GDP was understated during the last regime, and but the start date for the new data model is suspicious, former Central Bank Governor Nivard Cabraal said. Sri Lanka's nominal GDP for 2014 (at prices current at the time) was estimated under a 2002 model at 9784 billion rupees, was revised up to 10,291 billion rupees under the new method. "So GDP is not 74.9 billion dollars, but it is 78.8 billion US dollars (in 2014)," Cabraal told reporters. "Our per capita GDP was earlier estimated at 3,625 dollars. That has increased to 3,795 dollars. "That means the situation was much better than we thought when Mahinda Rajapaksa handed over the country." He said the 2012 GDP growth which was revised up to 9.2 percent from 6.2 percent, made the growth in the subsequent two years much lower. Bangladesh migrants on Island: Myanmar Navy rescues 102 stranded boat people Myanmar's navy has rescued more than a hundred Bangladeshi boat people from a southern island, state media reported. The Bangladeshi migrants were found on Bruer Island, near the Thailand border, between June 30 and July 12, the government-owned Global New Light of Myanmar said on Tuesday, according to the DPA news agency. "Some said they were forcibly taken from their country while others reported having been enticed by traffickers to work in Malaysia," the paper said, according to Agence France Presse. The traffickers abandoned them on the island in early June. "The navy is searching the areas and the victims will be sent back to their home country," the state media said, according to Reuters. Myanmar authorities found all of the boat people to be from Bangladesh and said that they would be sent back to Bangladesh. The Bangladesh mission in Yangoon, however, said they had no official information about migrants. "We have just received the news from the media. We have received no confirmation from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs," a mission official told Reuters. Last month, Myanmar had sent back more than 180 Bangladeshi migrants who it had found abandoned off its territorial waters. Thousands of Rohingya - a persecuted Muslim minority living in Rakhine state - have fled Myanmar on boats in recent years. Around 130,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled the country by sea as per United Nations figures, according to Anadolu Agency. Myanmar does not recognize Rohingya as citizens and prefers to call them 'Bengali' (people from Bangladesh). This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTAN TIMES Hadi loyalists seize more ground in Yemen s Aden Loyalists of Yemen's exiled president seized more ground in second city Aden on Wednesday after recapturing the airport held by Iranbacked militias for four months, military sources said. The offensive, dubbed Operation Golden Arrow, is the first major advance by the loyalists since the Houthi militias entered the port city in March, forcing President Abedrabbu Mansour Hadi into exile in neighboring Saudi Arabia. Saudi-led warplanes carried out six raids on rebel positions before dawn, witnesses and military sources said. Popular Resistance fighters -a southern militia that has been the mainstay of support for Hadi -recaptured the provincial government headquarters in the Mualla district by Aden's main commercial port, militia spokesman Ali alAhmadi told AFP. They also advanced in the Crater district of the city, he added. On Tuesday, the militia, backed by reinforcements freshly The United Nations Security Council is likely to vote next week on a resolution to endorse the Iran nuclear deal and terminate targeted sanctions, but retain an arms embargo and ballistic missile technology ban, diplomats said. The United States will circulate the draft resolution to the 15member Security Council on Wednesday, U.N. diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Under a historic deal between Iran and major world powers in Vienna on Tuesday, Iran agreed to long-term curbs on a nuclear program that the West suspected was aimed at creating an atomic bomb. Iran has said its work is purely peaceful. In return, the United States, European Union and United Nations would lift sanctions on Iran. Under the agreement, any United Nations sanctions relief would be simultaneous with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verifying implementation of agreed nuclear-related measures by Iran. The U.N. Security Council resolution would terminate its seven previous resolutions on Iran, but under the Vienna deal it would leave a U.N. weapons embargo in place for five years and a ban on buying missile technology for eight years. The five permanent vetowielding members of the U.N. Security Council - the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France - were parties to the deal agreed with Iran in Vienna, along with Germany and the European Union. The U.N. resolution to endorse the deal would also enshrine a mechanism for all Security Council sanctions to be automatically re-imposed if Iran breaches the deal. According to the Vienna deal, the six world powers, Iran and the European Union will form a Joint Commission to handle any complaints about breaches. If the complaining state is not satisfied with how the commission addresses its concerns, it could then take its grievance to the U.N. Security Council. The Security Council would then need to vote on a resolution to continue the lifting of sanctions on Iran. If such a resolution has not been adopted within 30 days of the council receiving the complaint of a breach, then the sanctions contained in all previous U.N. resolutions would be re-imposed, unless the council decided otherwise. If the nuclear deal is adhered to, all the provisions and measures of the U.N. resolution would terminate 10 years after its adoption and the Iran nuclear issue would be removed from the Security Council agenda. Obama discusses Iran deal with Saudi KING SALMAN President Barack Obama telephoned Saudi Arabia s King Salman bin Abdulaziz on Tuesday from Air Force One to discuss the newly completed Iran nuclear agreement, the White House said. Saudi Arabia expressed hope Tuesday for an end to Iran's regional "interference" after a historic nuclear deal aimed at ensuring Tehran does not obtain an atomic bomb was struck. "Given that Iran is a neighbor, Saudi Arabia hopes to build with her better relations in all areas on the basis of good neighborliness and non-interference in internal affairs," said an official spokesman cited by the Saudi Press Agency. Both leaders also discussed the urgent need to stop the fighting in Yemen and ensure assistance for all Yemenis through international humanitarian channels. Obama also spoke with Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan by telephone to discuss the nuclear agreement. The United Arab Emirates welcomed the historic deal saying it could turn a new page for the Gulf region. Iran could play a (significant) role in the region if it revises its policy and stops interfering in the internal affairs of countries like Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, a UAE official said in the first reaction from the Gulf Arab monarchies to the Vienna accord. Meanwhile, Egypt said it hopes that the deal between both sides is complete and prevents an arms race in the Middle East as well as ensuring the region is free of all weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons. Obama emphasized the United States' commitment to working with Gulf partners, such as United Arab Emirates, to counter Iran's destabilizing activities in the region. Following the calls, it was revealed that the U.S. president is sending his defense chief next week to the Middle East to reassure re- assuring allies that the nuclear deal will not undermine America's commitment to their security. U.S. defense officials told Reuters that Defense Secretary Ash Carter would travel to Israel and elsewhere within the region but declined to offer details. The agreement between Iran and six major world powers could transform the Middle East, curbing sensitive Iranian nuclear activities in exchange for sanctions relief - and, in the process, upending assumptions about Tehran's isolation. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned Tuesday's deal as "a stunning, historic mistake." Offering a hint of his message to allies, Carter said in a statement about the Iran deal that the United States stood ready to "check Iranian malign influence". "We remain prepared and postured to bolster the security of our friends and allies in the region, including Israel," he said. The deal Iran and major powers agreed on a mechanism under which the U.N. nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency could get access to suspect nuclear sites in Iran within 24 days, the text of the Iran nuclear agreement said. Iran will also be allowed to conduct research and development (R&D) with uranium for advanced centrifuges during the first 10 years of a nuclear agreement with major powers, according to the text of the deal posted on the Russian foreign ministry website. "Iran will continue to conduct enrichment R&D in a manner that does not accumulate enriched uranium," the text of the agreement said. Tehran and the six powers had been holding marathon diplomatic negotiations at the ministerial level for more than two weeks to resolve a 12-year stand-off over Iran's nuclear program. Kuwait charges 29 over deadly mosque bombing Loyalists of Yemen's exiled president seized more ground in second city Aden on Wednesday after recapturing the airport held by Iranbacked militias for four months, military sources said. The offensive, dubbed Operation Golden Arrow, is the first major advance by the loyalists since the Houthi militias entered the port city in March, forcing President Abedrabbu Mansour Hadi into exile in neighboring Saudi Arabia. Saudi-led warplanes carried out six raids on rebel positions before dawn, witnesses and military sources said. Popular Resistance fighters -a southern militia that has been the mainstay of support for Hadi -recaptured the provincial government headquarters in the Mualla district by Aden's main commer- cial port, militia spokesman Ali alAhmadi told AFP. They also advanced in the Cra- trained and equipped in Saudi Arabia, retook the airport and much of the surrounding Khormaksar ter district of the city, he added. On Tuesday, the militia, backed by reinforcements freshly diplomatic district. "After the recapture of Khormaksar, there was a collapse in the ranks of the Houthis and their allies," renegade troops loyal to Hadi's predecessor Ali Abdullah Saleh, Ahmadi said. It was the defection of the 39th Armored Brigade on March 25 that had enabled the militias to take the airport. Much of Aden has been reduced to rubble by four months of ferocious fighting. The retreating militias pounded residential districts in the north and east of Aden with Katyusha multiple rocket launchers, provincial officials said. At least 12 civilians were killed and 105 wounded, Aden health department chief AlKhader Laswar told AFP. Eight loyalist militiamen were killed and 30 wounded in the fighting, Laswar added. There was no immediate word on militia losses. A Japanese parliamentary committee has approved security bills to expand the role of the country's military despite vocal protests from opposition lawmakers and the public. At the House of Representatives committee, which is dominated by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), members of opposition parties surrounded the chairman, holding banners to protest the "forced" passage. But the bills that would expand the remit of the country's armed forces were approved by the lawmakers of the ruling coalition, and are now set to move to a vote in the main chamber on Thursday. The proposed legislation is something of a pet project for Abe, despite widespread public disquiet over what many Japanese say is an affront to the country's 70 years of pacifism. "Unfortunately, the Japanese people still don't have a substantial understanding" of the bills, the prime minister told the panel on Wednesday. "I will work harder so public understanding would deepen further." Abe said. Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett reporting from the South Korean capital, Seoul, said Prime Minister Abe reached the decision to push this bill July last year. "Prime Minister Abe sees the need for Japan's military to be more muscular, to present more of a deterrent against potential ene- mies in the future. For that he says it needs to come to the aide of its main ally the united states and potentially others." Fawcett said. One bill would allow the Jap- anese military a greater role, including the defence of foreign allies that come under attack. Another would expand the military's international peacekeep- ing role. Many constitution experts say the legislation is unconstitutional. Polls find that about 80 percent of Japanese also have concerns. ISIS claims deadly car bomb in Iraqi town A car bomb blast claimed by ISIS killed at least five people in the Iraqi town of Khalis on Tuesday, officials said. The blast, which the top provincial official in Khalis said occurred outside a reputed local doctor's house, also left at least 11 wounded. ISIS said in a claim posted on jihadist forums that the explosion targeted members of Hashed al-Shaabi, an umbrella organization for mostly Shiite militias which has been playing a leading role in the anti-ISIS fightback. Khalis lies around 60 kilometers north of Baghdad in Diyala, a province which the government declared free of ISIS militants in January. The jihadists no longer have fixed positions there but have reverted to their old tactics of planting car bombs, carrying out suicide operations or hit-and-run attacks. trained and equipped in Saudi Arabia, retook the airport and much of the surrounding Khormaksar diplomatic district. "After the recapture of Khormaksar, there was a collapse in the ranks of the Houthis and their allies," renegade troops loyal to Hadi's predecessor Ali Abdullah Saleh, Ahmadi said. It was the defection of the 39th Armored Brigade on March 25 that had enabled the militias to take the airport. Much of Aden has been reduced to rubble by four months of ferocious fighting. The retreating militias pounded residential districts in the north and east of Aden with Katyusha multiple rocket launchers, provincial officials said. At least 12 civilians were killed and 105 wounded, Aden health department chief Al-Khader Laswar told AFP. Eight loyalist militiamen were killed and 30 wounded in the fighting, Laswar added. There was no immediate word on militia losses. Ugandan president in Burundi for mediation talks Uganda's president has started mediation talks between Burundi's government and opposition groups that are opposed to President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial bid for a third term. President Yoweri Museveni met with representatives of the Burundi government and opposition leaders in the nation's capital, Bujumbura, late on Tuesday. The talks are being attended by Agathon Rwasa, the most prominent opposition leader in Burundi. In remarks before the start of the talks, Museveni urged Burundi's leaders to strive for unity and said sectarianism is a threat to development. He said he was happy that the government had disarmed a pro-government youth group that is accused of allegedly carrying out serious crimes, including murdering perceived opponents. Museveni, who has ruled Uganda since taking power by force in 1986, was chosen by re- gional leaders earlier this month to mediate Burundi's political crisis ahead of presidential elections scheduled for July 21. Burundi has been on edge since April when the country's ruling party nominated Nkurunziza to be its presidential candidate for a third term. Unrest boiled over into a military coup in May that was quickly put down by pro-Nkurunziza forces, but at least 77 people have died in sporadic protests in Bu- jumbura by civilians who say Nkurunziza must go after serving the two constitutionally-allowed terms. The nation's constitutional court has ruled in the president's favour, saying he is eligible for a third term because he was chosen by lawmakers - and not popularly elected - for his first term. Amid the political unrest, concern is growing over a possible new rebel movement based in the country's northern provinces. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES We a r e a n a t io n a l in st it u t io n a n d n o t t h e v o ice o f a go v t o r a p r iv a t e o r ga n iza t io n Where does stand Daesh between religion and democracy? AFGHANISTAN TIMES Editor: Abdul Saboor Sarir Phone No: +93-772364666 E-mail: [email protected] www.afghanistantimes.af Photojournalist: M. Sadiq Yusufi Advisory editorial board Saduddin Shpoon, Dr. Sharif Fayez, Dr. Sultana Parvanta, Dr. Sharifa Sharif, Dr. Omar Zakhilwal, Setara Delawari, Ahmad Takal Graphic-Designers: Mansoor Faizy and Edriss Akbari Marketing & Advertising: Mohammad Parwiz Arian, 0708954626, 0778894038 Mailing address: P.O. Box: 371, Kabul, Afghanistan Our Bank Accounts: Azizi Bank: 000101100258091 / 000101200895656 Printed at Afghanistan Times Printing Press The constitution says Article 16: The state shall design and apply effective programs to foster and develop all languages of Afghanistan. Usage of all current languages in the country shall be free in press publications and mass media. Academic and national administrative terminology and usage in the country shall be preserved. Harassing media is intolerable Press freedom means not only to have access to information but the free expression of information without any sense of fear, restraints and admonitions. Press freedom means to be on the path to truth and any attempt by state and non-state actors whereby they seek to suppress free voices mean they cannot tolerate their weaknesses be exposed. In a time of seemingly unlimited access to information and new methods of content delivery in the developed parts of the world, here in Afghanistan, more areas and subjects are becoming virtually inaccessible to newsmen. Given the current mood of the government, free flow of news and information will be something a relic of the past. Silencing criticism through restraints, arrests, detentions, interrogating journalists and building pressures on newsmen to give out their sources is something that doesn t augur well for the development of media. Not only media but for democracy itself, even because for a free and fair governance free media is of utmost importance. Given the troubles, challenges and restraints, the press doesn t stop publishing. This is a global issue, however, the issue is severe where there is weak governance and where the government is afraid of the power of press freedom because the officials tell the public something different from what they do behind the close doors. And this is where the clash between media and the government starts. Since the National Unity Government has been hit by mounting criticism from all sides for signing an intelligence sharing MoU with Pakistan s premier spy agency ISI, therefore, if someone reports it, give their opinion on it, it is their constitutional right. Anybody or government department that shows intolerance towards media for free reporting is tantamount to reversing the hard-earned gains of media during the past 14 years. Unfortunately, the National Directorate of Security (NDS) put the editor-in-chief of the daily Weesa, one of the leading newspapers, Zubair Shafiqi, on notice, but he refused to go to the NDS office. The extreme happened when intelligence officials picked Shafiqi up from his office and took him to the NDS office in Kabul where he was kept for hours and interrogated and harassed on the NDS-ISI MoU news story. He was asked for the source of the news. Interrogating newsmen for running certain stories is not the job of NDS rather it is the responsibility of the Ministry of Information and Culture to seek explanation from media houses and journalists. If NDS keeps picking journalists, detaining or quizzing them, Afghanistan will become another Pakistan and NDS will become ISI, as this is something quite rife in Pakistan where journalists are tortured and detained by Pakistan s covert agencies. There is self-censorship, a worst form of censorship as under self-censorship a journalist doesn t knows the don ts list and if someone unintentionally cross the limit, their name is added to the list of missing persons. Does our government want the same in Afghanistan? And if a state agency is doing the job of media-watch then what is the job of the Ministry of Information and Culture? Any other government body or covert agency other than the Information and Culture Ministry if seeks explanation from journalists, or pick them up from their offices by force is harassment. For the health of democracy, good governance, and accountability, nobody should try to gag free press and the journalists must be able to work in a free environment, free from restraints and harassment. Any government that attempts to the clip the wings of media is doing it at its own stake because we live in a global world where we the journalists are not alone but part of a biggest world community that is interconnected. The government must be media friendly as it is not only healthy for its image but newsmen will be free in pointing out the weakness of the government and the government will be in a good position to overcome the weakness and cover the grey areas. Subscription Rates Categories Fee Annual Afg: 3600 Six Months Afg: 1800 International Organization $200 per year Afghanistan Times at your door step For fast delivery service Afghanistan Times seeks the names, addresses of your organizations and the number of copies you want. By Danish Bakhtiari Email: [email protected] The relation between religion and democracy: Translated by Ahmad Siyar Seerat Democracy in the perspective of Muslims has three approaches: I- The conflict and contrast approach II- The equality and unity approach III- The interaction approach I- The Conflict and Contrast Approach Leaders and seniors of Ikhwan-ul-Muslimeen (the Muslim Brotherhood) Society such as Imam Hussain al Anbar, Shaheed Sayed Qutb, and their ilk believe that Islamic concept of sovereignty has been based on God s revelation (wahi) to guide the human being, while the democratic concept of sovereignty is based on understanding and thought, based on human experience. Democracy does not have any basis of revelation (wahi), therefore, the power (law making) doesn t rests with God rather it rests in the hands of human being, which is a sort of infidelity. It means democracy is based on unfaithfulness (infidelity). Therefore, religion and democracy don t have any relation and at the same time they are in conflict and contrast. Islam and the West liberal democracy both claim that they direct and steer the human being in the direction of welfare and good. Both have worldwide claiming. After the end of the cold war and collapse of the then USSR, the West liberal democracy considered Islam as the highest threat against uni-polar system in international era. Samuel P. Huntington, an American political scientist and theorist, in his two famous books, has listed three main issues as a threat for the West liberal democracy system, which is as follows: First: The unity of civilizations between Indian, Chinese, Russian and Iranian civilizations. He believes that the Russian civilization was replaced by the unity among the mentioned civilizations in international relations era and this will prevent the West from becoming a uni-polar power. I believe this theory of Huntington caused invasion of Afghanistan by the international community aimed at preventing the unity of the civilizations against the unipolar system of the West, through supporting and using Pakistan as a training camp for foot soldiers of global western liberal democracy and domination over Afghanistan. Second: The growth of Muslim population, particularly their migration to western countries has caused infiltration of eastern culture in particular the culture of Islam into western and American countries. The former US Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, said in one of her speeches that among all religions in the US, Islam and Muslims had a rapid growth. A number of statistics reveal that at least 20 million Muslims are living in western countries including the United States. It is worth mentioning that a huge number of internet sites have been created by Muslims that make Islamic teachings available online. This move has resulted in marriage between Muslim migrants with westerners and has attracted the attention of western moral ethics towards the bright basics and ethics in the holy religion of Islam. I believe that the war in the Middle East and the influx of Muslim migrants from West to bloody battlefields under the name of Daesh has been organized to prevent the growth of Muslims society and in particular evacuating them and the Islamic culture from western society. Third: Liberal democracy in its international claim with Islam suffers from lack of spiritual culture and ancient civilization. Therefore, Peace one of the main reasons of the war in the Middle East is the mentioned goal, because the Middle East is the historical cradle of God s messengers. The remaining heritages in Jerusalem as the prayer direction of Muslims and thousands of historical and civilization sites of Muslims especially the tombs of God s messengers are the best reasons for the ancient history and high civilization of Muslims as compared to the civilization of the West liberal democracy. In this case, the West liberal democracy has started demolishing historical sites of Islam and has started pitting Muslims against each other in a bid to eliminate and damage the history and civilization of the Muslims and Islam through recruiting and using brainless Muslims and of course this is not done directly by the US, rather it is done by the merchants of religion under the name of Daesh and other similar groups. The partisans of conflict and contrast approach believe that democracy is the best way of governance and an achievement of the Western governments experiences. The West has never accepted benefits of Islam rather it has created democracy based on its political and governance interests. II- The Equality and Unity Approach Experts and believers of this approach believe that democracy encompasses the ingredients that are in Islam, and there is no difference and distance between Islam and democracy. They believe that democracy is similar to Islam. The equality and unity approach is not acceptable because the Holy Qur an has never mentioned clearly about democracy. Islam mentions the issues that religious scholars and researchers in every era and time realize it is based on the necessities and requirements of that era and time. III- The Interaction Approach Interaction is a bilateral reaction which includes deal- ing. As far as democracy is successful experience in governance and has benefits and positive effects on human being society, and as the way of life of Muslims has a number of needs to improve their lives. Since Shari a Law cannot stand against the welfare of Muslims, therefore, the interaction approach suggests that relations between Islam and democracy must be based on cooperation rather than based on conflict and contrast. The interaction approach believes that democracy in Islamic society has positive and negative effects, and Islam says according to the Holy Qur an that: Translation: Give the good news to those of Our servants who listen the speech (Qura an) and follow the best of them. According to this holy verse, the relation between religion and democracy is neither in contrast nor in unity, but is it the interaction approach. Major problems in political, economic cultural and military ties of Islamic World will be solved, if we see democracy from this point of view. Since Islam has too many qualities and if there is interaction between Islam and democracy, it will bear fruits, and if a way other than interaction is followed by Islam, then it will remain in isolation and the claim of globalization of Islam will fade away while the Muslims will ever remain locked in trivial debates over pity issues. Therefore, Islam has global claim and this will happen when Muslims and nonMuslims reach a common point or an interaction in realizing inner facts similar to the fact that improvement in science is bind to exchanging thoughts and experiences. In globalization era, if Islam is assessed and evaluated through academic lens of global scholars, it will take the human society out of the spiritual gap and the conflict of schools thoughts and beliefs, and will globalize the sovereignty of Islam in a logic interaction. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES The Afghan government s discussions with the Taliban earlier this month sparked hope for an eventual peace process, but were those in attendance speaking on behalf of the Taliban? Or will rifts between the Taliban s political office in Doha and the factions in the field prove fatal to negotiations? BY DAUD KHATTAK One immediate and somewhat positive outcome of the first-ever direct talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government on July 7 is that it vindicated President Ashraf Ghani, who has been under criticism by his political opponents, particularly ex-president Hamid Karzai. After less than two months in office, President Ghani traveled to Pakistan as the head of a high-level delegation to discuss peace in the region. The most conspicuous aspect of his three-day official trip was his meeting with Pakistan s Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif at the military s General Headquarters, the center of military strength which is viewed by many as the key arbiter in decision-making regarding Afghanistan. However, the mounting attacks since his initial visit to Pakistan on cities and provincial centers in Afghanistan s north (Kunduz, Faryab, and Jawzjan provinces) by an alliance of Central Asian, Pakistani, and Afghan militants combined with the pressure from political opponents forced President Ghani to the brink of reviewing his policy of putting too much faith in enlisting Pakistan s help in restoring peace to his warbattered country. As a last ditch effort to continue with the bonhomie generated by his November 2014 Islamabad visit, President Ghani wrote a letter, parts of which were leaked to media outlets, in which he requested the Pakistani civilian and military leadership to deny sanctuary to Afghan Taliban, show sincerity in backing the Afghan peace process, and take action against the Haqqani Network. The environment of trust was further muddied by the botched up attack on the Afghan parliament in June following which Pakistan s dubious role in the Afghan peace process was once again questioned in local and international media. It was under this backdrop that Pakistan, under pressure from Ashraf Ghani, the key regional and international partners in the Afghan peace process and the media, organized the unprecedented meeting between the Afghan government and Taliban representatives in its Murree Hill resort. The talks at Murree Hill also pointed to Pakistan s seriousness with the Afghan peace process and its support for President Ghani, who, unlike his predecessor Hamid Karzai, is known for his straightforwardness and practical approach towards issues ranging from corruption to mismanagement to human rights to peace building. The meeting was unprecedented in another sense; besides key members of the Afghan High Peace Council and the National Unity Government being in attendance, representatives of different Taliban factions, including the Haqqanis were there, while senior U.S. and Chinese officials played a support role allowing Afghans to discuss the ways and means for ending the conflict and bringing peace and stability to their country. Recently, China s expanding role in the region has been seen with utmost interest, particularly after its multi-billion dollar investment in the Pak-China Economic Corridor project in Pakistan and its eyes on the untapped mineral resources in neighboring Afghanistan and central Asia. Only a peaceful Afghanistan, referred to as the Heart of Asia by Pakistan s national poet Muhammad Iqbal in his Persian verses, could ensure China s reach to the vast energy resources in Central Asia beyond Afghanistan and Pakistan and its products could reach Europe reviving the legendary Silk Route. The presence of Chinese representative in the Murree talks was more important mainly because China never played an active part in the decades-old Afghan conflict. Besides its leverage over Pakistan, the Taliban also see China as the best international guarantor; and China had already hosted a meeting of the Afghan peace envoy with the Taliban representatives in Urumqi in May. Furthermore, it was the first time the Afghan government has expressed willingness to consider all demands and concerns presented by the Taliban to ensure peace in the country. Soon after their return from Islamabad, the Afghan delegation expressed confidence in the authority of the Taliban delegation which, they said, was fully authorized by the Taliban Quetta Shura, a body of top Taliban office bearers responsible for the Taliban s military operations, administration, and peace-making with the Afghan government. However, the road ahead is long and bumpy. Despite an agreement on pursuing another round of talks after the month of fasting (which is supposed to end July 17), some signs of a rift or at least disagreement is visible in the Taliban rank and files over the issue of talks, or to put it more specifically, over the issue of who is authorized to speak on behalf of the Taliban movement the Taliban s political office at Doha, Qatar or the Quetta Shura in Pakistan? In this regard, a statement released by the Taliban s Qatar office just a day after the July 7 meeting was carrying both a message of hope and a sign of disagreement. Unlike previous statements from the Taliban, the Pashto-language message circulated to the media this time was vague. For example, the Taliban did not disapprove of the peace talks. Nor had they disowned the leaders who attended the July 7 meeting on behalf of the Taliban. Rather, the words expressed seemed more like a silent approval of the Murree talks and of the leaders who attended on the Taliban s behalf, but with a certain degree of resentment or unwillingness to continue. One apparent cause of that resentment could be seen in the second part of the two-paragraph statement, which reads (according to my translation): (Only) the political office is responsible for all the internal and external affairs (relating to talks) and the political office has the authority to hold talks with local and foreigners anywhere and at any place. This shows the Qatar office s unhappiness with the participation of the leaders of Quetta Shura in the Murree talks, which they believe falls under the purview of the Qatar office. Still, they did not disapprove of the talks and did not disown the leaders who joined in clear terms. Quite understandably, the Taliban Qatar office sees the Quetta Shura more as a military wing while reserves the political role for itself. In this case, they [the Qatar office] conveyed their unhappiness for being bypassed by the Quetta shura leaders, says Danish Kadokhel, director of the Kabul-based Pajhwok Afghan News. But without disapproving of the talks out right or disassociating themselves from the Taliban leaders who attended the meeting, the Qatar office statement said in its first paragraph that the Taliban introduce changes in the abilities (responsibilities) of (their) officials from time to time for the purpose to ensure progress and betterment. This diplomatically written line is either meant to support the participation of the Taliban leaders in Murree talks in ambiguous terms only to avoid resentment in the fighters and field commanders, many of whom are unhappy with peace efforts and want to continue their holy war, particularly after the withdrawal of most of the international troops from Afghanistan, or to hide the stroke of being bypassed and rendered useless by the Quetta Shura, which is the key authority of decision-making regarding war and peace. In any case, the rift is visible and if it continues to spread, it may create adverse effects on the nascent peace talks, says Kadokhel, who believes the switching over of some Taliban fighters and lowrank commanders and to ISIS is a looming threat for the Taliban insurgency, which remained united for the past 14 years and survived the hardest circumstances. Since the parties to the July 7 meeting have agreed to hold another round of talks after the month of fasting, analysts look forward to the participants from the Taliban side. It is most likely that the Taliban Qatar office and Quetta Shura come to an agreement and select delegates for the next round of talks that may likely be arranged outside Pakistan. If that happens, it will save the peace process as well as the Taliban movement. If not, it could be the beginning of another long, drawn out conflict that may pave the way for strengthening ISIS, luring away Taliban fighters and mid-ranking commanders who don t want to end the war and those unsure of which Taliban group to side with. Keeping an eye on migration flows in the Mediterranean Maria Dubovikova Migration flows in the Mediterranean are nothing new. According to the official data, an average of almost 40,000 people (on the basis of monitoring between 19982013) cross the Mediterranean sea per year to reach its northern shores. It s a drop in the sea if we were to compare this figure to the numbers of immigrants admitted to the EU every year, that is reportedly over 1.5 million persons. South to North migration in the Mediterranean is a given reality preconditioned by the differences in the development between the two shores of the Mediterranean, and by the challenges and problems in the southern part as well. In other words, by the issues plaguing Africa and the Middle East. Running from extreme poverty, low levels of living quality, and conflicts, the issues are forcing people to seek a better life in the developed Western world, notably in Europe. Even having their demand of asylum approved, immigrants prospects are far from optimistic However, dreams about the European paradise soon crumble as the migration flows are more intensive than the capabilities of the receiving side and the final destination is far from paradise itself. The problem resides also in the historical insufficiency and inadequacy of the measures in the majority of the receiving countries to effectively integrate the newcomers into society. It is the aggregate disillusionment of newcomers and the limited migration policy that creates a delayed-action bomb in Western societies. The Mediterranean Sea represents a major problem in terms of immigration, especially taking into consideration the recent trend of the last years of its transformation into a grave for thousands of people. The migration flow to Europe is unstoppable. And what is more, it is rising, notably due to the ongoing crisis in Syria and Iraq and to the Libyan collapse. Everyday, European ships rescue almost an average of a thousand people in the sea. Thus Qaddafi s gloomy prophecy that the Mediterranean will become a sea of chaos comes true. The greatest burden lays on Italy, as its shores are the nearest northern point in the Mediterranean for the migrants from the South, and im- poverished Greece. The problem is that the EU still has no adequate system, which would distribute such a burden between the countries. Matteo Renzi has fairly said that the Mediterranean migrant emergency is not Italy s. It s Europe s. But the truth goes farther, as the Mediterranean migrant emergency is global. But the European countries are definitely the first ones to face the true problems and challenges. Migrants pose a huge social and economic threat. Italy, the economy of which seems to have survived the hard times, spends $12 million a month on the noble Operation Mare Nostrum searching and rescuing the asylum seekers in the waters of the Mediterranean. Poor devastated Greece, for example, spent 63 million to prevent illegal immigration in 2013 (and only 3million came from European border agencies). Feeding tens of thousands of hungry people is hard. And the money spent, which is sadly still insufficient, is the money of taxpayers who are already suffering a lot from the tough austerity measures. Furthermore, Even having their demand of asylum approved, immigrants prospects are far from optimistic and they are becoming an easy target for ineradicable radical Islamist preachers. To send these refugees back to the countries of their origin is also a matter of spending the money of taxpayers and spending them totally in vain, as the reason that pushed immigrants to leave their homes will not have suddenly stopped. Then there is an extreme danger, which transforms the current migration crisis to the global threat, that ISIS terrorists sneak into Europe disguised as migrants. This February, ISIS threatened to send 500000 migrants to Europe as a psychological weapon. Several months have passed and this supposed weapon could be nicely debugged and updated. For sure, most of these people will reach Europe not by sea (and this brings another dimension to the problem deepening the matter and concerns it causes), but the Mediterranean is still an integral part of this puzzle. And thus the illegal migration transforms into an almost global terrorist threat with unpredictable and not manageable consequences both regionally and globally. ETTER TO THE EDITOR Afghanistan s trade routes Afghanistan due to its strategic and important geographic location plays a major role in connecting the South and Central Asian countries. However, insecurity has impeded the country to play this role better. Years of insecurity and wars has made Afghanistan s trade more dependent on Pakistan in compare with other neighbors of this war-hit country. While Afghanistan can have trade ties with its other neighbors too such as India. But the Afghan investors lack a nearest and direct trade route with India. One of these routes is the Chabahar Port. This route provides Afghan investors direct access to India. Afghan investors trade with India through Gwadar and Karachi ports in Pakistan which is more expensive and distanced than the Chabahar Port. Afghan traders will find access to the port in near future. The government should boost up highways security. Insecurity has impeded the growth of all sectors. The National Unity Government should use each and every opportunity for economic development. Economy is one of the rare options that can lead Afghanistan towards prosperity and a bright future therefore this sector needs inclusive planning and serious attention. Mohammad Alim, Khairkhana, Kabul Letter to editor will be edited for policy, content and clarity. All letters must have the writer s name and address. You may send your letters to: [email protected] Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in the articles are those of the author(s) and do not reflect the views or opinions of the Afghanistan Times. By Jane Kinninmont As details of the international agreement over Iran s nuclear programme emerge, the EU s Foreign Policy Representative Federica Mogherini has described the deal as the beginning of a new chapter in international relations. Certainly, the agreement will have implications that go far beyond the nuclear non-proliferation issues that the negotiators have been focusing on. And this means that a fresh diplomatic effort is urgently needed to deal with the potentially game-changing effects it will have on the Middle East. Without addressing the regional political tensions between Iran and its neighbours, a nuclear deal will exacerbate them. One of the impressive aspects of the agreement is that the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany (P5+1) were able to maintain a united front, despite their various political differences. To ensure this unity, they insisted the talks should have a narrow focus on non-proliferation issues, rather than bringing in the wider issues of Iran s regional role. Persisting regional conflicts But the regional powers see them as a larger political gamechanger, in a part of the world where the security architecture depends overwhelmingly on the US, and has been predicated on the US containment of Iran for longer than most people s lifetimes. The US key allies in Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Cairo perceive a nuclear deal as a first step to normalising Iran s role in the region. This may be a mirage: the desire to prevent proliferation is hardly a basis for a warm friendship. But it comes at a time when the Gulf countries do not trust the judgement of the US, thinking it handed over Iraq to Iran and Egypt to the Muslim Brotherhood, and suspecting a desire to accommo- date Iran is behind the reluctance of the US to intervene in Syria. In the most benign scenario, there is potential to build on the nuclear deal with Iran to transform the country s international relations, making it better integrated into the region and the world. Ultimately a less threatened Iran could be less domestically repressive too. Different forces within Iran will now be calculating what options they have to lead their country down very different future trajectories. But the vision of a historic transformation may be too good to be true. In the utter absence of a diplomatic process to deal with the regional disputes, they are playing out through proxy wars. This is what is happening in Yemen and Syria, where fighting could now intensify still further; Lebanon and Iraq could easily be next. There is a risk, too, of renewed conflict between Israel and Iran s Lebanese ally Hezbollah. Regional conflict could even spread into the Gulf itself, as tensions between the states could be increasingly amplified by non-state actors that are beyond any state s control: Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) uses anti-Iranian narratives as a core element of its recruiting strategy, while Shia militias in Iraq and Syria are proliferating far beyond those backed by Iran. The relations between Iran and the Gulf Arab states have not always been so bad. During the former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami s rule, from 1997 to 2005, there was a rapprochement. The head of Iran s national security council was awarded with Saudi Arabia s highest honour in 2004. But this all fell apart with the reassertion of more hardline forces in Iran, the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the struggle for power in post-2003 Iraq. Old narratives The idea that the region is simply caught up in age old sectarian hatreds is convenient for the Western powers, as it leaves out the role of their interventions in contributing to tensions. But it is a vast oversimplification. The reality is much more complex, as shifting geopolitics - like the fallout following regime change in Iraq, the post-Arab Spring power vacuums, and the perception that the US security commitment to the Gulf is changing - tap into a seam of identity politics. The world needs a parallel diplomatic track involving Iran and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, to address their differences over regional politics. This is the missing link in the Iran deal, and the P5+1 need to push for this final piece to be put in place. Such a process could be mediated by northern European or Nordic countries, which have less historical baggage in the region, in partnership with non-aligned rising powers like South Africa or Brazil. Talks could start with Gulf security, where there is a common interest in the free flow of oil and goods, despite differences over who should provide security: Iran calls for a regional security architecture, but key Gulf states take the view that Iran, as the largest country, would inevitably dominate this, and so would prefer to stick with the US as policeman. In the long term, Gulf security could be reconceptualised as a global public good that has a corresponding multilateral responsibility. A multilateral role would lessen the asymmetry inherent in a purely local framework. There can be no illusions that talking would solve all the issues soon. But at a minimum, the world needs a detente between Iran and Saudi Arabia, or the various conflicts afflicting the region are only likely to get worse following the historic international nuclear deal. The bailout deal: A true Greek tragedy Jan Douwe Keulen The Spanish penal code defines terrorism as "undermining the constitutional order and provoking a state of terror in part of the population". According to Juan Carlos Monedero, this is exactly what the draconian package of austerity measures and the surrender of fiscal sovereignty imposed on Greece amounts to: an act of terrorism. On Monday, Monedero, one of the founders of the Spanish political party Podemos, said that he felt ashamed to be a European. He is not the only one. #ThisIsACoup went viral on Twitter. It is no coincidence that using this hashtag to express disbelief and outrage about what happened in Brussels, started in Barcelona. Podemos, a clone of the Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' Syriza, has surged in the Spanish polls in the last twelve months. Spaniards understand too well the Greek public opinion, as expressed by more than 60 percent of the electorate in a snap referendum on July 5, that austerity and difficult reform measures will not automatically lead to an improvement of their lives. In fact, unemployment remains high in spite of the fact that the centre-right Spanish government is applying the neoliberal recipes from Brussels. Many Spaniards feel the social and economic malaise continues unabated. An unrelenting European charge Counting the Cost - Who are the winners and losers in Greece? But questions remain. What about the pace in which the reform package has to be approved by the Greek parliament, if it will be approved at all? And what about the recapitalisation of the Greek banks in the coming days? Even those who supported the Brussels deal as unavoidable spoke of an unrelenting Europe charging Greece with a very heavy task. Some of the agreed upon reforms, like streamlining value-added tax and modernising tax collection, were seen as appropriate and could, in time, improve Greece's economic performance. The Greek drama raises even more pressing long-term political interrogations. A Grexit may have been avoided for now, but will it be possible in the long run to maintain the euro and the European monetary union without greater European political union and decisiveness? Especially in the field of financial and fiscal policies? And how does this stronger European political union relate to the 28 member countries' sovereignty? The eurozone crisis revealed - once more - profound political differences, radically different national narratives, and a lack of a common European public opinion. There is no doubt that the Brussels agreement deprives Greece of a great deal of its sover- eignty. Who is in charge now in Greece? Greek humiliation Apparently not the Greek people who voted against the austerity package, nor the Greek government who was - in the eyes of many - humiliated and forced to accept most of the EU's proposals. No wonder terms like "coup", "terrorism", and "modern slavery" were used to criticise the Brussels agreement. Likewise, the question may be raised: who is in charge in the eurozone and the EU? Angela Merkel? The banks? The technocrats? The finance ministers? Solving the riddle of maintaining the democratic process at the level of the 28 national parliaments, and simultaneously reducing the EU's democratic deficit is one of the biggest challenges ahead. The legitimacy and accountability of EU institutions and procedures needs to be improved urgently. July 13 will be remembered as a day the democratic foundations of the European project rocked and fundamental questions were raised about Europe's future. One wonders: how many July 13's can the EU put up with? For decades the EU led the way as a model of sovereign states working together to ensure a common approach to tackle issues of economy, peace and war, migration, climate, etc. Other regions, by Germany, lost its trust in Tsipras and Syriza; hence the castiron guarantees they demanded Athens in order to sign a deal. The Greek and many other South Europeans lost their trust in Germany, seen as the new coloniser and killer of the European project. Nobel Prize winning American economist Paul Krugman called the euro group's list of demands "a grotesque betrayal of everything the European project was supposed to stand for". In his blog, Krugman wrote: "This goes beyond harsh into pure vindictiveness, complete destruction of national sovereignty, and no hope of relief." The European left does agree by and large with this analysis. A Greek tragedy But what good will it do just knowing that the euro is poorly designed and should probably not have introduced in Greece in the first place? What good will it do to be convinced that austerity does not work, the Greek debt is unpayable and the EU destroys democracy and social rights, if there is no effective strategy to counter these policies? This seems to me to be the tragedy of Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, who was accused by his European colleague ministers to give them economics lectures without suggesting workable like Latin America and the Arab world, were envious of the European integration project. European leaders do use words like 'trust', 'unanimity', 'solidarity', and 'shared responsibility' all the time, but they seem to lack real substance. Ironically, the EU's image of a historical model that created peace and stability in the last 50 years in a continent that knew wars and divisions for centuries, seems to have faded away. Overshadowing the European success story The emotions and disputes raised by Greek crisis seem to have overshadowed this traditional European success story completely. European leaders do use words like "trust", "unanimity", "solidarity", and "shared responsibility" all the time, but they seem to lack real substance. The eurozone leadership, led political solutions. It also has been the tragedy of Alexis Tsipras, who ended up having the impossible choice of leading Greece to the abyss of a Grexit or accepting the harsh European bailout conditions. In the end, Syriza did not succeed to restore the dignity of the Greek people, counter effectively the German "sound money" philosophy and present a convincing project to modernise and democratise Greek economy. Does Syriza's failure have far reaching implications for the European left, including Podemos in Spain? What lessons will be drawn by French President Francois Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and other European social-democrats, who only succeeded in soften a bit the dominant German/Finnish/Slovakian/Dutch austerity policy, but did not really present a political alternative? This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES US President Obama says agreement offers a chance to reset ties with Tehran, but Israel PM calls it "historic mistake". World leaders have hailed the Iran nuclear deal, with US President Barack Obama envisioning a "new direction" and Russian President Vladimir Putin voicing a global "huge sigh of relief", although Israel criticised it as a "historic mistake". The accord, which seeks to curb the Islamic Republic's nuclear programme, was announced on Tuesday by Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and the European Union's policy chief Federica Mogherini in a joint statement in the Austrian capital. Sanctions on Iran's central bank, the National Iranian Oil Company, shipping lines, Iran Air, many other institutions and people will be lifted Obama said the agreement offered a chance to reset strained relations with Tehran. "Every pathway to a nuclear weapon is cut off," he said, adding that the deal "offers an opportunity to move in a new direction. We should seize it." Part of the deal, which covers the lifting of US sanctions need to be approved by the American Congress, and Obama vowed to veto any legislation blocking it. "This deal is not built on trust. It is built on verification," said Obama. Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei praised the "honest and hard endeavours" of the country's nuclear negotiating team in a post on Twitter carrying the #IranDeal hastag. Hassan Rouhani, the president of Iran, commented on the deal on Twitter: Addressing the Iranian nation, Rouhani said: "We didn't ask for charity. We asked for fair, just and win-win negotiations." Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, criticised the deal calling the decision "a historic mistake for the world". "Iran will get hundreds of billions of dollars with which it will be able to fuel its terror machine," he said, referring to the expected lifting of crippling Western sanctions on its oil and banking sectors. In a second statement on Tuesday afternoon, Netanyahu said the deal gives Iran incentives "not to change" and said "the world is a much more dangerous place today than it was yesterday." What do we know about Iran deal contents? Meanwhile, thousands of Iranians gathered in the capital to celebrate the deal following the end of Ramadan fast on Tuesday. They waved Iranian flags from their cars, while drivers honked their car horns. "My personal opinion is that I wish they had done this sooner so people wouldn't have to go through all these difficulties," Masumeh Momeni, a resident of Tehran, told Al Jazeera. 'Win-win solution' Iran's Foreign Minister Zarif called the deal a "win-win" solu- The accord will keep Iran from producing enough material for a nuclear weapon for at least 10 years and impose new provisions for inspections of Iranian facilities, including military sites. Iran was resisting the probe in the country's alleged work on nuclear weapons and demanding that a United Nations arms embargo to be lifted. It also demanded that any UN tion to end "an unnecessary crisis and open new horizons for dealing with serious problems that affect our international community." Al Jazeera's James Bays, reporting from Vienna, said that for the presidents of the United States and Iran "it is a historic deal that would serve some kind of a re-set after decades of mistrust." But he also said that "there are many forces that do not want the deal to succeed". Among those will be senior Republican lawmakers and presidential candidates in the US, who strongly criticised the deal on Tuesday. White House hopefuls Scott Walker and Rick Perry vowed to rip it up if they reach the Oval Office and Senator Marco Rubio suggested he would re-impose sanctions. Israel's Prime Minister reacts angrily at Iran deal The accord seeks to end nearly 12 years of nuclear stand off between Iran and the western powers led by the US. Security Council resolution approving the broader deal no longer describe Iran's nuclear activities as illegal. The accord also contains what is being described as a snapback clause. This means UN sanctions will be restored within 65 days if Iran does not comply with the terms of the agreement. In Damascus, Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, a key Iran ally, had "achieved a historic victory" with the agreement. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the deal would boost the regional economy. Alongside him in Ankara, his Iraqi counterpart Ibrahim al-Jaafari also supported the deal and emphasised keeping "doors of dialogue open". Meanwhile the Vatican hoped the agreement would "bear fruit" which would extend beyond simply Iran's nuclear programme. Aljazeera For campaigners demanding reform in the selection of the top UN diplomat, leaders like Angela Merkel show there is ample talent in the global pool of stateswomen [EPA] For decades, the United Nations has preached about giving equal rights to women. Now, it faces unprecedented pressure to come good on this talk and have a woman at its helm as the world body's next secretary-general. The UN's current boss, South Korean diplomat Ban Ki-moon, is the eighth in an all-male line of secretaries-general dating back to 1946. He steps down at the end of next year, and UN coffee shops are already abuzz with talk of who fills his shoes on January 1, 2017. Campaigners and some diplomats say it is time for a woman. Current world leaders - including Germany's Angela Merkel, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia and Michelle Bachelet of Chile - show there is ample talent in the global pool of stateswomen, they say. "The UN Charter calls for gender equality and respecting women's rights. The UN should live up to its own proposals," Jean Krasno, a Yale University scholar told Al Jazeera. "The eight secretariesgeneral have all been men, it's time for a woman." Women make up more than half the world's population and have never been represented in this role. Jean Krasno, Yale University "Women make up more than half the world's population and have never been represented in this role," Krasno said. UN chiefs are not chosen in an open vote. The selection is typically made surreptitiously by the US, Russia, China, Britain and France - the UN Security Council's permanent five members (P5). Efforts to appoint a woman are part of a broader drive to overhaul the hiring process itself. Krasno is campaigning to see a woman lead the UN and proposes 30 "outstanding" candidates. They include such big names as Merkel, Sirleaf and Bachelet as well Irina Bokova, who runs the UN's culture agency UNESCO, New Zealand's former Prime Minister Helen Clark and Mexico's Alicia Barcena Ibarra. Another pressure group, Equality Now, has nominated 14 female UN technocrats. UN members have promised more top jobs for women since 1995, but only about a quarter of its senior posts are currently held by females, the group says. Many of those being discussed have not said they will run; some are serving terms that continue into 2017. System-wide revamp While few reject the notion of a woman secretary-general, some warn against good male candidates being sidelined in favour of less talented females. "Discrimination against men is also unacceptable," Russia's UN envoy Vitaly Churkin said in April. Ireland's former president Mary Robinson blames the selection process for UN leaders. Letting five powerful countries select the holder of such a key job is "morally inexcusable", she said last month. The procedure is "weak, opaque and, perhaps, even irrational". Traditionally, the P5 states have vetted candidates in secretive straw polls and veto anybody they dislike. Their preferred candidate is endorsed by a vote of the 15nation council, who is then rubber stamped by the General Assembly of all 193 UN members. This process favours candidates who are beholden to Washington, Moscow and Beijing and, to a lesser extent, to London and Paris, said Bill Pace director of the 1 for 7 Billion campaign, which seeks to raise the calibre of future UN bosses. "We're in the worst situation, where the countries with nuclear weapons pointed at each other decide who becomes secretarygeneral," Pace told Al Jazeera. "The P5 asks for a secretarygeneral who addresses their interests and appoints their nationals to key jobs; and it's a process that should stop," said Pace. Ban Ki-Moon: 'My role is to serve the people' The formal rules for selecting UN chiefs are only briefly laid out in the UN Charter. The world's top diplomat "shall be appointed by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council," says Article 97 of the Charter. Pace calls for a system-wide revamp. "The General Assembly needs to stand up and say the system from these past 69 years needs to come into the new century," he said. "If the many gang up, they can make a change here. With overwhelming support in the General Assembly, even the US, Russia and China will be more reasonable." Active leadership For Edward Mortimer, a former UN spin doctor who now calls for reform via The Elders, a group of seasoned statesmen, the system would benefit from a UN leader who earned the job through a selection process in which ev- it has resisted change. In 2005, India, Brazil, Germany and Japan failed in a bid to create permanent Security Council seats for themselves. Efforts to get the P5 to relinquish their vetoes have likewise failed. Hardeep Singh, India's former UN envoy, said changing the UN chief selection process could go the same way. "The status quo has something very charming about it. Once eryone has a say. "At the moment, the real qualification is that you haven't made too many enemies and the P5 don't think you will cause trouble," Mortimer told Al Jazeera. "That's a very negative and passive way of looking at an extremely important job, somebody who gives leadership to the whole world," Mortimer said. The incumbent, Ban, and previous UN chiefs have struggled to get their message heard, he said. Changing the selection process could deliver UN leaders with enough stature to defy the presidents of even mighty countries, he said. Refining the selection process is one of several ideas for UN reform that have been mooted over the years. The UN rule book was written in 1945. It favours the winners of the Second World War and you've bitten into that cherry, you don't want to let go," Singh told Al Jazeera. "We must ask whether changing the process will produce a different outcome. The answer: I don't know," said Singh. But with so much pressure from campaigners and calls for reform among several dozen UN states, including the 27-nation Accountability, Coherence and Transparency group, there is a chance that this latest bid will gain traction ahead of the annual UN meet in September. Gerard van Bohemen, the UN ambassador for New Zealand, which advocates for UN reforms and holds the rotating Security Council presidency in July, said he would push for more transparency in the UN system. "I intend to make sure that the [Security] Council at least considers the issue," van Bohemen told Al Jazeera. Aljazeera ke/NowHere Media /Al Jazeera] Takpa criticised the conventional notion of conservation, saying that it is a tough task to restore a previously depleted ecosystem like Ladakh. "All over the world and even in rest of India people think conservation means taking a big chunk of area which has a good biological value and declaring it as a conservation reserve. And this normally involves displacing all the people who live inside the area. This is based on the theory that man and wildlife cannot coexist," Takpa said. The Forest Department approach is contrary to this line of thinking, said Takpa. "We say human beings and wildlife have to coexist and help each other in sustaining themselves." The government has followed in the footsteps of the SLC-IT, and is now running homestays in national park areas. Villagers document cases of snow leopard attacks in order to recover losses from the insurance schemes which offer protection against such losses. [Felix Gaedtke/NowHere Media /Al Jazeera] The conservation programs do not benefit everyone in the vast deserts of Ladakh. There were unconfirmed reports about a snow leopard having been killed the previous month in Tar, a sleepy village with about 12 homes right across the valley from Saspochey. A two-hour hike up from the main road, Tar has no access to electricity or medical facilities. Most residents are in their 50s and 60s, the younger generation having left in search of better educational and career opportunities. Tsering Dolkar, a 60-year-old woman with a wrinkly face, is the appointed head of the village. Dolkar complained about the losses the villagers endured due to snow leopard and Tibetan wolf attacks on livestock. Aljazeera Homestays for snow leopards in the Himalayas Tsering Angmo from the Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust helps set up an electric fence to safeguard the village fields in Saspochey from wild species like Tibetan Blue Sheep. [Felix Gaedtke/NowHere Media /Al Jazeera] On a recent June evening, as the sun cast the day's final, crimson rays over the mountains surrounding Saspochey, a hamlet at 3,658 metres in the Indian Himalayan region of Ladakh, Sherab Dolma prepared her living room for guests. An old Ladakhi stove with intricate metal work took centre stage in the room. Soft, warm carpets hugged the floor and traditional kitchen utensils stood neatly stacked in a wardrobe. A young boy with sunburned cheeks and a dirty, green hat stormed in and out of the room. As her guests seated themselves, Dolma served hot tea in delicate ceramic cups. Dolma has been running a homestay for three years, letting out rooms with stunning views over the Zanskar range. Tourists flock to her tiny hamlet in the hope of spotting a special guest - the snow leopard, a wild cat that thrives in high mountain terrains. It is estimated that India is home to 400-700 snow leopards of a global population of 4,5006,500, spread across 12 countries. As part of conservation efforts, these countries have declared 2015 as the International Year of the Snow Leopard and have been promoting cross-country projects to save the endangered cats. Ladakh - in the state of Jam- mu and Kashmir - with 60 percent of India's snow leopard population, is well known among wildlife enthusiasts for offering some of the best sightings of snow leopards. That helps Dolma business. "I earn 30,000 Indian rupees ($472) per year from the homestay business. The snow leopard and other wildlife here are like jewels," Dolma said as she prepared a meal in her compact kitchen. A few years ago, Dolma wouldn't have spoken so kindly about snow leopards. "I had lost many sheep and goats to snow leopards. So had many others in the village. That left us in a lot of loss. We were helpless. People would even go after snow leopards to kill them," she said. The biggest threat to snow leopard populations globally is this conflict with humans . Decrease in the number of natural prey species leads to snow leopards hunting livestock. This in turn triggers retaliatory killing by herders and farmers. The Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust (SLC-IT), a community-based conservation NGO, helped Dolma and eight other villagers set up homestays in Saspochey. The director of the Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust (SLC-IT), a local NGO that works towards conservation of snow leopards, Tsewang Namgail drives through mountain roads to reach remote populations [F elix Gaedtke/NowHere Media /Al Jazeera] Tsewang Namgail, director of the SLC-IT, who was visiting the village to raise awareness accompanied by a handful of his cheerful Ladakhi staff and international volunteers, told Al Jazeera how his organisation worked with the villagers. "People in these remote areas live under poor conditions. They have to think about their day-today struggle," Namgail explained. "When we go to a village and ask them to protect snow leopards, they sometimes laugh at us because they lose livestock to snow leopards," he said. "We also wanted to improve their livelihoods. That's when we started the Himalayan Homestays," Namgail told Al Jazeera. The Himalayan Homestay program, which began in 2003, seeks to reduce the dependence of the herders on livestock and the pressure on the pasture lands, allowing natural prey species like the Tibetan blue sheep to thrive. Snow leopards belong to what's termed an umbrella species - a species that symbolises the health of an entire eco-system. "Snow leopard is an apex predator so they are very important. When we work towards conserving this species, in the process we are helping a lot of other species," Namgail said. Sitting in his office in Leh, Ladakh's administrative capital, Jigmet Takpa , chief conservator of Forests for Ladakh told Al Jazeera of the historical and cultural significance of hunting that has led to a decline in snow leopard numbers. "Ladakhis, whether Buddhist or non-Buddhist, were hunters. They were poaching. It is in the culture. Even today, the hunting ceremony is still conducted during Losar (a Buddhist celebration)," Takpa told while looking at the view of snow-capped mountains through his window. "This led to fast depletion of already scarce wildlife in the region," Takpa explained. Tsering Angmo from the Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust helps set up an electric fence to safeguard the village fields in Saspochey from wild species like Tibetan Blue Sheep. [Felix Gaedt- This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES 530 Indian firms fined for failing to appoint women directors NEW DELHI: The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) has slapped fines on 530 listed companies for failing to meet a deadline to appoint a women director and boost gender diversity in their boardrooms, a BSE official said. The Securities and Exch-ange Board of India (SEBI) last year imposed a quota of at least one female director on the board of every listed firm, and warned of very serious consequences if the thousands of companies did not comply by an April 1 deadline. The BSE said in a statement that SEBI rules meant companies who failed to comply would face a scheduled fine. This ranging from 50,000 rupees ($790) to 142,000 rupees ($2,240) to Oct 1, 2015. After this, they would pay an additional 5,000 rupees ($78) per day until they complied. As per the provisions of the SEBI circular, BSE has till date (July 13) issued advisory letters to 530 companies regarding levy of fines for non-compliance with the said provision within the prescribed timelines, said a statement. A BSE spokesman said he could not disclose the names of the 530 firms from the 5,711 companies listed on the exchange that were being penalised. The National Stock Exch-a-nge (NSE) said it had also sent out letters informing 260 listed firms, many of which are also listed on the BSE, of its intention to levy fines. An NSE spokesman said SEBI could take further action against companies which had not paid up fines and appointed a woman director by Sept 30, 2015. SEBI may take any other action, against the non-compliant entities, their promoters and/or directors or issue such directions in accordance with law, as considered appropriate, he said quoting the SEBI directive. Finding job greatest challenge facing graduates in Saudi Arabia When pursuing their first job, 78% of fresh graduates living in Saudi Arabia used or plan to use leading online job sites, Bayt.com 2015 Fresh Graduates in the Middle East and North Africa survey conducted by Bayt.com, the Middle East s leading career site, and market research agency YouGov, revealed. The majority of respondents state that finding a job is the biggest challenge of their generation, in line with this, 81% are leaning towards entrepreneurship as a potential future career option. landing their first job was/will be very difficult . A majority of respondents (57%) feel that the biggest challenge they face in finding a job is the fact that employers are looking for candidates with previous experience. Knowing where to find relevant jobs and how to approach the job search effectively are also considered to be challenges by 46% and 30% of them, respectively. Some 10% of KSA respondents claim that it took/ will take less than 3 months for them to find their first job. For 40% of them, the job search lasted/ will The study has also revealed that 54% of KSA respondents obtained their most recent qualification in KSA, followed by Egypt, at 10%. The two most common fields of study pursued by respondents were engineering (29%) and information technology/computer science (19%). Most graduates living in KSA (65%) were satisfied with the quality of higher education they received; in fact, 39% consider the preparation it gave them for the workplace to be very good or good . Qualification of teachers (76%), curriculum (70%), teaching methods applied (61%), quality of infrastructure (56%), technology usage (60%), and value for money paid (62%), are also rated positively by KSA respondents. Over a third of fresh graduates living in KSA (37%) do not feel that they would have fared better in the job market if they had chosen a different major or different school, with 65% admitting to having considered the job availability in the field they chose to major in prior to enrolment. In contrast, 34% of working KSA respondents ended up working in a totally different industry. Based on the survey, in KSA, the most appealing industries from a career perspective are banking and finance (28%) and engineering and/or design (24%). Business consultancy, business management and management consulting (22%) and information technology (22%) are also popular industries among KSA fresh graduates. Fortunately, more than half of respondents (59%) claim that their education prepared them to target the industry of their choice. For 40% of KSA respondents, the most important attribute when selecting a job is experience in the field they want to work in. While most KSA respondents (78%) rely on leading online job sites to search for employment opportunities, direct applications to target companies (50%) and a resourceful network of family and friends (45%) are also highly valued and used. Up to 51% of fresh graduates living in KSA state that last between 3 and 12 months, while only 1% got or are expecting to get a job directly through campus placements. One in 5 KSA respondents (21%) stayed or anticipate staying in their first job for 1-2 years. Salary expectations for fresh graduates living in KSA are moderate; 22% expect to receive/ have received between $1,0011,500, while 15% anticipate a salary between $1,501-2,000. Almost two thirds (62%) of KSA respondents expect to be offered/were offered a basic salary. 41% are also looking to receive/have received personal medical insurance and 39% anticipate a housing allowance. 32% expect a training and development course allowance. According to 79% of KSA respondents, their college or university did not help them identify job opportunities. Overall, 43% of graduates living in KSA acquired work experience either before or during their time at university. The survey revealed that 61% of KSA respondents are planning to pursue higher education, with the US (35%) being the most popular destination to do so outside of their country of residence, followed by Canada and other Western and European Countries for 10% respectively. Graduates are also eager to travel abroad for employment purposes, with 46% saying that they might consider moving elsewhere for a job. When asked what challenges fresh graduates face the most, 47% disclosed that saving money is difficult, while 32% said that discovering what they wanted to do in life is a major challenge for them. 64% claim that there is a low availability of jobs for fresh graduates in KSA. However, 41% are optimistic that their generation has better career and educational opportunities in comparison to their parents generation. When it comes to industries that seem to be hiring the highest number of fresh graduates, KSA respondents listed advertising/marketing (25%), followed by banking/finance (22%), and military/defense/police (17%). Alarabiya ADDIS ABABA: As the world grapples to find the cash to end poverty and battle climate change, African leaders at a global development summit being held in Ethiopia are pushing for rich multinational companies to stop dodging tax. Tax avoidance by big companies who employ accounting tricks to shift profits into countries where the taxman is more forgiving costs Africa tens of billions of dollars in revenue every year. This issue has now taken centre stage at a global development financing summit, which the United Nations hopes will pave the way for a fairer world of inclusive, low-carbon growth, set out in its 2015-2030 Sustainable Development Goals. It also symbolises the NorthSouth divide over the question of how to fairly fill the development financing gap, estimated at up to $2.5 trillion annually. Developing nations want their share of tax revenues, yet developed nations are keen to protect their business interests. Illicit money flows and tax evasion are costing Africa between $30-$60 billion a year. This is more than the total development aid, said Senegal s President Macky Sall. A strong international tax regime is crucial for eradicating poverty. We, therefore, look for agreement on tax in Addis, added Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, in his opening speech to the summit on Monday. Developing nations, in the form of the 134-member G77 bloc, are lobbying hard for an end to multinationals profit-shifting, which the UN s trade and development body UNCTAD says costs poorer countries some $100bn a year. I call that a robbery. It s a broken system that is allowing robbery of the poor countries by rich multinationals, said Oxfam director Winnie Byanyima, whose aid agency has been campaigning for reform. She said the US Senate found that Caterpillar had almost 30 per cent of its employees in Asia and Africa, made 30pc of its sales in Asia and Africa but recorded only one percent of its profit in Asia and Africa. Eighty per cent of its profit went to a tax haven. We must plug these loopholes. The solution being pushed by the G77 is the creation of a UNmanaged intergovernmental body charged with overseeing a new set of global fiscal regulations, replacing the current set-up where such matters are managed by the OECD, a so-called rich man s club . British inflation falls back to zero LONDON: Britain s ann-u-al inflation rate turned flat in June from the previous month on the back of falling clothing and food prices, official data showed on Tuesday. The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) was unchanged in the year to June 2015, that is, a 12-month rate of 0.0 per cent, down from 0.1pc in the year to May, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement. Falls in clothing and food prices were the main contributors to the change in the rate, it said. In April, the CPI rate had turned negative for the first time since 1960 on the back of falling transport prices notably air and sea fares and the earlier timing of Easter, when travel tends to be more expensive. The rate had stood at zero in both February and March before hitting minus 0.1pc in April. Despite Tuesday s flat inflation reading, Bank of England (BoE) governor Mark Carney predicted Tuesday that the time for an interest rate hike is moving closer. The point at which interest rates may begin to rise is moving closer given the performance of the economy, Carney said in an appearance before parliament. The BoE s main task is to use monetary policy as a tool to try and keep 12-month CPI inflation close to a government set target of 2pc. Some banks in Pak still charging 0.6pc WHT ISLAMABAD: The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) asked banks on Tuesday to refund the excess amount deducted in terms of withholding tax (WHT) on transactions. It has been reported to the FBR that some banks are still deducting 0.6 per cent WHT on bank instruments of non-filers. Through a presidential ordinance issued on July 11, the rate of withholding tax on bank instruments issued out of an account has been reduced from 0.6pc to 0.3pc till Sept 30, 2015 for the people who do not file their tax returns. In the latest budget, the government imposed a 0.6pc tax on banking transactions and cash withdrawals made by non-filers in an attempt to widen the tax net. Poor Ramadan sales vex Malaysian retailers As the Muslim fasting month draws to a close, Malaysian retailers are lamenting the most dispiriting Ramadan sales in years, adding to evidence recent hard decisions on taxes and subsidies might be costing the economy its main growth engine. The fasting month is traditionally the busiest time of the year for Malaysian retailers, but the country s retailers association are predicting a plunge in Ramadan sales of as much as 20 percent compared with last year. Shoppers are more cautious with their money, said Indah Asbiran, who sells traditional Malay costumes for women at a stall in Tunku Abdul Rahman bazaar, the grande dame of festive shopping in Kuala Lumpur. You see people walking by but not buying much. A recent survey by the Malaysian Institute of Economic Research showed consumer sentiment had dropped to the lowest for six years. Sentiment worsened after the government dismantled petrol subsidies in December and introduced a goods and services tax (GST) this year. With many households shouldering heavy debts, some shoppers are looking and not buying. Private consumption accounts for over half of Malaysia s gross domestic product. Its 8.8 percent expansion in the first quarter drove the economy s growth of 5.6 percent, the fastest among Southeast Asia s five biggest economies. But all the signs are that consumption is slowing, making it harder for Prime Minister Najib Razak s government, already battling weak oil, gas and manufacturing exports, to achieve this year s 4.5-5.5 percent growth target. Najib s government had hoped consumption might anchor domestic demand at a time when the government is seeking to rein in its fiscal deficit. But there is little sign of that happening. Turkish unemployment rate falls to 9.6pc The Turkish unemployment rate fell to an average of 9.6 percent in the March-May period from 10.6 percent during February-April, the Turkish Statistics Institute said on Wednesday. In the same period a year earlier, the unemployment rate stood at 9.0 percent. The non-farm unemployment rate, also measured on a three-month average, stood at 11.6 percent during the March-May period, down from 12.6 percent in February-April and up from 10.8 percent a year earlier. Ninety percent of respondents to a survey by employment firm Jobstreet said they could not cope with daily expenses after the government imposed the 6 percent GST in April. Auto sales dropped by more than 30 percent that month compared with March. To counter sluggish sales, retailers are fighting for market share, and that means accepting smaller profits, said H C Chan, chief executive of Sunway Pyramid Shopping Mall, one of the country s largest malls.Vendors are giving out additional discounts, discounts for buying more items, and discounts for bundle buys. Hasliza Hasnawi, a schoolteacher, said she still had to do her shopping during Ramadan, which ends on Thursday. But like many shoppers at Tunku Abdul Rahman bazaar, Hasliza was carrying few shopping bags, choosing to window-shop extensively before settling on a purchase. Emirates to resume flights to Arbil in northern Iraq Dubai s carrier Emirates will resume passenger flights to Arbil, the capital of Iraqi Kudistan, from Aug. 15 after a risk assessment fell in line with the airline s safety standards, it said on Wednesday. Emirates in March suspended flights to Arbil on security concerns after Islamic State razed ancient cities in Iraq s north. The carrier will resume its four weekly flights to Arbil on a redirected flight path as a precaution- ary measure, which will result in longer flight times for passengers. We have been closely observing the situation in northern Iraq and upon a comprehensive review of our operations as well as a detailed risk assessment that is in line with Emirates safety standards, we decided to recommence our services to Arbil, said Sheikh Majid Al Mualla, Emirates divisional senior vice president for commercial operations. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Bajirao Mastani first look: Ranveer, Deepika and Priyanka will set screen on fire! The end of Ramazan is upon us and with Eid just around the corner, bazaars are rife with eager shoppers preparing for the festivities. While some are stocking up on groceries, others are hopping from tailor to tailor in the hopes of getting last-minute alterations done to their joras. But as always, many of us are still clueless about what to wear on Eid. With a string of Eid exhibitions taking place, it s a challenge to decide what trends to follow for the season. And with so much variety on offer, who can blame us? As we look ahead to see what trends will shape this festive occasion, let s look back at how sartorial choices for Eid have evolved every Ramazan. With cultural influences dictating shifts in aesthetic preferences, we ve witnessed a myriad of Eid trends over the past four to five decades. The 1970s and 80s boasted vibrant brocades, silk, jacquard, Chantilly laces and kamdani, which remain a fond memory for many, such as designer Faiza Samee. Back then, Eid clothing had to be very formal. So, if we ever failed to have something new stitched, we could simply don an outfit from a cousin s wedding, she says. Hemlines were more conservative, wavering right above or below the knee. Paired with heavy dupattas, featuring gotta patti, mirrors, and ari and zari work, the trends granted the entire decade a gleam like no other. The 80s also saw an influx of colourful patterns, shimmery fabrics, chooridar pajamas, anarkalis, and angrakha panel shirts, which lost their lustre towards the end of the decade. As the average Pakistani woman became more careeroriented, the looks became more muted. Baggy Patiala shalwars, for instance, were replaced by sleek culottes and trousers, both of which have made comebacks recently. As we set foot in the 90s amid growing forces of globalisation, Eid attire evolved once again. Not only did designers from other countries influence what the locals wore but young and trained fashion experts emerged to the fore in Pakistan as well, reinvigorating the industry. They introduced silhouettes, cuts and intricate embroideries never seen before, putting works, such as tilla, naqshi and gotta, on the back burner. Diamantes, semi-precious stones and Swarovski crystals became popular embellishments and remain so to date. Even jewellery preferences changed with time and finally, after decades of donning gaudy jewellery and sets of bangles on Eid, women begun opting for something a little different. Many women, who once ran to the bank to retrieve their chand baalis, jhumkaas and pearls, now opt for statement pieces alone. The pendant necklace has made a comeback, updating current jewellery trends, shares jewellery designer Sherezad Rahimtoola. Just one piece is much more popular now, be it a bracelet, earring or locket. A bit of gold is okay but bangles are completely out, she added. In today s Pakistan, women are leading busy lives, so they prefer a chic yet minimalist wardrobe for occasions, such as Eid. According to Faiza, fashion these days is much more distinctive in its use of colours, cuts and embroideries. I m probably the only designer encouraging shalwars in a modern, innovative combination as part of Eid formals. Shalwar kameez is essentially the only living traditional attire, which evolves and influences latest trends, she explains. Like Faiza, the current crop of designers often draws inspiration from the past and simply modifies the traditional looks, keeping the spirit of Eid intact. The only Eid trend that has seemingly stood the test of time and retained its original essence is the crisp white shalwar kurta the go-to solution for most Pakistani men, especially in the blazing heat. Fashion guru Amir Adnan, who claims to have reintroduced traditional menswear, agrees with Faiza. No matter how much fashion evolves, the white shalwar kurta will always be in vogue, he notes. Amir and his brand work to combine elements of Pakistani culture, juxtaposing them with modern silhouettes. When I create an Eid kurta, I picture a man wearing it for namaz, family gatherings and formal dinners. With time, I have included embroidery, embellishments and different colours. Waistcoats have also come back and sparked a new era in menswear, he shares. Owing to the influence of Bollywood on the local fashion scene, most waistcoats are available in vibrant hues and flashy patterns. Fortunately for us, the sky is the limit when it comes to fashion. Our complaints about having nothing to wear may be longstanding, but it shouldn t matter what cut suits us best or what colour we stand out in, so long as our joras reflect the gloriously rich Pakistani aesthetics and celebratory nature of Eid. Actors try to save an irredeemable script Pakistani cinema has evolved as the veterans who shaped its television industry head out for the bigger, more lucrative medium. They borrow their skills, aesthetics and storytelling techniques from the small screen and somehow tweak it for the big one. It works in some instances and in others, it doesn t. In the case of Bin Roye a feature film made by producers renowned for their timeless television scripts the writer, Farhat Ishtiaque, does manage to extract a wholesome plot out of her novel. Unfortunately, she doesn t give us reason enough to stay through the film. Saba, played by the lovely Mahira Khan, sights an Eid ka chaand and makes a wish. Her elaborately-decorated house comes off as one hosting a wedding rather than the pre-Eid setting written in the script and it is here that we first see Humayun Saeed, in the role of Irtiza. Saba and Irtiza are serve a great round of applause for churning out their very best with what they have been given which is barely anything. After all, one can t expect much from even the dialogues of a film where the ice-breaker lines include Yeh tumhari billi hai? Mahira, in particular, adds much-needed zeal and symmetry to a character with only one ambition in life: to fulfill the dreams of her love interest. Where there is room, she breaks out from an otherwise hollow character and gives tangent to Saba s journey, making her agony felt on the screen. We anxiously await the day Pakistani actors are given something more impactful to play with. For Mahira, it happened neither in Bol, nor in Bin Roye and we can only hope her next release, Ho Man Jahan, gets it right. Javed Sheikh is effervescent in his hackneyed role of the wise, old father figure but his better half, played by the graceful Zeba Bakhtiar, is a tad bit rusty. Junaid Khan must be given due recognition for his powerful cameo. Humayun, on the other hand, puts a huge damper on things. Only the Almighty can help him learn how to cuddle a baby on screen! His bland performance elicits little more than exasperated sighs from the audience, despite 20 years of experience in the industry. Similarly, the sundry dance sequences are ambitious but stiff as well. All in all, Bin Roye is Pakistan s rendition of a masala film sans any great strokes of genius. A direct evolution of our seriels, the film will be consumed much like fast food: you will fill up inside, only to realise later you didn t eat anything healthy. Also don t buy the title; the film has too much rona dhona for it to be called Bin Roye . Verdict: Bin Roye can vary between being a cringe-worthy experience to a paisa vasool film. If you enjoy Pakistani dramas then watch the film or just go see your extended family this Eid. Salman, Nawazuddin dubsmash each other's dialogues from 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' From Kareena Kapoor Khan, Hrithik Roshan and Salman Khan to finally Alia Bhatt and Varun Dhawan, Karan Johar's 'Shuddhi' has been in news for its casting tweaks but that does not worry the 'Highway' actress. Alia, 22, said she will approach 'Shuddhi', which was announced in early 2014, like any other project. The film, to be produced by Johar and directed by "Agneepath" helmer Karan Malhotra, originally had Kareena Kapoor and Hrithik as the lead pair. But it got derailed due to Hrithik's health issues leading to his exit following which Kareena also walked out. Later, Salman Khan was roped in but his leading lady was undecided. After some time, Salman also opted out. "I feel pressure before every film whether it's big or small. I don't feel like I should take anything for granted. There is pressure but it is good pressure. I am not feeling bogged down. I am excited about the film and I want to put up a great show," Alia told PTI. This is the third time she will be teaming up with Varun after 'Student of the Year' and 'Humpty Sharma ki Dulhaniya'. "I hope we live up to that expectation and entertain our audience." This is the fifth film that KJo is producing for Alia after 'Student of the Year', '2 States', 'Humpty Sharma Ki Dhulania' and 'Kapoor and Sons'. "Karan is like my father to me... that is the relation I have with him. Whether we are working on a film together or any other project it is so much fun. We are comfortable with each other and the chemistry is right," Alia said. All of Alia's films till date have been hits and she is glad with the success each of her projects. "I am not sitting... taking a backseat and thinking I have achieved something. I don't feel I have achieved anything. I feel I have a long long way to go. I have just started. More than being content I am excited, energetic and nervous to do more good films," Alia said. As there are a lot of newcomers and even established actresses around, Alia thinks competition is ing fierce. Directed and produced by Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Bajirao Mastani is based on the love story between 18th century Maratha warrior Peshwa Bajirao I (Ranveer Singh) and his second wife Mastani (Deepika). Priyanka Chopra will be playing Kashibai, the role of Maratha warrior Peshwa Bajirao s first wife. The movie is scheduled to release on December 18, but has already managed to grip the audience. Fans tweeted excitedly after the first look was unveiled on social media. yyan to spend another day in prison Revealed: Why did Kat skip Neetu Kapoor s birthday bash? Supermodel Ayyan has been forced to spend another day behind bars on Wednesday as the judge overseeing her release left and courts closed. Banking Court Judge Sabir Sultan has been overseeing Ayyan s case ever since Customs Court Judge Rana Aftab Ahmed Khan left on leave. On Tuesday, the supermodel finally secured a bail some four months after she was arrested from Islamabad airport on charges of money laundering. A division bench of the Lahore High Court (LHC), headed by Justice Anwarul Haq, had ordered her release as it remarked that the accused was no more needed for investigation. The case is apparently also not of money laundering as A few more days till Bajrangi Bhaijaan and people can hardly wait for the release of the film. First, because it s a Salman Khan movie; second, B-Town celebs are doing Dubsmashs for the film! The team of Bajrangi Bhaijaan along with eager fans have been promoting the movie aggressively on social media but this time the promotions have taken to a Dubsmash level. first cousins who moonlight as best friends. To make her wishes come true, boy takes girl out for some shopping and from thenceforth, their chemistry evolves in a series of montages and songs culminating in Irtiza shifting to the US. And so, the plot begins to unravel in true Momina Duraid fashion: an excess of close-ups and beauty shots. Right at the start, we are introduced to too much in too short a time and sometimes too less for too long. This uneven pace grants viewers little space to breathe and by the time one acclamitises to the budding romance between Saba and Irtiza, they are already focused on the latter s impending exit. In contrast, some powerful scenes such as the one where Saba takes off her jewelry and curses God for her ill-fate are stretched beyond limits. Arguably, the editor is partly at fault here but much of the blame lies with the writer. The script is weak, with few clear motivations for the characters and their actions. It seems to throw around the idea of death casually, considering that three significant characters are killed off without much ado. Furthermore, apart from Irtiza, who is repeatedly addressed as a man above 30, the age of the rest of the cast remains indeterminate. Nonetheless, the actors de- With a stellar cast, this historical romance film looks highly promising and now that the first look and poster have been released, fans are ecstatic to watch their favourite stars take on such daring roles. Ever wondered why Ranveer had been wearing hats like the Mad Hatter? Because his director asked him to keep his looks literally under the hat. Priyanka looks like a goddess in this royal attire. Did you know Deepika took a 10-day training course to learn archery because she wanted to do all her stunts herself? Talk about be- important. "Competition is very important. I don't think anyone is looking at it like a race or people are running to win a first prize. Everybody wants to do very well. I feel the opportunities have become very diverse as more and more directors, writers, producers are coming up with new and exciting content," Alia said. "I feel if not this film then other film we will get to show our talent. As long as you are engaging the audience and keeping them happy then you will be happy as well," she said. Alia will be seen next opposite Shahid Kapoor in 'Shandaar' which is set to release in October this year. She is filming for 'Kapoor and Sons' with Siddharth Malhotra and she has recently wrapped up shooting for "Udta Punjab" which again has Shahid and Kareena Kapoor in the lead. claimed by the investigators, the bench noted. Appearing before the bench on Tuesday, Ayyan s counsel Sardar Latif Khan Khosa submitted that the Customs officials had arrested his client on fake charges of money laundering as part of a conspiracy and that Ayyan is an honourable girl. There is this strange buzz doing the rounds about why Katrina Kaif was unable to attend Neetu Kapoor's birthday bash recently. Some say since she was shooting for 'Jagga Jasoos', she was forced to miss it. Strangely, however, her co-star and beau Ranbir Kapoor could make it, but not Katrina. Earlier, there were whispers about differences between Katrina and director Anurag Basu over date issues for the film's reshoot. Truth can sometimes indeed be stranger than fiction. This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16, 2015 AFGHANISTANTIMES Less hotels and more campsites for 2018 World Cup Football fans at the 2018 World Cup could find themselves sleeping on boats or pitching tents in Soviet-era summer camps as Russia reins in spending on the tournament by cutting back on the number of hotels. When Russia won the right to host the 2018 tournament, it promised to provide 100,000 rooms for visiting supporters, far exceeding the 60,000 required by FIFA. Since then, an economic downturn, worsened by a fall in global oil prices and Western sanctions over Moscow's role in the Ukraine crisis, has forced Russia to scale back its ambitions. The government in April axed plans for 25 hotels to save $475m and last month reduced its limit on total spending on the tournament to $11.8bn. A source close to the organising committee said planners had few other options to reduce costs, and had discussed using boats to provide temporary bed spaces in host cities that are near a river or the coast. Interactive: Brazuca, story of the football "You can't cut the stadium, you can't cut the training grounds, but when you have 20-30 hotels of course there is flexibility there," the source said. In the woods, near the rivers, lakes and water areas, beautiful places. Those places would be available Maxim Podovinnikov, Region's deputy trade and industry minister But he warned that cutting back on hotels could mean fans have to make return trips of thousands of kilometres on match days. The World Cup will take place across 11 host cities, from Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea to Yekaterinburg, 1,700 km east of Moscow on the border where Europe meets Asia. Organisers in Nizhny Novgorod, a host city about 400 km east of Moscow, plan to let fans stay in vacated university dormitories and say budget cuts will not diminish the accommodation on offer. "One legacy of the Soviet Union is the Pioneer camps, used by children in summer time" said Maxim Podovinnikov, the region's deputy trade and industry minister, referring to the youth movement in which red-scarved boys and girls were brought up to revere Lenin and become good Communists. "In the woods, near the rivers, lakes and water areas, beautiful places. Those places would be available," he said. World Cup planners will be anxious to avoid the debacle with hotels at the Sochi Winter Olympics last year, when some rooms were being finished as athletes and journalists queued to check in. Since the Games, critics say luxury hotels have struggled to fill rooms in the Black Sea resort, which is also a World Cup venue. ICC urged to push for cricket's presence at Olympics The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) has urged the sport's ruling body to try to get the game's Twenty20 international format into the Olympics. Cricket has been played only once at a Summer Games, in Paris in 1900, but there have been growing calls to return the sport to the programme. The [MCC] committee is unanimous in its belief that every effort should be made to make cricket an Olympic sport MCC statement The MCC, founded in 1787 and the owner of the Lord's ground where it is based, was formerly the governing body of world cricket and is the guardian of the laws of the game. "The [MCC] committee is unanimous in its belief that every effort should be made to make cricket an Olympic sport, and urges all governing bodies around the world to get behind such a bid," the MCC said in a statement. "The Olympics is a fundamental opportunity for cricket - in both the men's and women's game - and with a global reach, such a presence would expose the game positively to new markets." The International Cricket Council (ICC) has been reluctant to push for the sport to be played in the Olympics. "The committee urges the ICC Board to reconsider its position and take a decision that it believes is in the best interests of the global game," the MCC said. "This would need to be done in the next 12 months for cricket to have a chance of being included in the 2024 Olympics." The ICC confirmed last month that the number of teams taking part in the 2019 and 2023 50-over World Cups, the sport's showpiece oneday tournament, would be cut from 14 to 10 countries. A Supreme Court committee has recommended Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals be suspended for two years from the Indian Premier League and an official from each of the clubs be banned for life from all cricket matches in the wake of corruption scandal in the competition. The three-member committee, headed by former chief justice Rajendra Lodha, proposed the sanctions saying that Chennai team principal Gurunath Meiyappan and Rajasthan co-owner Raj Kundra had been found to have indulged in betting on matches and been in contact with illegal bookmakers, "bringing the game, BCCI and IPL into disrepute". Meiyappan is the son-in-law of International Cricket Council chairman Narainaswamy Srinivasan, who had earlier been restricted by the court from running for another term as president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India owing to a conflict of interest. IPL's back... with an added twist His company, India Cements, held a stake in the Chennai franchise. "As the face of the team, he [Meiyappan] ought not to have indulged in betting practices," Lodha read out from the verdict which also criticised the franchises for inaction that brought disrepute to the game. "By regularly placing bets in IPL matches... he acted in gross violation of the anti-corruption code. "He is suspended for life from being involved in any type of cricket matches." The Supreme Court had earlier said the panel's verdict will be binding on the BCCI. The committee was formed in January to decide on the scope of punishment following a probe by a separate committee that found the clubs and both officials guilty. Meiyappan, who was detained for two weeks by Mumbai Police in 2013 over allegations of spot-fixing, was cleared by a BCCI-appointed panel but a petition from the Cricket Association of Bihar led to the Bombay High Court declaring that panel "illegal and unconstitutional." The Cricket Association of Bihar then took the issue to the Supreme Court, which ordered an investigation into the conduct of Srinivasan and 12 others. The fixing controversy erupted during the 2013 IPL competition when a small group of players, including former Test bowler Shantakumaran Sreesanth, were arrested for allegedly deliberately conceding a set number of runs in exchange for money from illegal gamblers. US Open singles champs to get record $3.3m US Open men's and women's singles champions will receive a record $3.3 million in prize money this year, a 10 percent boost over last year, the US Tennis Association announced Tuesday. The richest prizes in the sport will be part of a record $42.3 million total purse, which jumps 10.5 percent from 2014. Runner-ups will take home $1.6 million each with every player who makes the New York main draws of 128 assured at least $39,500. Wimbledon champions Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams each won $2.9 million last weekend while this year's Australian Open winners each made $2.5 million and the French Open champions each took $2 million. In all, US Open prize money has increased by 67 percent over the past three years. "We continue our commitment to ensure that the US Open offers one of the most lucrative purses in all of sports," USTA president Katrina Adams said. "As we have stated, total player compensation at the US Open will reach $50 million by 2017." Players can also boost their take if they earn bonus money based on their results at select warm-up tournaments for the Flushing Meadows showdown that begins August 31, extra funds that could take the total purse to $44.6 million if certain players win the crowns. Last year, defending champion Williams -- who owns all four Grand Slam titles for the second time in her career -- took $4 million for her US Open title thanks to a $1 million bonus based upon her results in tuneup tournaments. Chris Froome wins Stage 10, extends overall lead In boxing circles, July 18, 2015, may come to be remembered as "The Day of the Jackal." Carl Frampton, the plucky champion from Northern Ireland nicknamed "The Jackal," will make his U.S. debut Saturday when he defends his IBF super bantamweight title against Alejandro Gonzalez in a Premier Boxing Champions bout to be shown on CBS. The bout is in El Paso, Texas, where the fans are most likely to appreciate Frampton's aggressive, take-no-prisoners style. He fights in a style reminiscent of his manager, Hall of Famer Barry McGuigan. McGuigan said he had Frampton sign with PBC founder Al Haymon because Frampton wanted to make a run in the U.S. "Carl is a superstar in Britain and in Europe and in Ireland," McGuigan said. "The reality is when your career is dead and buried, all they remember is the stuff you've done in the United States. So it was a very important decision for us to come over here and try and be impressive and trying to make a name for ourselves." McGuigan has made his name, becoming one of the most popular fighters in Ireland history and punching his way to a spot in the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Frampton is 20-0 with 14 knockouts and hoping to fight many of the Haymon-controlled super bantamweights such as Leo Santa Cruz. He hopes he'll be able to have the same kind of impact upon his arrival in the U.S. that middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin and light heavyweight champion Sergey Kovalev did. They were largely unknown to the American audience when they arrived, but their combination of power, aggressiveness and charisma turned them into stars. Frampton is the same kind of a fighter and, particularly given that he's fighting near the Mexican border, where fans appreciate a slugfest more than most, he's got a chance to do the same kind of thing. "They're aggressive, they can punch hard and they knock people out, and that's what they want to see," Frampton told Yahoo Sports. "The diehard fans will tune in to see anyone, but the casual fans generally want to see blood and guts. I think my style is suited to the television audience and I think I can appease the American fans, particularly on the East Coast where there are a lot of Irish Americans." Frampton was, one might say, born into fighting but not in the traditional sense. He grew up the son of working class parents in a completely Protestant section of Belfast. The next housing estate over was completely Catholic. There were fights nearly every day, and one had to have a certain level of toughness to be able to go about his day. Within walking distance from his home was a gym where he decided to explore boxing. And what he found was, in a sense, salvation. There were a lot of loudmouths whom he'd encounter on his way to the gym. He was notoriously quiet and shy. But he was able to do his talking with his fists. "It's not like I was from some big boxing family," he said. "The gym was literally like two minutes away. I was more curious than anything. But all these rowdy boys, these loudmouths, I'd beat them up whenever we were boxing. And I've never looked back since." He made a run in Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom and established himself as one of the can't-miss fighters in Europe. But he was yearning for bigger fighters and bigger notoriety and so he made the decision to campaign in the U.S. He's very much a slugger, but he does have boxing skill if he needs it. It just so happens that he more often doesn't need to rely on that aspect of his game. "I can fight going backwards, to be totally honest with you," Frampton said. "That's no problem. But I like to fight. I like to put on a show." And he can do so confident in his chin. He's sparred with super welterweights and had no issue taking their punches. He's confident he can take whatever Gonzalez throws at him. But he wants to fight the best even the frequently dodged Guillermo Rigondeaux and feels he'll be able to come out on top when all is said and done. "I think the three guys in my division that I am really interested in are Rigo, [Scott] Quigg and Santa Cruz," he said. "You earn respect in this business by getting out there and testing yourself against all comers, the tougher the possible. Those are the three big names besides myself at super bantamweight, so those are the guys I think would be good for me to fight." He may not win all of them, but that won't be necessary for him to become a star in the U.S. All he needs is exposure, and his hard-charging style will take care of the rest. Chris Froome used the first highmountain stage of this year's Tour de France to take control of the race, powering up a punishing climb in the Pyrenees on Tuesday at a pace that none of his rivals could match. Watch every stage at NBC Sports with 'Tour de France Live' Froome and his Sky teammates killed off the hopes of one contender after another, including 2014 winner Vincenzo Nibali, the first of the big favorites to crack on the final ascent of Stage 10 to the ski station of La Pierre-SaintMartin. As Sky led the way, with three support riders strung out in front of Froome to tug him up the gradients, the lead group shrunk to less than a dozen of the hardiest climbers. Alberto Contador, the 2007 and 2009 winner, was the next former champion to wilt as Sky rider Richie Porte came up with another burst of speed. With six kilometers (four miles) to go, on some of the steepest sections, Froome tore away alone, getting out of the saddle as he accelerated. The last rider to stay with him, 2013 runner-up Nairo Quintana, couldn't respond and finished third behind Froome and Porte. American Pharoah arrives at Del Mar for training American Pharoah arrived at Del Mar Race Track on Tuesday to begin training for next month's Haskell Invitational in New Jersey. The first Triple Crown winner in 37 years even accomplished another rarity on his journey down from Santa Anita - avoiding summer traffic on the Los Angeles-area freeways. ''Well we did leave at 4 a.m.,'' said Jimmy Barnes, trainer Bob Baffert's chief assistant. American Pharaoh made the roughly 100-mile journey early in the morning, settled in and then jogged around the track in a morning workout that drew a large media contingent. ''It's like having a rock star here,'' said Joe Harper, the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club CEO. ''Otherwise we wouldn't have 14 cameras here.'' American Pharoah isn't expected to race at Del Mar, with its summer season starting on Thursday. Instead, the 3-year-old colt will train at the seaside oval in preparation for the Haskell on Aug. 2 at Monmouth Park. He'll return to Del Mar after the Haskell. Del Mar hopes Baffert, who arrives on Thursday, will add the track's $1 million Pacific Classic on Aug. 30 to the itinerary of the first horse in 37 years to win the Triple Crown. ''Those are all Bob's decisions,'' Barnes said. ''But I wouldn't think so.'' It's not expected that American Pharaoh will compete against older horses until October's Breeder's Cup. But like the estimated 2,000 other horses boarded at Del Mar, American Pharoah is enjoying the beach life. ''The horses love it down here,'' Barnes said, as he distributed peeled baby carrots to American Pharoah. ''It's a little cooler.'' American Pharoah is familiar with Del Mar, after winning its Grade I Del Mar Futurity for 2-year-olds last year. ''I remember saying to Bob, 'That is a really good looking horse,''' Harper said. 'Bob said, ''It could be the one.' It was the one all right.'' Fans can watch American Pharoah train each morning, with three of the sessions being timed workouts. ''It's terrific that he is here and it really is special,'' Harper said. While there are no guarantees American Pharoah will race at Del Mar, his presence rivaled the excitement of 1996 when Cigar attempted to break Citation's mark of 16 straight wins. But Dare And Go upset Cigar in the Pacific Classic, before a record crowd of 44,181. ''To have a Triple Crown winner is really a positive,'' Harper said. ''It sheds a positive light on our sport. A lot of smart people in our game speculated there would never be another one and American Pharoah proved them wrong.'' This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF. . THURSDAY JULY 16 . 2015-Saratan 25, 1394 H.S Vol:IX Issue No:340 Price: Afs.15 This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.win2pdf.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only. This page will not be added after purchasing Win2PDF.