Articles found March 16, 2007
Two more suspects arrested in beating of Afghanistan war hero
The Canadian Press Published: Thursday, March 15, 2007
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MORRISBURG, Ont. — Two more men are facing charges after a highly decorated soldier was beaten at a bar in Morrisburg in eastern Ontario.
Master Cpl. Collin Fitzgerald was awarded a Medal of Military Valour last month for his heroic actions in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan.
On Saturday, he was attacked in the bar by four men, who had also allegedly taunted him about his war hero status.
Fitzgerald suffered a badly broken foot and several facial injuries.
Police have charged 22-year old Ian Tait and 19-year old Jeremy Stewart with assault.
Twenty-one-year-old Travis Baldwin was arrested earlier in connection with the assault and police continue to seek a fourth suspect
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DND doubts watchdog's role in Afghan abuse probe
OLIVER MOORE From Friday's Globe and Mail
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The Department of National Defence says it doesn't believe a military watchdog has jurisdiction to look into a complaint about the handover of prisoners in Afghanistan.
The dispute may end up in a court showdown between DND and the Military Police Complaints Commission. If DND refuses to co-operate in its investigation, the commission says, it may be forced to hold public hearings.
In a letter, DND says it is set to seek a judicial review, but has given chairman Peter Tinsley until Monday to explain why the commission accepted the complaint from two civil-liberties groups.
The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association and Amnesty International Canada lodged the complaint last month, arguing military police are typically the last Canadians to have custody of prisoners before they are given over to Afghan authorities. The groups said troops handed prisoners over to Afghan authorities, even though they should have known Afghan police and the security directorate "routinely tortures prisoners."
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PM considering increasing Afghanistan troop commitment
The World Today - Friday, 16 March , 2007 12:10:00 Reporter: Louise Willis
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ELEANOR HALL: Australians are being warned to brace for casualties if the Federal Government does increase Australian troops numbers in Afghanistan.
The Prime Minister used a surprise visit to Kabul overnight to reveal he's considering increasing Australia's troop commitment, with speculation that 450 extra soldiers could be sent.
Mr Howard won't confirm the plans, or give a figure, but the move is reportedly under consideration by Cabinet's National Security Committee.
But while there is bipartisan support for the extra troops, Labor leader Kevin Rudd says Afghanistan is extremely dangerous. And security analysts are already warning about the increased risk of Australian casualties.
Louise Willis has our report.
LOUISE WILLIS: It's beginning to warm up in Afghanistan, both the weather and the fighting.
NATO-led (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) forces in the country are preparing for a major spring offensive by the Taliban and that may prompt Australia to boost its already 500-strong troop commitment to the country.
JOHN HOWARD: We are looking at the possibility of some increase in our commitment to Afghanistan. You asked me about Iraq, we announced recently an increase of military trainers for Iraq, and we have no plans to, certainly have no plans to reduce our commitment and we are planning a modest increase in military trainers.
We think, in the case of both countries and both operations, providing as much training as possible to the Iraqi forces, both the army and also the police, and also providing training assistance to the National Army of Afghanistan, we think in both cases that is an extremely valuable commitment.
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Afghanistan Says 5 Police Mistakenly Killed By Coalition Forces
Friday, March 16, 2007
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KABUL, Afghanistan — U.S.-led coalition forces mistakenly killed five Afghan police in a clash in a southern province, the government said Friday.
The police were manning a checkpoint in Gereshk district, Helmand province when the clash broke out Thursday evening, said Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary.
"Coalition forces mistakenly opened fire on police," Bashary said. "Unfortunately five policemen were killed."
A high-ranking Afghan delegation was sent to the area to investigate, Bashary said. He could not provide further details of how the friendly fire broke out.
U.S. military officials were not immediately available to comment on the matter.
The clash came as NATO-led forces pressed on with their largest operation yet in Afghanistan, trying to secure a region of Helmand province — a stronghold for resurgent Taliban militants.
Lt. Col. Angela Billings, a spokeswoman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force in Kabul, said their troops were not involved in the clash.
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Funeral today for soldier killed in Afghanistan
Updated Fri. Mar. 16 2007 8:07 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff
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Hundreds of soldiers will be in Stellarton, Nova Scotia, today for the full military funeral of Cpl. Kevin Megeney -- killed in Afghanistan in what the military is calling an "accidental shooting."
Megeney, 25, was killed in his tent at the Canadian base in Kandahar on March 6 by a gunshot wound to the chest. He died 20 minutes later from the wound.
"The funeral today will be about celebrating Kevin's life not just as a soldier but as a friend and family member," Megeney's cousin, Brian MacLeod, told Canada AM on Friday.
He said there will be about 100 family members at the funeral.
"The family has been coping quite well ... There's been a lot of grieving but also a lot of reflection and thinking about those happy times with Kevin," said MacLeod.
He described his cousin as someone with "a great sense of humour" who was "not a leader of the pack but very influential in any group he was ever a part of."
"Kevin honestly thought that he could make a difference by contributing to his country through service in the army through the reserves and he wanted to do his part in Afghanistan to try to help bring peace throughout the world," said MacLeod.
Local residents are also honouring Megeney with a yellow ribbon campaign.
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No easy way out for Prodi on Afghanistan
Friday, 16 March, 2007, 01:47 PM Doha Time By Phil Stewart
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ROME: Italy is paying a higher political price than other Nato partners for keeping troops in Afghanistan, but analysts say the cost of withdrawal would be even greater for Rome and its closest allies.
Prime Minister Romano Prodi, already forced to resign briefly last month over foreign policy, including the Afghan mission, still faces major tests on the peacekeeping issue.
The Taliban are piling pressure on Prodi by holding an Italian reporter hostage and demanding Rome withdraw its forces. Closer to home, leftist senators who oppose the mission will vote this month on a bill financing Italy’s 1,900 troops there.
Keeping troops in Afghanistan may seem unnecessary given that Italy has a smaller contingent than even the Netherlands and operates in the safer, western sector of the country.
But military strategists and political analysts say any meaningful pullout would ostracise Italy from its allies abroad and anger moderates at home.
From a military perspective, the size of Italy’s contingent belies its strategic importance, they say. Withdrawal would leave a gaping hole in an already understaffed force so far unable to defeat the Taliban.
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What’s wrong with Afghanistan’s suicide bombers?
March 15, 2007
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Afghanistan has seen a precipitous rise in suicide bombings (from 25 in 2005 to 136 in 2006) but they have failed to cause many fatalities among their targets: foreign and international security forces. And while they may have achieved their goal of impeding the goals of Karzai's government and its international backers, these tactics are earning the Taliban enmity among the people whose support they most need.
So conclude Brian Glyn Williams and Cathy Young of the Jamestown Foundation, who recently conducted a five month study on 158 documented suicide bombings in Afghanistan from 2001-2007. One of their conclusions is that despite surface similarities with Iraq, “the suicide bombing campaign in Afghanistan has its own specific dynamics.” MORE
When you glance at the statistics, one thing is evident: suicide bombings in Afghanistan have had a shockingly low rate of success. During the first seven weeks of 2007 there were 22 attempted bombings (punctuating Mullah Hayat Khan’s claim that they Taliban has deployed 2,000 suicide bombers to make 2007 "the bloodiest year" in Afghanistan.) However, in 16 of these 22 cases the only fatality of the explosion was the suicide bomber himself, and in another two cases, the perpetrator was shot even before detonating his bomb.
The three “successful” attacks killed two policemen and eight civilians (Jan 23), three policemen (Feb 4), and 23 people, including several coalition soldiers. Such “numbers hardly compare to Iraq where suicide bombers often carry out synchronized attacks that regularly kill anywhere from 60 to 130 people.” And the eighteen failed attacks “translate to 19 Taliban suicide bombers for one Afghan policeman, hardly an inspiring kill ratio for would-be-suicide bombers.”
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Howard pays surprise visit to Afghanistan
Web posted at: 3/16/2007 8:58:22
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KABUL • Australian Prime Minister John Howard said during a surprise trip to Afghanistan yesterday that his government may send more troops to combat Taleban militants in the insurgency-hit country.
Howard visited Australian troops stationed in Tirin Kot, the capital of the volatile southern province of Uruzgan, and later met Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
“We are looking at the possibility of some increase in our commitment to Afghanistan,” Howard told a news conference, without giving details. Australia, an ally in the US-led “war on terror”, already has 550 troops in Afghanistan.
He ruled out any corresponding decrease of Australian troops in Iraq. Howard also reaffirmed Australia’s commitment to Karzai’s government as it takes on Taleban-led militants who have waged a bloody insurgency since their ouster by US-led troops in late 2001.
“We remain committed as a nation to assisting Afghanistan in resisting terrorism, in resisting the Taleban forces,” he said.Howard acknowledged the challenging task ahead for Nato and Afghan troops. Last year was the deadliest in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taleban, with around 4,000 people killed.
The Islamist movement has promised to launch a spring offensive as the harsh Afghan winter comes to an end.
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Self-immolation by Afghan women rising
By Alisa Tang, Associated Press Writer | March 15, 2007
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KABUL, Afghanistan --One woman committed suicide by setting herself ablaze after her father-in-law tried to rape her. Another set herself on fire because her brothers would not let her marry, preferring that she remain their servant at home. Yet another told her mother before she died that her husband beat her daily.
Testimony gathered by the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission documents how life for many Afghan women remains so bleak that some choose a horrific and painful death instead.
The group interviewed about 800 Afghans whose sisters, daughters and daughters-in-law have killed themselves by self-immolation to escape domestic abuse, forced marriage and other misogynistic social customs.
The report and anecdotal evidence from other rights workers suggests the phenomenon is growing, with desperate women sometimes mimicking what they have seen reported on TV.
"It's really a big problem in Afghanistan," said Nabila Wafiq, who has researched the issue for the aid group Medica Mondiale, which has interviewed women who survived their self-immolation attempts.
"When we asked most people why they committed self-immolation, they said that when they take pills, they don't die, but when they commit self-immolation they believe they will die, 100 percent."
Reports from Herat, in western Afghanistan, show about 90 women set fire to themselves last year there and more than 70 percent died. Afghanistan's poor health system can do little for the badly burned.
The commission report, released last week, covers Badghis, Herat, Farah, Nimroz and Kandahar, provinces that media and other reports suggest are the worst affected. However, women's rights advocates suspect that self-immolation is a nationwide problem.
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Two more suspects arrested in beating of Afghanistan war hero
The Canadian Press Published: Thursday, March 15, 2007
Article Link
MORRISBURG, Ont. — Two more men are facing charges after a highly decorated soldier was beaten at a bar in Morrisburg in eastern Ontario.
Master Cpl. Collin Fitzgerald was awarded a Medal of Military Valour last month for his heroic actions in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan.
On Saturday, he was attacked in the bar by four men, who had also allegedly taunted him about his war hero status.
Fitzgerald suffered a badly broken foot and several facial injuries.
Police have charged 22-year old Ian Tait and 19-year old Jeremy Stewart with assault.
Twenty-one-year-old Travis Baldwin was arrested earlier in connection with the assault and police continue to seek a fourth suspect
More on link
DND doubts watchdog's role in Afghan abuse probe
OLIVER MOORE From Friday's Globe and Mail
Article Link
The Department of National Defence says it doesn't believe a military watchdog has jurisdiction to look into a complaint about the handover of prisoners in Afghanistan.
The dispute may end up in a court showdown between DND and the Military Police Complaints Commission. If DND refuses to co-operate in its investigation, the commission says, it may be forced to hold public hearings.
In a letter, DND says it is set to seek a judicial review, but has given chairman Peter Tinsley until Monday to explain why the commission accepted the complaint from two civil-liberties groups.
The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association and Amnesty International Canada lodged the complaint last month, arguing military police are typically the last Canadians to have custody of prisoners before they are given over to Afghan authorities. The groups said troops handed prisoners over to Afghan authorities, even though they should have known Afghan police and the security directorate "routinely tortures prisoners."
More on link
PM considering increasing Afghanistan troop commitment
The World Today - Friday, 16 March , 2007 12:10:00 Reporter: Louise Willis
Article Link
ELEANOR HALL: Australians are being warned to brace for casualties if the Federal Government does increase Australian troops numbers in Afghanistan.
The Prime Minister used a surprise visit to Kabul overnight to reveal he's considering increasing Australia's troop commitment, with speculation that 450 extra soldiers could be sent.
Mr Howard won't confirm the plans, or give a figure, but the move is reportedly under consideration by Cabinet's National Security Committee.
But while there is bipartisan support for the extra troops, Labor leader Kevin Rudd says Afghanistan is extremely dangerous. And security analysts are already warning about the increased risk of Australian casualties.
Louise Willis has our report.
LOUISE WILLIS: It's beginning to warm up in Afghanistan, both the weather and the fighting.
NATO-led (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) forces in the country are preparing for a major spring offensive by the Taliban and that may prompt Australia to boost its already 500-strong troop commitment to the country.
JOHN HOWARD: We are looking at the possibility of some increase in our commitment to Afghanistan. You asked me about Iraq, we announced recently an increase of military trainers for Iraq, and we have no plans to, certainly have no plans to reduce our commitment and we are planning a modest increase in military trainers.
We think, in the case of both countries and both operations, providing as much training as possible to the Iraqi forces, both the army and also the police, and also providing training assistance to the National Army of Afghanistan, we think in both cases that is an extremely valuable commitment.
More on link
Afghanistan Says 5 Police Mistakenly Killed By Coalition Forces
Friday, March 16, 2007
Article Link
KABUL, Afghanistan — U.S.-led coalition forces mistakenly killed five Afghan police in a clash in a southern province, the government said Friday.
The police were manning a checkpoint in Gereshk district, Helmand province when the clash broke out Thursday evening, said Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary.
"Coalition forces mistakenly opened fire on police," Bashary said. "Unfortunately five policemen were killed."
A high-ranking Afghan delegation was sent to the area to investigate, Bashary said. He could not provide further details of how the friendly fire broke out.
U.S. military officials were not immediately available to comment on the matter.
The clash came as NATO-led forces pressed on with their largest operation yet in Afghanistan, trying to secure a region of Helmand province — a stronghold for resurgent Taliban militants.
Lt. Col. Angela Billings, a spokeswoman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force in Kabul, said their troops were not involved in the clash.
More on link
Funeral today for soldier killed in Afghanistan
Updated Fri. Mar. 16 2007 8:07 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff
Article Link
Hundreds of soldiers will be in Stellarton, Nova Scotia, today for the full military funeral of Cpl. Kevin Megeney -- killed in Afghanistan in what the military is calling an "accidental shooting."
Megeney, 25, was killed in his tent at the Canadian base in Kandahar on March 6 by a gunshot wound to the chest. He died 20 minutes later from the wound.
"The funeral today will be about celebrating Kevin's life not just as a soldier but as a friend and family member," Megeney's cousin, Brian MacLeod, told Canada AM on Friday.
He said there will be about 100 family members at the funeral.
"The family has been coping quite well ... There's been a lot of grieving but also a lot of reflection and thinking about those happy times with Kevin," said MacLeod.
He described his cousin as someone with "a great sense of humour" who was "not a leader of the pack but very influential in any group he was ever a part of."
"Kevin honestly thought that he could make a difference by contributing to his country through service in the army through the reserves and he wanted to do his part in Afghanistan to try to help bring peace throughout the world," said MacLeod.
Local residents are also honouring Megeney with a yellow ribbon campaign.
More on link
No easy way out for Prodi on Afghanistan
Friday, 16 March, 2007, 01:47 PM Doha Time By Phil Stewart
Article Link
ROME: Italy is paying a higher political price than other Nato partners for keeping troops in Afghanistan, but analysts say the cost of withdrawal would be even greater for Rome and its closest allies.
Prime Minister Romano Prodi, already forced to resign briefly last month over foreign policy, including the Afghan mission, still faces major tests on the peacekeeping issue.
The Taliban are piling pressure on Prodi by holding an Italian reporter hostage and demanding Rome withdraw its forces. Closer to home, leftist senators who oppose the mission will vote this month on a bill financing Italy’s 1,900 troops there.
Keeping troops in Afghanistan may seem unnecessary given that Italy has a smaller contingent than even the Netherlands and operates in the safer, western sector of the country.
But military strategists and political analysts say any meaningful pullout would ostracise Italy from its allies abroad and anger moderates at home.
From a military perspective, the size of Italy’s contingent belies its strategic importance, they say. Withdrawal would leave a gaping hole in an already understaffed force so far unable to defeat the Taliban.
More on link
What’s wrong with Afghanistan’s suicide bombers?
March 15, 2007
Article Link
Afghanistan has seen a precipitous rise in suicide bombings (from 25 in 2005 to 136 in 2006) but they have failed to cause many fatalities among their targets: foreign and international security forces. And while they may have achieved their goal of impeding the goals of Karzai's government and its international backers, these tactics are earning the Taliban enmity among the people whose support they most need.
So conclude Brian Glyn Williams and Cathy Young of the Jamestown Foundation, who recently conducted a five month study on 158 documented suicide bombings in Afghanistan from 2001-2007. One of their conclusions is that despite surface similarities with Iraq, “the suicide bombing campaign in Afghanistan has its own specific dynamics.” MORE
When you glance at the statistics, one thing is evident: suicide bombings in Afghanistan have had a shockingly low rate of success. During the first seven weeks of 2007 there were 22 attempted bombings (punctuating Mullah Hayat Khan’s claim that they Taliban has deployed 2,000 suicide bombers to make 2007 "the bloodiest year" in Afghanistan.) However, in 16 of these 22 cases the only fatality of the explosion was the suicide bomber himself, and in another two cases, the perpetrator was shot even before detonating his bomb.
The three “successful” attacks killed two policemen and eight civilians (Jan 23), three policemen (Feb 4), and 23 people, including several coalition soldiers. Such “numbers hardly compare to Iraq where suicide bombers often carry out synchronized attacks that regularly kill anywhere from 60 to 130 people.” And the eighteen failed attacks “translate to 19 Taliban suicide bombers for one Afghan policeman, hardly an inspiring kill ratio for would-be-suicide bombers.”
More on link
Howard pays surprise visit to Afghanistan
Web posted at: 3/16/2007 8:58:22
Article Link
KABUL • Australian Prime Minister John Howard said during a surprise trip to Afghanistan yesterday that his government may send more troops to combat Taleban militants in the insurgency-hit country.
Howard visited Australian troops stationed in Tirin Kot, the capital of the volatile southern province of Uruzgan, and later met Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
“We are looking at the possibility of some increase in our commitment to Afghanistan,” Howard told a news conference, without giving details. Australia, an ally in the US-led “war on terror”, already has 550 troops in Afghanistan.
He ruled out any corresponding decrease of Australian troops in Iraq. Howard also reaffirmed Australia’s commitment to Karzai’s government as it takes on Taleban-led militants who have waged a bloody insurgency since their ouster by US-led troops in late 2001.
“We remain committed as a nation to assisting Afghanistan in resisting terrorism, in resisting the Taleban forces,” he said.Howard acknowledged the challenging task ahead for Nato and Afghan troops. Last year was the deadliest in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taleban, with around 4,000 people killed.
The Islamist movement has promised to launch a spring offensive as the harsh Afghan winter comes to an end.
More on link
Self-immolation by Afghan women rising
By Alisa Tang, Associated Press Writer | March 15, 2007
Article Link
KABUL, Afghanistan --One woman committed suicide by setting herself ablaze after her father-in-law tried to rape her. Another set herself on fire because her brothers would not let her marry, preferring that she remain their servant at home. Yet another told her mother before she died that her husband beat her daily.
Testimony gathered by the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission documents how life for many Afghan women remains so bleak that some choose a horrific and painful death instead.
The group interviewed about 800 Afghans whose sisters, daughters and daughters-in-law have killed themselves by self-immolation to escape domestic abuse, forced marriage and other misogynistic social customs.
The report and anecdotal evidence from other rights workers suggests the phenomenon is growing, with desperate women sometimes mimicking what they have seen reported on TV.
"It's really a big problem in Afghanistan," said Nabila Wafiq, who has researched the issue for the aid group Medica Mondiale, which has interviewed women who survived their self-immolation attempts.
"When we asked most people why they committed self-immolation, they said that when they take pills, they don't die, but when they commit self-immolation they believe they will die, 100 percent."
Reports from Herat, in western Afghanistan, show about 90 women set fire to themselves last year there and more than 70 percent died. Afghanistan's poor health system can do little for the badly burned.
The commission report, released last week, covers Badghis, Herat, Farah, Nimroz and Kandahar, provinces that media and other reports suggest are the worst affected. However, women's rights advocates suspect that self-immolation is a nationwide problem.
More on link