Tag: Afghanistan

  • Afghan security forces losing ground – U.S. report

    Afghan security forces are losing territory to insurgents in Afghanistan, according to a report released by the U.S. Special Inspector-General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said on Friday.

    SIGAR quoted the U.S. forces in Afghanistan said that by the end of May the government controlled 65.6 per cent of Afghanistan’s districts, a drop from 70.5 per cent in January 2016.

    “Of the 407 districts within the 34 provinces, 268 districts were under government control or influence, 36 districts within 15 provinces were under insurgent control or influence and 104 districts were ‘at risk,’” the report said.

    Since the NATO combat mission officially ended in December 2014, the Afghan national security forces have faced heavy losses on the battlefield against Taliban fighters.

    This has led to NATO members recently slowing down their withdrawal of remaining troops.

    Security experts said that in 2015 around 7,000 Afghan police and soldiers died fighting against the Taliban, while some 14,000 were injured.

    The experts further said that in 2016 these numbers are expected to rise again.

    This week five U.S. soldiers were injured in Nangarhar province near Kabul, supporting Afghan forces in battle against the so-called Islamic State, U.S. forces confirmed on Thursday.

  • 150,000 Afghans displaced – UN

    150,000 Afghans displaced – UN


    The United Nations said in its conflict latest figures that more than 149,000 Afghans fled their homes in the first six months of the year due to the ongoing conflict.

    The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a bulletin released on Thursday in Kabul that many of those affected were farmers who were missing critical sowing and harvest times.

    It said the crisis has put their livelihoods at risk and increasing food insecurity in Afghanistan.

    The UN noted that the northern province of Baghlan was one of the worst hit by the conflict still affecting 29 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces.

    It complained that it had no access to many of the internally displaced persons.

  • ‘Britain not ready to release Nigeria’s stolen funds’

    Steve Franklin is an American widely traveled journalist and author, President of Nigerian American Press Association (NAPA) a famous media association of Nigerians and American journalists with over 100 memberships. He’s a very outspoken media professional who passionately follow events in Africa. In this interview with Adetutu Audu, he chronicles several vices imbibed in Britain as they continually squander Nigeria’s Stolen Wealth kept in Britain’s Bank Account for their own rapid development at the latest  Anti-Corruption Summit in UK.

     How do you view the on-going Anti-Corruption Summit in Britain?

    As far as I am concerned, I know that from the outset of United Kingdom Anti-Corruption Summit, David Cameron, British Prime Minister had convened that meeting to embarrass and disgrace Nigeria, which was why he referred to ‘Nigeria and Afghanistan’ as two most corrupt nations in the world during his pre-summit chat with Queen Elizabeth II. Were it not the video camera that captured that scathing and derogatory statement, Cameron could have denied he did not utter it. Britain is not a saint, but very corrupt. In the present list of Transparency International Corruption Index, UK occupied 10th position with Germany, Luxembourg.

    You are aware in the UK Anti Corruption Summit, Cobus de Swardt, Managing Director of Transparency International reacted to Cameron comments regarding Nigeria, Afghanistan as ‘Most Corrupt’ when he said: ‘There is no doubt that historically, Nigeria and Afghanistan have had very high levels of corruption, and that continues to this day. But the leaders of those countries have sent strong signals that they want things to change, and the London Anti-Corruption Summit creates an opportunity for all the countries present to sign up to a new era. This affects the UK as much as other countries we should not forget that by providing a safe haven for corrupt assets, the UK and its Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies are a big part of the world’s corruption problem.’

    I can tell you that majority of British politicians and Nigerians are presently condemning Cameron for trying to place Britain as a saint, immunized from stealing. In Africa, I have heard lots of people say ‘A Pot cannot be calling the Kettle Black.’ May be you don’t know yet, British opposition politicians and anti-corruption campaigners have said Cameron was ill-placed to criticize Nigeria when Britain’s own record on combating corruption was less than glorious.

    Unilaterally, they have said that corrupt politicians and business people from Nigeria and many other countries have laundered their ill-gotten gains in Britain’s property market, while London also has ties to numerous tax havens routinely used to hide stolen money to develop their country. There will be an Agreement to be signed at the end of the summit on Reparation of Nigeria’ stolen funds in United Kingdom.

    Are you sure that after Nigeria may have signed the Agreement on Stolen Funds Reparation, the UK Government will return the money?

    Based on Britain’s body language, I am sure they are not ready to return Nigeria’s stolen funds stashed in various banks which I will reveal shortly soon. They act and see themselves as Dictator, suffering from Colonial Master’s Syndrome. They want to use Nigeria’s stolen funds to build and rapidly develop their own nation to their optimal satisfaction. When they are through, they will then recycle same stolen funds into their banks and begin to give to Nigeria in piece meal after a long waiting period. They will then attach stringent conditions for Nigeria to follow in implementing the piece meal funds reparation. If they feel that the returned funds is not well executed according to British laid down rules, they will delay releasing other stolen funds.
    My position is further confirmed by a reported statement from British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Paul Arkwright, who said that the UK government had no plan to keep the money, but there are certain legal requirements that Nigeria had not met to ease the recovery of the money. He agreed that the money belongs to the Nigerian people but left a caveat that they ‘need to make sure that the money is well spent when it returns to Nigeria’. They need to make sure they ‘can do that in a proper way, which is fully in compliance with the British law.’ What an insult. Nigeria is a Sovereign nation like Britain, with laid down rules on procedures. Britain must do away with its Master-servant mentality. They cannot enforce British laws on Nigerian laws. That is why I call them dictator of the highest order. Nigeria had her independence since October 1, 1960, yet you are not willing to let the country grow, progress forward. What a shame.


    Can you mention those British Banks where British Government hides Nigeria’s stolen funds?

    Let me say here that British Government is government built mostly on stolen funds from the money pilfered by some politicians in those countries and kept in their banks. It is strange that UK knows those funds were stolen from Nigeria yet they instruct their banks to collect such funds, so that they may use the funds through backdoor and play it around in a circle, when tired, they return the funds into the banks. It is that simple. It will shock you to hear that British banks being used by UK Government to hide Nigeria’s funds are: HSBC, Barclays, Natwest, & Royal Bank of Scotland. Till date, no British bank has been publicly fined or even named by the regulators for taking corrupt funds, whether willingly or through negligence.

    Recently, an International corruption watchdog said high street banks in the United Kingdom could have helped fuel corruption in Nigeria by accepting millions of dollars in deposits from dubious politicians in the West African nation.

    How come five leading UK banks have failed to adequately investigate the source of tens of millions of dollars taken from two Nigerian governors accused of corruption in the past. Robert Palmer, a campaigner at Global Witness corroborated my position when he said ‘Banks are quick to penalize ordinary customers for minor infractions but seem to be less concerned about dirty money passing through their accounts.

    He also said ‘Large scale corruption is simply not possible without a bank willing to process payments from dodgy sources, or hold accounts for corrupt politicians in the knowledge of the government.

    I strongly share in the belief that Financial Services Authority (FSA) have failed woefully to do more to prevent money laundering through British banks. The fact that they reportedly acknowledged that in accepting the money, Barclays, NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and HSBC, as well as Switzerland’s UBS, might not have broken the law is a shame on British Government.

    In Britain, banks help in facilitating corruption. Name one British bank that has been publicly fined or even named by the regulators for taking corrupt funds, whether willingly or through negligence or sacked. In United States, banks that breach the law have been fined hundreds of millions of dollars for handling dirty money. Barclays, HSBC and UBS are all members of the Wolfsberg Group, an international body set up in 2000 to try to improve global anti-money laundering procedures. This revelation was made by Robert based on court documents from cases the Nigerian government has brought in London in an attempt to get funds returned that it said were stolen by two former state governors: Diepreye Alamieyeseigha of Bayelsa state and Joshua Dariye of Plateau state.

  • Kabul suicide attack leaves 28 dead, over 300 injured

    Kabul suicide attack leaves 28 dead, over 300 injured

    Nothing less than  28 people have been confirmed dead  and more than 300 injured after an explosion rocked Kabul, Afghanistan on Tuesday morning.

    This was confirmed by the Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi,   after a suicide car bomber targeted the office of a security team protecting government VIPs caused the explosion.

    First a suicide bomber blew up his explosives-laden lorry on the gate of the department and then other armed attackers went in and started shooting on the rest of the enemies, CNN reports.

    However,Afghan President,  Mohammad Ashraf Ghani condemned the terrorist attack in Pule Mahmood Khan area, Kabul, which martyred and injured a number of Afghan innocent civilians in strongest terms,” a statement released by the president’s office read.

     

  • Taliban announces start of spring offensive in Afghanistan

    The Taliban has announced the start of their spring offensive on Tuesday.

    The offensive tagged “Operation Omari”, was named after the late Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar.

    The Taliban, in a statement released in Helmand, pledged to launch large-scale offensives against government strongholds backed by suicide and guerrilla attacks to drive Afghanistan’s Western-backed government from power.

    It read that “Jihad against the aggressive and usurping infidel army is a holy obligation upon our necks and our only recourse for re-establishing an Islamic system and regaining our independence’’.

    The Taliban statement said further that as well as suicide and tactical attacks, the operation would include assassinations of enemy commanders in urban centres.

    “The present Operation will also employ all means at our disposal to bog the enemy down in a war of attrition that lowers the morale of the foreign invaders and their internal armed militias.’’

    In line with recent statements, it also said it would establish good governance in areas it controlled as well as avoiding civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure.

  • U.S. drones kill 17 in Afghanistan

    An early Friday report from Kabul said 17 people were killed by U.S. drones in south-eastern Afghanistan during the week.

    Nematullah Baburi, a member of the council of Paktika province, said there were conflicting reports on the identities of the causalities, while the local officials said the dead were civilians, while police and foreign forces said all casualties were militants.

    He, however, insisted that three drone airstrikes conducted by U.S. forces in the Nematabad area of Gomal district killed 17 civilians including a tribal elder.

    Baburi said the first strike targeted a vehicle carrying an elder named Haji Rozuddin on Wednesday, killing all 12 passengers.

    “Two other airstrikes a few kilometres away the same day killed 5 villagers.

    Another council member, Fazal Katawazai, confirmed that the strikes had left civilian casualties, but said he did not know how many.
    He said there were problems getting more information, as the phones do not work there.

    Katawaza said another problem was that the local government only controls the district centre, while other areas are in control of Taliban.

    The provincial police and international forces said only Taliban militants were killed in the airstrikes.

    Gen. Zorawar Zahid, Paktika’s Police Chief, declining to comment on reports of Rozuddin’s death, stressing that no civilians were killed.

    Meanwhile, a spokesman of the U.S. forces in Kabul said that there was no evidence of civilian casualties.

    Drone strikes have intensified since Islamic State militants have started appearing in Afghanistan. Most of them have been in Nangarhar province, north-east of Paktika.

     

  • Afghan district police chief assassinated

    Parun Provincial Governor, Haffiz Abdul Qaum on Tuesday said a district police chief was killed following an ambush attack in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Nuristan.

    “The enemies of Afghanistan attacked the vehicle of, Enayatullah Khan, police chief of Duab district, with guns along a main road in the district located in south western of provincial capital Parun on Tuesday.

    “ As a result Khan was martyred and two policemen were wounded,’’ Qaum told newsmen.

    He however blamed the Taliban militant group for the attack in the mountainous province.

    The Taliban militants, which ruled the country before they were ousted in late 2001, renewed armed insurgency, staging ambushes and suicide attacks, killing combatants as well as civilians.

    On Monday, a policewoman was shot dead by gunmen in the country’s southern province of Kandahar.

     

  • Taliban storms Afghan jail, releases prisoners

    Taliban insurgents stormed a mud fort being used as a prison in Afghanistan on Monday, killing policemen and releasing more than 400 inmates.

    Officials said that the insurgents also attacked troops who came to the rescue of the policemen.

    The latest Taliban prison raid, on the outskirts of the central city of Ghazni, comes after setbacks for the government in different parts of the country and deadly attacks in Kabul which have dashed hopes for peace talks.

    Mohammed Ali Ahmadi, Deputy City Governor, said that out of the 400 prisoners that escaped, about 80 had been recaptured and 352 were on the run, including about 150 Taliban.

    Ahmadi noted that seven Taliban and four members of the security forces were killed in the attack.

    “Roads to the prison were covered with land mines in advance to avoid reinforcement.

    “An army vehicle coming for reinforcements was blown up by a roadside bomb while trying to reach the prison,’’ he said.

    The governor said that the prison did not have heavy security because it was so close to Ghazni – only seven km (4.3 miles) from the city centre – and it was believed that reinforcements would get there quickly in the event of trouble.

    One security official said the attackers, armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles, were wearing Afghan security force uniforms.

    Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid while taking responsibility for the attack said that gunmen and three suicide bombers attacked the prison at 2 a.m. (2200 GMT Sunday).

    “Three bombers were killed while 40 Afghan security forces and prison guards were killed in the prison break.

    “Some important military mujahideen officials have been freed,’’ Mujahid said, referring to Islamist fighters.

    The Taliban often exaggerate casualty tolls in statements about their attacks.

    The Taliban are fighting to overthrow the foreign-backed government of President Ashraf Ghani, expel foreign forces from Afghanistan and impose a strict interpretation of Islamic law.

  • Suicide bomber kills six, injures 10 in Afghanistan

    No fewer than six people were killed and 10 others injured on Thursday when a truck-driving suicide bomber struck a provincial council building in eastern Afghanistan, an official said.

    “It was a heavy explosion near the provincial council and Quick Reaction Forces base in Pul-i-Alam city, the provincial capital,

    “Three civilians, three policemen were killed and 10 people injured,” said Haseeb Stanekzai, head of the provincial council in eastern province of Logar.
    According to him, the bomber also died.

    The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which extensively damaged the council building and nearby houses.

  • Spain arrests eight in ‘ISIS cell’

    Spain arrests eight in ‘ISIS cell’

    Spanish police say they have detained eight people on suspicion of recruiting militants to fight in Syria and Iraq.

    They suspect the cell of trying to send jihadists to join the militant group ISIS – the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.

    Raids were carried out in Madrid in the early hours of yesterday, officials say.

    The leader of the cell had been held at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba after being arrested in Afghanistan, a statement said.

    Unconfirmed reports in Spanish media said one of the eight was from Spain, another from Argentina and the other six from Morocco.

    The group leader was named by Spanish media as Lahcen Ikasrrien, who was held at Guantanamo Bay for several years but released on his return to Spain in 2005 for lack of evidence.

    Raids were carried out on 12 addresses and several suspects were said to be from Morocco

    Police were also reported to be hunting the brother of one of the Madrid bombers. Attacks carried by Islamist militants on four trains in March 2004 left 191 people dead and another 1,800 people hurt.  Spanish police have carried out a series of raids against suspected militants in recent months.

    A number of people were arrested last month in Spain’s north African enclave of Melilla on suspicion of trying to recruit fighters for Islamist militant groups in Libya and Mali.

    But Spain is also concerned about the threat of “blowback” from the conflict in Syria and the Sunni rebel offensive led by ISIS in Iraq, which has led to the capture of a number of towns and cities.

    At the weekend, a French national was detained by German police on suspicion of fighting for militants in Syria. He was arrested as he arrived in Berlin on a flight from Istanbul.

    Belgian police investigating the murder of four people at the Jewish Museum in Brussels are seeking the extradition from France of a militant who spent a year fighting in Syria.

    Although Monday’s arrests were not thought to be linked to potential domestic attacks, Spanish police are said to be stepping up security ahead of the proclamation of Prince Felipe as king later this week.