Thursday, September 3, 2009 - 8:56 AM

Election protection
The
results of Afghanistan's Aug. 20 presidential vote are likely to be
delayed for even longer due to slow vote counting and thousands of
allegations of fraud that need to be investigated (Washington Post).
For the second day in a row, incumbent president Hamid Karzai's primary
challenger Abdullah Abdullah met with religious and tribal leaders in
Kabul, saying again that he would not accept a flawed Karzai victory
but calling for his followers to be patient. However, one leader
proclaimed, "If we cannot win with our heads, we will win with our
feet."
With 60 percent of the vote counted, Karzai is leading
Abdullah 47.3 percent to 32.6 percent, still shy of the 50 percent
needed to avoid a runoff (IEC).
Of the some 130,000 of the 3.7 million votes counted so far that have
been thrown out, nearly half of them have been for candidates who
dropped out of the race (Pajhwok).
As the world turns
At
a meeting of 27 international envoys to Afghanistan in Paris, diplomats
prepared a neutral public stance toward the widespread claims of fraud
in last month's election, though reportedly there was a sense of
inevitability around Karzai's presumed victory (Times Online).
U.S.
President Barack Obama faces an increasingly challenging political
climate about the war in Afghanistan, putting him in the awkward
situation of potentially relying more on supportive Republican
congressmen than on his own base (New York Times).
Comparisons to Vietnam are growing more pervasive, but some experts say
critics need to better understand the strategy and conditions on the
ground (AFP).
The show of violence
Yesterday
morning, Pakistan's religious affairs minister was shot and his driver
killed in a shooting in a busy residential and commercial neighborhood
in Islamabad (New York Times and Reuters).
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack yet, but Hamid Saaed
Kazmi has been an outspoken critic of the Taliban and six suspects are
being held for questioning (AP, BBC, and AFP). A preliminary investigation reportedly shows that the assailants were locals, meaning they live in Islamabad (Dawn and Daily Times).
Violence
in the scenic Swat Valley, site of a Pakistani military offensive this
spring, continues as members of a local militia claim to have killed
three militants near the region's main town of Mingora (BBC). Elsewhere in Pakistan, at least 16 militants were killed by Pakistani security forces in Khyber (Geo TV).
The mad scientist
Pakistani
nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, who confessed to running the
world's largest nuclear proliferation network and is hailed as a hero
in Pakistan, has been put back under travel restrictions requiring him
to inform the government of any travel plans and forbidding him to
travel abroad (New York Times).
Khan, who is alleged to have spread nuclear technology to Iran, Libya,
and North Korea but has never been interviewed by the CIA about his
activities, was declared by a court in Lahore to be a "free man" last
week, but the Pakistani government appealed and a new hearing is
scheduled for September 15 (AP and The Nation).
We will rock you
There is a thriving underground rock scene in Pakistan, nourished by the internet and amateur bands, according to The Guardian (The Guardian).
One Islamabad-based band, Bumbu Sauce, just released a single that
mixes references to kung fu, talking dogs and the Taliban, but the lead
guitarist isn't worried about militant retaliation. "Rock music is low
on their list of priorities," he says.
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