Tuesday, September 8, 2009 - 9:05 AM
Media alert: AfPak Channel editor
Peter Bergen will be reporting "Live from the Battle Zone" from Helmand
province in southern Afghanistan tonight at 10:00pm EST on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360, simulcast on CNN International.
Justice is served
An
English court convicted three British Muslims of conspiracy to murder
using explosives on an airplane for their involvement in the summer
2006 plot to smuggle bombs made with flammable liquids aboard at least
seven transatlantic airliners (Washington Post and BBC).
The convictions, coming after a jury rejected the men's defense that
the plot was an elaborate publicity stunt, followed Britain's largest
counterterrorism operation and two criminal trials which cost an
estimated $100 million (Telegraph, Telegraph).
Ringleader
Abdulla Ahmed Ali and accomplices Tanvir Hussain and Assad Sarwar, who
trained and received guidance from extremist groups linked to al Qaeda
in Pakistan and Afghanistan, will reportedly be sentenced next week and
could face up to life in prison (New York Times, Guardian, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, and AFP). The attack could have killed up to 1,500 people aboard the targeted planes, according to prosecutors.
Force and fraud
A
suicide bomber drove an SUV into a convoy of NATO soldiers on their air
base in Kabul this morning, in an attack that killed at least three and
was claimed by the Taliban (AFP).
The latest attack comes just weeks after a massive car bomb on ISAF's
headquarters a few days before Afghanistan's Aug. 20 presidential
election (New York Times).
Afghanistan's
Electoral Complaints Commission has ordered a partial recount of the
ballots in the country's election, which has been plagued by
accusations of fraud and voter intimidation (CNN and AP). So far, about 200,000 ballots from 447 stations have been thrown out because of fraud.
Incumbent
President Hamid Karzai currently has 54.1 percent of the vote with 92
percent of the ballots counted, pushing him over the 50 percent mark
needed to avoid a runoff against his primary opponent Abdullah
Abdullah, who has 28.3 percent (BBC and IEC).
Carlotta
Gall and Dexter Filkins, both longtime Afghanistan observers, reported
that Karzai supporters set up hundreds of fictitious polling sites
where no one voted on election day but mysteriously hundreds of
thousands of ballots for Karzai flowed in (New York Times).
In Karzai's home province of Kandahar, for example, preliminary results
show upward of 350,000 ballots to be counted -- but Western officials
estimate that only 25,000 people actually voted.
Tick tock
Afghanistan's
election troubles come as the United States is engaged in a vigorous
debate over whether top NATO commander in Afghanistan Gen. Stanley
McChrystal's anticipated request for more boots on the ground is
necessary to prevent the Taliban and al Qaeda from operating in a safe
haven in Afghanistan and Pakistan (New York Times).
Last
Friday's NATO airstrike on two stolen fuel tankers in the once-calm
northern Afghan province of Kunduz, which an Afghan human rights group
claims killed up to 70 civilians, was reportedly based on a phone call
with a single Afghan informant, according to Rajiv Chandrasekaran (Washington Post, Reuters, and AP). In a fit of irony, the Taliban have called for a United Nations investigation into the incident (BBC).
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel addressed the German parliament today, as
lawmakers in the country demanded explanations for why German soldiers
in Afghanistan, normally restricted to peacekeeping duties, called in
the airstrike that reportedly killed as many as 125 (Washington Post).
Merkel said she regrets any civilian deaths but would not accept any
"premature judgments" about the airstrike, which NATO is investigating (New York Times, BBC, and Bloomberg).
Such perilous circumstances
A
U.S. drone strike in the Machikhel village near Mir Ali, the main town
in Pakistan's troubled tribal area of North Waziristan, reportedly killed five
people suspected to be Taliban fighters late last night (AP, Al Jazeera, and Dawn). It is the 34th drone strike in Pakistan so far this year, compared with 34 in all of 2008.
As
clashes between Pakistani security forces and Taliban-affiliated
militants continue in Khyber Agency on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border,
thousands of refugees are fleeing the violence, flooding into Peshawar,
the capital of the Northwest Frontier Province (AFP, Bloomberg, and AP). The Khyber Pass is a main supply route for foreign troops in Afghanistan (Times of London).
The death toll over the last eight days has risen to 130, according to
Pakistani officials, and more than 100 insurgents have been arrested
while 60 militant hideouts have been destroyed (Al Jazeera, Dawn, and Dawn).
Four
Shiite high school students were shot this morning in the neighboring
tribal agency of Orakzai in an apparently sectarian attack (AFP and BBC).
In the Swat Valley, site of this spring's Pakistani military offensive
designed to rout Taliban militants from the area, sporadic violence
continues as the military arrested 32 suspected militants in the last
24 hours and killed three over the weekend (Bloomberg).
Preventing Pakistani polio
In
a glimmer of good news, Pakistani authorities have resumed polio
vaccinations in the Swat Valley, an act once banned by local Taliban
militants as a conspiracy to make Muslim children infertile (AP). Some 215,000 children are the target of the three-day campaign.
Your next vacation?
Residents
of Bamiyan, a comparatively peaceful province in central Afghanistan,
are trying to boost their fledgling tourism industry, opening hotels
and restaurants that cater to the few intrepid backpackers who venture
the seven hour, bone-rattling drive on mostly dirt roads from Kabul (CNN).
For example, a non-profit organization is working with the government
of New Zealand to develop eco-tourism with some $1.2 million in funding
over three years.
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