Friday, January 29, 2010 - 8:47 AM

Secret diplomacy
The
outgoing chief of the U.N. mission in Afghanistan, diplomat Kai Eide,
reportedly met with members of the Afghan Taliban's Quetta shura leadership council on January 8 in Dubai, at the request of the militant leaders (Reuters, FT, Guardian, WSJ, AFP, McClatchy, BBC).
Though reconciliation is a key part of the U.S. and Afghan governments'
strategies for the country, it is unknown what was accomplished at the
Dubai meeting or which Taliban envoys attended.
At yesterday's
international summit in London, Afghan President Hamid Karzai's
announcement of a traditional tribal meeting with Taliban leaders
reportedly went further than the approach preferred by many U.S.
officials, which is reaching out to lower- and mid-level Taliban
fighters (NYT, Tel, Reuters, Wash Post, Reuters, AP, CNN).
A Taliban spokesman said that the movement's leadership "will soon
decide" whether to participate in the peace talks, which would not
involve the international community but focus on the Afghan government
-- which says it will within weeks convene the jirga.
The
conference also moved forward with plans for the Afghan government to
assume responsibility for security "in a number of provinces" by late
this year or early next year, and medium-term goals of taking the lead
in in some insecure areas of Afghanistan within three years and overall
responsibility within five (Guardian, Times, Tel, Guardian, AJE, AFP, AP).
Gunfire in Afghanistan
Taliban
militants launched an attack earlier today in the capital of the
restive southern Afghan province Helmand, sparking a gun battle between
NATO-backed Afghan troops and the extremist group (AP, Pajhwok, Reuters, ISAF).
A Taliban spokesman said the militant organization had dispatched seven
suicide bombers armed with machine guns to attack the local United
Nations mission in Lashkar Gah and a guesthouse there frequently used
by government officials.
U.S. soldiers shot and killed an
Afghan imam in Kabul as he and his son drove on the outskirts of the
Afghan capital yesterday morning, prompting immediate outrage from
local citizens and an apology from NATO, which said the convoy of
troops had "fired on what appeared to be a threatening vehicle" (Wash Post, CNN, NYT, AP, ISAF). The shooting occurred about a mile from a U.S. base that has been frequently targeted by suicide bombers.
Bin Laden on global warming
Al
Jazeera has received another purported audio tape from al Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden, in which he calls for the international community to
boycott the U.S. dollar to "free humankind from slavery" and commented,
"Speaking about climate change is not a matter of intellectual luxury
-- the phenomenon is an actual fact" (AJE, BBC, AFP, AP). The tape comes after one earlier this week in which bin Laden praised the failed Christmas Day bombing attempt.
An audit, a bombing, an election
A
$46 million program run by the U.S.-based private contractor
Development Alternatives, Inc. aimed at improving the local government
in the tribal regions of northwest Pakistan and decreasing the
influence of militancy "has achieved little" since beginning two years
ago, according a newly released audit (FP, AP).
In spite of a few successes, the audit criticized the DAI program for
its planning and implementation, highlighting the difficulties of
providing aid to Pakistan.
Earlier today, suspected militants
carried out a bombing on a NATO supply truck in the Khyber Pass between
Pakistan and Afghanistan, and gunmen killed three Shiite Muslim
pilgrims headed for Iran on the outskirts of Quetta in what is believed
to be a sectarian attack (AP, Dawn, AFP).
Pakistani authorities claim that security forces have killed 44
militants in the past three days in pitched fighting in the northwest
tribal agency of Bajaur, and Dawn profiles a split within the Taliban in Bajaur (AP, Dawn).
In
the nearby Swat Valley, the first election since the Pakistani
military's offensive there last year has brought the Awami National
Party's Rehmat Ali Khan to the provincial assembly (Dawn, Daily Times, BBC).
The seat had been empty since early December after a suicide bomber
killed Khan's brother, who had held it; of the 80 polling stations open
during the contest, 33 were designated exclusively for women, though
the turnout was low.
The jihadist next door
Andrea
Elliott has a fascinating, lengthy profile of Omar Hammammi, who now
goes by the nom de guerre Abu Mansoor al-Amriki and has become an
important figure in the al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab movement in Somalia,
and who was raised in Alabama and used to attend Bible camp as a child (NYT Magazine).
Sports for the deaf
Afghanistan
has formed the country's first official Sports Committee for the Deaf
after a year of planning, according to the head of the National Olympic
Committee (Pajhwok). There are 80 deaf athletes who can compete in 18 different disciplines.
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