Tuesday, August 10, 2010 - 8:50 AM

Taliban "justice"
The U.N. released its semi-annual report on civilian casualties
in Afghanistan today, finding that overall civilian casualties have
spiked 31 percent after the first six months of 2010, with fully 76
percent of those casualties caused by the Taliban and only 12 percent
caused by coalition forces, a nearly 30 percent drop (BBC, Reuters, Guardian).
1,271 civilians were killed in the time period and another 1,997
injured. The drop in coalition-caused casualties stems from increased
restrictions on airstrikes and the use of heavy weapons while the
Taliban are using larger explosives and resorting in much greater
numbers to assassinations, including public killings of women and
children (NYT, Tel).
Reports
differ as to her name and age, but news sources agree that the woman
killed by the Taliban yesterday in the northwestern Badghis province for
committing adultery was a widow and pregnant when she was flogged
nearly 200 times and shot in public (CNN, VOA, AFP).
The Taliban claim to have taken 21 Afghan soldiers hostage, and
reportedly wish to exchange them for prisoners held by the government (WSJ). An Afghan prisoner attempting to escape this past weekend from a
jail in Southern Afghanistan killed two Marines after somehow taking a
rifle, before being shot dead (CNN, AFP).
And five prominent human rights groups wrote a letter to WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange urging the organization to more comprehensively
redact the names of Afghans from the documents on the Afghan war
published by the group (WSJ).
The
Taliban issued a communiqué responding to the most recent TIME Magazine
cover showing a young woman, Bibi Aisha, disfigured reportedly by a
Taliban court for wanting to leave her husband's family (AFP). The communiqué's author accused TIME of lying and wrote, "[a]s far as the story of Aisha is concerned, Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan has condemned this barbaric, inhumane and un-Islamic act and
declares that this case has never been forwarded to any court or
persons of Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan."
And
NPR has a feature on the changing dynamics of the international mission
in Afghanistan as more U.S. troops pour in and other countries are
scheduled to withdraw their forces (NPR).
Identification
Dirk
Frans, the head of the International Assistance Mission (IAM) yesterday
named the ten members of his organization's team killed this weekend in
the northeastern Badakhshan province, but said that the IAM would
continue its operations in Afghanistan (Tel, NYT).
Frans also confirmed that the team's Afghan driver, who reportedly
survived by quoting the Quran at his captors, is being held for
questioning by Afghan authorities (LAT).
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Special Envoy for Afghanistan
and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke condemned the attacks as the FBI joined
the investigation of the killings, for which the Taliban have claimed
credit (VOA, Wash Post).
Despite
vows from other humanitarian aid groups to remain in Afghanistan, some
question whether or not the killings -- and more broadly the worsening
security situation in once-peaceful parts of the country in the north
and west -- will dampen the Obama administration's much-talked about
"civilian surge" (NYT, TIME, NPR).
Rain, rain, rain
Monsoon
rains caused by a "supercharged" jet stream continued to pound
different parts of Pakistan with even more storms predicted for the next
24 hours, as U.N. officials declared the total number of people
affected by flooding in the country to be more than the 2004 tsunami,
Pakistan's 2005 earthquake, and the Haiti earthquake combined (NYT, Tel, Guardian, Daily Times, Dawn).
Rising waters continue to threaten dams in the Sindh province, where
millions of residents have been evacuated but government aid seems
sparse (Dawn, AP, ET). An International Monetary Fund spokesman said the flooding would cause "major harm" to Pakistan's economy (Reuters).
The
United States has drastically stepped up its aid to Pakistan, pledging
up to $40 million for flood relief even as Pakistan requested more aid,
especially the deployment of additional helicopters for rescue and aid
missions, in overcoming the worsening conditions (Wash Post, CSM).
Still they are fighting an uphill battle against resource availability
and growing anger in Pakistan at the government's response to the
crisis, as charities linked to banned groups expand their aid operations
(LAT). Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari returned to Karachi today from his much-criticized European trip (ET).
Zardari
reportedly told the Associated Press last Friday that he would be
willing to engage in talks with the Pakistani Taliban (AP).
The Pakistan Chief of Army Staff Gen. Ashfaq Kayani met with Afghan
President Hamid Karzai during a summit in Kabul to discuss security and
counterterrorism policy (Daily Times).
And the Sindh High Court moved to proclaim former President Pervez
Musharraf a "proclaimed offender" after he failed to appear several
times before the court to face charges against him (Dawn).
The smell of silver
A Lahore jewelery company has created what they claim to be the biggest silver ring ever made, weighing in at 71.6 kilograms (Daily Times).
The creators of the ring, which they named "Fragrance of Love," have
petitioned the Guinness Book of World Records for the ring's inclusion.
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