Wednesday, September 1, 2010 - 7:58 AM

Too big to fail?
Afghanistan's
Central Bank has taken control of the politically powerful private
Kabul Bank, fearing the Kabul Bank is "dangerously short of cash and
could falter," and ordered the bank's chairman, Sherkhan Farnood, to
hand over more than $150 million in luxury housing in Dubai that he had
allegedly bought with the bank's money for well-connected Afghans,
including Afghan President Hamid Karzai's brother (WSJ, Post, NYT).
The Central Bank reportedly forced the change in management after
"unearthing evidence of a massive portfolio of off-the-books loans by
[Farnood] to himself and to other politically connected Afghans,"
according to Afghan officials. Central Bank chief Abdul Qadir Fitrat
said at a press conference earlier today that the Kabul Bank management
was not forced out, but resigned because of new regulations forbidding
shareholders from having senior positions (AFP, Pajhwok). The government of Afghanistan, Fitrat said, "will never allow [Kabul Bank] to collapse."
Although
many local officials had dismissed the cases as "mass hysteria," tests
have reportedly shown that victims in ten mass sickenings of Afghan
schoolgirls across the country over the last two years had "toxic but
not fatal levels" of organophosphates, chemicals found in herbicides,
pesticides, and nerve gas, in their blood (NYT, AP).
And a remote controlled bomb on a bicycle killed Mohammad Hassan
Taimuri, the director of the local office in Kandahar that arranges the
hajj, earlier today, while a candidate for parliament escaped an attack
in the northern province of Faryab (AP, Pajhwok).
Parliamentary elections are scheduled for September 18, and a convicted
drug smuggler is reportedly still on the candidate lists (Pajhwok).
The official word
Oxfam,
one of the biggest British aid groups working in Afghanistan, has
suspended its operations in the northern province of Badashkan after two
Afghan staffers and an Afghan volunteer were killed in a roadside
bombing on Saturday (Guardian, AP, AFP).
During a surprise visit to the country, British deputy PM Nick Clegg
praised British troops in Helmand and reiterated that all British combat
troops will leave Afghanistan by 2015 (BBC).
During
last night's Oval Office speech in which he declared an end to combat
operations in Iraq, U.S. President Barack Obama said that the transition
of security to Afghan control will begin next summer based on
conditions on the ground, adding, "But make no mistake: this transition
will begin because open-ended war serves neither our interests nor the
Afghan people's" (White House, AFP).
Before the speech, Defense Secretary Robert Gates called for patience
in Afghanistan, emphasizing that combating corruption will be a priority
over the next several months (Post). Karzai is reportedly angry at a corruption probe of one of his key aides (AP).
The
Afghan government has asked its ambassador to the U.S., Said Jawad, to
leave his post this month, after what he called a "smear campaign;"
Afghan outlets published photos purportedly from an embassy party to
celebrate Ramadan that included women wearing sleeveless dresses and
alcohol being served (Post).
Embassy officials say Jawad was on a trip to South America at the time
of the alleged party, and the Afghan government has not given a reason
for his removal; no successor has been named yet.
Miscommunication
A
delegation of nine senior Pakistani military officials who planned to
visit CENTCOM in Tampa has returned to Islamabad after the men were
taken off a plane at Dulles and interrogated, after one of them made a
comment to a flight attendant (Post, AP, Dawn, Geo).
Dawn reports that United Airlines officials said a brigadier told the
flight attendant that "This would be her last mission," but Pakistani
officials say a general, perhaps tired from a long day of travel,
remarked that, "I hope this is my last flight." The delegation has
received apologies from the Pentagon and CENTCOM (Post).
Between three and five dozen suspected militants affiliated with
Lashkar-e-Islam or members of their families were killed by Pakistani
military airstrikes yesterday in the Tirah Valley of Khyber agency (The News, AP, Dawn, Daily Times, AP, AJE, AP). Militants who fled South Waziristan and Orakzai following military operations there are believed to have established new bases in Khyber.
And
six Pakistani men have been convicted of criminal conspiracy for
plotting to conduct a suicide attack designed to kill former Pakistani
president Gen. Pervez Musharraf in 2008 (Dawn). The six had accumulated more than 900 kg of explosives for their planned attack.
A long tail
As
waters in Pakistan continue to empty into the Arabian Sea, the
aftermath of five weeks of flooding is becoming apparent: Prime Minister
Yousuf Raza Gilani said the damage is worth $43 billion, and predicted
economic growth in Pakistan will fall by 2.5 percent (ET, AP, Reuters); the floods have moved landmines to new areas, increasing risks to Pakistanis (Dawn/AFP); more than 400 children have been separated from their families, and 8.6 million children have been affected (ET, The News);
and the Pakistani government has decided to impose a two percent tax on
imports and a five to ten percent surcharge on incomes more than
Rs300,000, to generate revenue for reconstruction (Dawn).
Pakistan's
intelligence agency has reportedly blocked an offer of military aid
from the U.K., in continued reaction to British PM David Cameron's
comments in July that Pakistan turns a "blind eye to some forms of
terrorism" (Tel). Nick Clegg visited some relief camps in Sukkur, warning of a "long tail" for the disaster (BBC).
Flashpoint
One
Indian Army officer was reportedly killed and three injured in a 20
hour long gun battle with suspected Lashkar-e-Taiba fighters in northern
Kashmir (Hindu, PTI).
A curfew has been lifted across the valley with the exception of the
southern town of Anantnag, where an 11 year old boy was shot and killed
by Indian security forces recently, sparking protests (Hindu).
Cosmetic changes
Female
candidates for Afghanistan's parliament have been disparaged for
wearing makeup in their campaign posters, which critics claim is a
technique to lure young voters and/or disguise a weak platform (Pajhwok).
Some of the women running for office have defended themselves, saying
that wearing makeup is a "trend among women" and that the posters were
printed by supporters.
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
India is favourably poised in Afghanistan to give crippling blows to NATO forces and also Pakistan in order to help USSR take her revenge and also settle her scores with Pakistan on permanent basis. It is NOT a mere hypothesis but a reality that is hidden from the Americans and also from Pakistani governing elite.
Time will prove the veracity of above reality. So let us wait and see what comes out from new offensive in Afghanistan.
The troubles of Kabul Bank are worrisome for two reasons: one, that 250,000 of government workers rely on it for the delivery of their salaries. And lets not forget that a good portion of those workers are armed (the police and the army). And secondly, it will force the citizens to reconsider their trust for the banking system, which is young and fragile.for details, please read my blog
http://costofwar.wordpress.com/
(2)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE