Monday, January 24, 2011 - 9:46 AM

Behind closed doors
Afghan president Hamid
Karzai, under pressure from international diplomats and Afghan
politicians, appeared to back down from his one-month delay of the
inauguration of Afghanistan's parliament over the weekend after the
legislature said it would convene itself late last week, which caused
concern about a potential constitutional crisis (AP, NYT, Post, WSJ, Pajhwok, AFP, FT, AJE, AP).
Karzai, who is said to have stormed out of a meeting with MPs on
Saturday, reportedly agreed to open parliament this Wednesday, if his
worries about electoral fraud investigations are addressed; the terms of
still-tentative deal are unclear, however. Afghanistan's Supreme Court
will reportedly rule today whether the opening can go ahead (Reuters).
Afghan
officials have compiled a list of 16 security companies, including some
American and British firms, that have allegedly committed "major
offenses" in Afghanistan, such as tax evasion (Post, NYT).
The renewed focus on the alleged violations by private security firms
raises concerns that the companies' departure from Afghanistan may be
hurried up.
Iranian officials have reportedly lifted a ban on
fuel trucks headed for Afghanistan, after a nearly two-month blockade
that caused fuel prices in some areas of Afghanistan to spike as much as
70 percent (AP, Pajhwok). Some 200 trucks crossed the border and Afghan officials say no more are stuck in Iran.
Taliban justice
The
Sunday Times has a must-read interview with a Taliban judge in Ghazni
province, in which Bayatullah Qasim describes Taliban punishments for
alleged offenses: stealing property worth more than $200 results in the
loss of a hand; blasphemy yields hanging; the rape of a virgin results
in 120 lashes with a whip filled with coins; and others (Times). Qasim estimated that his workers have chopped off 40 hands and arms in the year and a half since he became a district judge.
And
the LA Times has a detailed story about the Marines' Three-Five (3rd
Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment) deployed in Sangin district of Helmand
province, where 24 Marines have been killed and more than 140 wounded in
four months (LAT). The battalion has been in more than 400 firefights and found 434 buried roadside bombs.
In court, protests, and Col. Imam
Mumtaz
Qadri, the self-professed killer of Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer,
appeared in a high-security court in Rawalpindi earlier today for a
preliminary trial hearing, and reportedly said in his confession that he
acted alone in the assassination (AFP).
Qadri is due back in court on February 1 for an indictment. Since
Taseer's assassination, which Qadri said was in reaction to Taseer's
support for modifying Pakistan's stringent blasphemy laws, Pakistani MP
Sherry Rehman, who also supports modifying the laws, is under
"self-imposed house arrest" in Karachi after receiving a flood of death
threats (Guardian).
A trio of suspected U.S. drone strikes
was reported in North Waziristan over the weekend, as more than 10,000
protesters in the northwest Pakistani cities of Peshawar and Mir Ali
demonstrated against the use of drones (AFP, CNN, AFP, Geo, AP, AFP, AJE). At least a dozen alleged militants were reportedly killed in the strikes.
The
body of Sultan Amir Tarar, a former Pakistani intelligence official
also known as Col. Imam who was instrumental in funneling Pakistani
support to Afghans fighting the Soviets in the 1980s and became
Pakistan's point man with the Taliban, was found over the weekend in
North Waziristan (AP, Guardian, Daily Times, ET, Pajhwok, Dawn).
Col. Imam was kidnapped in March of 2010 along with a British
journalist by the Asian Tigers, a group thought to be affiliated with
the Taliban in Pakistan's tribal regions; Taliban leader Mullah Omar, a
former student of Col. Imam, reportedly intervened to keep him alive for
several months.
Opaque operations
Mark
Mazzetti has this weekend's must-read describing the "legally murky
clandestine operations" run by former CIA case officer Duane "Dewey"
Clarridge, whose company the Eclipse Group sends out dispatches from
Afghanistan and Pakistan that are "an amalgam of fact, rumor, analysis
and uncorroborated reports" (NYT).
Clarridge, "an unflinching cheerleader for American intervention
overseas," produced around 500 intelligence dispatches before his
Pentagon contract was terminated in 2010, and has since taken his outfit
private.
Pakistani president Asif Ali Zardari is scheduled to
pay an official visit to the U.S. next month, after his unofficial trip
earlier this month for a memorial service for the late Obama
administration envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Amb. Richard Holbrooke
(Dawn).
Zardari is spearheading an effort to immunize 32 million Pakistani
children against polio, after an "alarming surge in cases last year" (Guardian). Bonus read: Pakistan's mounting public health crisis (FP).
Terrifyingly good
Pakistan's
Express Tribune reviews the Hot Spot, a horror-movie-themed ice cream
parlor in Karachi, describing a shrine to Freddy Krueger, Friday the
Thirteenth, and other B-movie monsters (ET). In addition to the sundaes, the reviewer recommends a roulade topped with cream sauce.
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
(0)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE