Category Archives: War

Uganda & Sudan: Museveni is to talk to Kiir over SPLA attack on Uganda in Moyo district

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni is to talk to his Southern Sudan counterpart Gen. Salva Kiir over the recent attacks on Lefori sub-county in Moyo district by Sudanese People’s Liberation Army soldiers,the NEWVISION has reported.

The SPLA last week attacked Lefori sub-county and abducted 15 people, including a parish priest, accusing Ugandans of encroaching on land and illegally felling trees in Sudan.

The 15 were, however, on Friday released after the intervention of the Uganda Police and political leaders.

“Some people from Southern Sudan came here and took people over the border. I want you to calm down.

Changing the border of Uganda is impossible,” Museveni said while addressing a campaign rally at Celecelea Stadium in West Nile.
“I will talk to Gen. Salva Kiir so that if there is anything, we can discuss,” Museveni said.

He told the residents that on Sunday, he visited Vurra at the DR Congo boarder and discovered that some Congolese had built on Ugandan territory.

Museveni said he instructed the foreign affairs ministry to ensure that the building was removed.

“There is no way Congolese can build in Uganda unless they are investors,” he told the cheering crowd.

At the same rally, Museveni blasted the UPC presidential candidate, Olara Otunnu, saying he should not be entrusted with national leadership because he had no house, wife or child.

“Ask yourself, who is Otunnu? A man aged 60 without a wife, a child or a house anywhere in the world. How can you entrust the State to such a man?” he asked.

Museveni said the Nyagak power dam would be completed next year and it would supply power to the whole of West Nile.

The presidential adviser on Buganda affairs, Robert Sebunya, told residents of Moyo to vote for Museveni and all the NRM flag-bearers in the district for peace and tranquillity.

Sebunya delivered a message he said was from the Katikkiro of Buganda, disassociating the kingdom from the Inter-Party Co-operation, whose flag-bearer is Col. Kizza Besigye.

The Moyo district NRM chairman and NRM parliamentary flag-bearer, Tom Aza Aleru, assured the President of the district’s support.

Ends

Sudan: Khartoum’s Army Bomb South, Targeting Darfur Rebels

from Judy Miriga

Khartoum — At least 8 people have been injured in an aerial bombardment by Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) hunting rebel forces from war torn region of Darfur in Aweil north county, Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, South Sudan.
Colonel Philip Aguer Panyang, official spokesperson for Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Army, on Saturday told Sudan Tribune from the regional capital of Juba that two military aircrafts belonging to the Khartoum-controlled SAF dropped bombs on southern territory in the state of Northern Bahr el Ghazal.

“I am told by our forces on the ground in Northern Bahr el Ghazal that the air attack occurred on Friday. No death causalities have been reported but there are reports that 8 civilians have sustained serious injuries. Some of these victims with light injuries are being nursed in the local clinic in Gok Machar but those with inflicted shrapnel injuries and are at critical conditions have been moved to Aweil civil hospital,” explained Panyang.

However, other southern officials have indicated that there may have been fatalities.

The senior military officer said the high military command in Juba contacted Khartoum yesterday night for explanation and were told that the bombing was part of government forces pursuing Darfur rebels the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

“We contacted central command of the Sudan Armed Forces yesterday night seeking explanation of why they bombarded our territory. The explanation they gave us in response was that they were pursuing rebel forces. They said it was not their intention to bomb our areas. They were only following routes of the Darfur rebels,” explained Panyang.

Sudan Armed Forces spokesperson Al-Sawarmi Khaled, accused the southern Sudan ruling party of supporting JEM saying the southern army (SPLA) evacuated wounded rebels to Juba and to Uganda.

Al-Sawarmi said SAF forces on Saturday attacked JEM rebels – who were trying to cross the 1956 border into south Sudan – in Meram, South Kordofan state.

The SAF spokesperson claimed the JEM fighters had withdrawn to South Sudan to receive help from the SPLA. He said the SPLA evacuated 67 injured rebels through Jaj airstrip in Bhar el-Ghazal to Juba and Uganda.

SAF spokesperson stressed this support is a clear violation of the military and security protocols of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), between the Khartoum government and the former rebel SPLM/A.

Helping JEM hinders government efforts to achieve peace in Darfur, Al-Sawarmi added.

Ahmed Hussein Adam, JEM spokesperson speaking to Sudan Tribune from Doha where he is taking part in discussions between the mediation and the rebel group over the resumption of peace, denied any presence of their fighters in southern Sudan. He further accused the Sudanese government of seeking pretext to delay the referendum on southern Sudan independence.

“These are baseless allegations. This is a conspiracy by the Sudanese government to impede the referendum process,” he said.

“But we say they have to hold the referendum on time,” he stressed.
The National Congress Party this week repeated accusation to the southern Sudan government of harboring JEM rebels, a matter that southern Sudan officials denied.
Colonel Deng Thiep Akok, a former commissioner of Aweil North who comes from the area also confirmed to Sudan Tribune from Juba occurrence of the incident and disputed claims that the bomb was meant for Darfur rebels.

“Sudan Armed Forces claimed that the bomb was meant for Darfur rebels who are alleged to have attacked Majaac on Monday. Majaac is a settlement under south Darfur territory. They claimed that Sudan Armed Forces attacked Majaac and looted everything before they retrieved towards Gokmachar in Northern Bahr el Ghazal. This is not correct. I come from the area and I am not aware of the presence of some Darfur rebels in the area. As far as I know the area, there are no rebels from Darfur operating in the area presently,” said Akok.

Akok said that the attack was part of a plan by Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party to sabotage voter registration processes for the south’s referendum, which is due to begin next Monday.

Officials from United Nations Mission in Sudan working in Aweil town, capital of Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, said a UN team was going to the area to assess the situation.

“We are told that the area of the attack could be between two states: Northern Bahr Gazal, which is part of South Sudan, and South Darfur, which is part of the north,” said the official from UNMIS who declined to be named.

The borders between north and south Sudan have not been demarcated despite the 2005 peace deal establishing mechanisms to do so.
In the run up to January’s referendum on southern independence some members of the NCP have said that the vote should be delayed until the border is finalised. The southern government has rejected this saying that border demarcation can be completed after the poll takes place.

There is concern as the vote approaches that rising tensions on the north-south border could trigger renewed conflict.

South Sudan fought a two-decade civil war against successive Khartoum governments in which 2 million people died and more than a million migrated north to escape the fighting.

The independence referendum will be the culmination of the 2005 peace deal that ended over 20 years of north-south conflict.

Sudan: UNAMID Chief Warns of North-South Affect Over Darfur, Demands Access to War Zones
14 November 2010

Khartoum — The recent flare-up of fighting between the Sudanese government and rebels in Darfur as well as tension along shared borders with south Sudan has exacerbated the security situation in Darfur, the head of the UN-AU peacekeeping mission in the region said on Sunday.

Ibrahim Gambari, who heads the hybrid peacekeeping mission known as UNAMID, told reporters in a press conference at Rotana Hotel in the capital Khartoum yesterday that he was “deeply concerned” about the renewal of violence in the region, urging the belligerent parties to immediately cease hostilities.

“I call upon all parties to refrain from further offensive military action and respect international humanitarian law,” Gambari said.

In the past weeks, Darfur region witnessed a spike in fighting between government forces on one side, and rebels from the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and the Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdel-Wahid Al-Nur on the other side.

The increase in violence comes as Sudan inches closer to holding a politically sensitive vote in January 2011 on the full independence of its semi-autonomous region of south Sudan from the north. The plebiscite is stipulated by a 2005 peace deal that ended Africa’s longest war between the Muslim-Arab north and the Christian-African south.

North and south Sudan have recently traded accusations of exhibiting an aggressive military posture along shared borders and supporting each others’ rebels.
On Thursday, South Sudan army the SPLA said that militias associated with north Sudan are acting in a provocative manner with the intent of breaching the permanent ceasefire between the two sides.

Similarly, north Sudan on Friday accused south Sudan army of aiding JEM rebels who clashed with government forces near Al-Meirem which abuts south Sudan’s state of Bahri al-Ghazal.

South Sudan said on Saturday that north Sudan army “accidently” dropped a bomb inside its territories as it was conducting an aerial bombardment against Darfur rebels.

Gambari voiced fears that “old alignment” between south Sudan leaders and Darfur rebels could be “rekindled” and result in further complication of the situation in Darfur.
The peacekeeping chief further warned that armed incidents along north-south borders shared borders could extend to affect Darfur.

“We are also concerned about the spillover effect of the north-south border and the armed incidents occurring there, particularly in the no man’s land between south of Sudan and south of Darfur,” he said.

However, he later said that his mission had devised “a contingency plan” to counter any violence resulting from tension between north and south Sudan.
“That’s why UNMIS and UNAMID have developed contingency plans,” he added.

Gambari also said that UNAMID needs to gain “unimpeded” access to all areas affected by recent fighting in order to assist the population there.
On Darfur peace process, Gamabari said that the UN-AU Chief Mediator for Darfur Djibril Bassole had held a “good” meeting with JEM leader Khalil Ibrahim, reiterating his calls on JEM and SLM-Nur to join Darfur peace talks in the Qatari capital of Doha.
Sudan Tribune took Gambari aside and asked him about the latest developments regarding the case of the six Darfur refugees who are under UNAMID custody and sought by the Sudanese government on accusations of instigating last July’s violent clashes in Kalma displacement camp between supporters and opponents of Darfur peace talks.

Gambari said that the situation in this particular case was “under control” and that UNAMID was working very closely with the Sudanese authorities in order to reach what he called “a win-win outcome.”
He elaborated that the ideal win-win outcome would be a one that respects the sovereignty of Sudan and assures the UN that the wanted IDPs would receive a proper trial observed by UNAMID, access to attorney and immunity from capital punishment.
Darfur region came to the fore of international agendas in 2003 when a harsh counterinsurgency campaign by Khartoum government against rebel groups created one of the worst humanitarian situations in recent history.
According to UN estimates, the conflict killed 300.000 people and displaced more than 2 million.

Uganda & Somolia: Museveni want Somalia to be declared no fly zone in order to curb the illegal supply of arms

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has called for a no-fly zone to be imposed over Somalia in a bid to curb the influx of arms and the terrorism activities in the war-torn country.

The President made the call yesterday during a closed-door meeting with the 15-nation team from the UN Security Council.

He proposed that the no-fly zone be enforced by the big powers which have aircraft carriers based in the Indian Ocean.

“If such a move is implemented, it will reduce the influx of arms in Somalia by over 70%,” Museveni reportedly told the delegation. The delegation was led by Uganda’s permanent representative to the UN Security Council, Dr. Ruhakana Rugunda.

Museveni also told the delegation that the countries that are willing and capable to send troops to the Horn of African county should be supported, and that those which cannot provide troops should fund the operation.

He reportedly told the meeting that the insurgencies fighting the African Union Peacekeeping Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) are not Somalis but al Qaeda insurgents from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen.

At a press conference after the meeting, Museveni reiterated Uganda’s commitment to send more troops to Somalia.

Museveni (centre) with the security council team and Ugandan government officials at State House, Entebbe

He said it was the duty of the international community to help Somalia regain its sovereignty.
The President called for financial support to increase troop levels in the AMISOM. Uganda and Burundi are the only countries that have contributed troops to Somalia, with Uganda contributing the highest number.
“The number of troops is not the problem. If there is everything we need, we can raise the number but they (rich nations) must bring the money,” the President said.

The UN delegation, which was in Uganda for a one-day tour, was not specific on the kind of support it would give to AMISOM. The team later left for Sudan, where it will visit Juba, Darfur and then Khartoum.

Museveni warned the team against any delay in holding the referendum to determine the autonomy of Southern Sudan. He urged the UN to put in place the structures needed for a free and fair referendum in Sudan slated for January 2011.

“The referendum is very crucial and delaying it is highly risky. It is better to involve the UN in the organisation rather than waiting to see what happens after the results,” Museveni reportedly told the delegation.

He pointed out that the African Union did not support the International Criminal Court’s indictment of President Omar El Bashir because they thought it would jeopardise the peace process in Sudan.

Museveni also dismissed a recent UN report on DR Congo that accused Uganda of several human rights abuses and war crimes during the conflicts in the 1990s as a “concoction and lies.”

“These international groups are fictional writers. They should look for other subjects,” he said.

Museveni defended the army, saying it followed a strict code of conduct and could not torture civilians.

Ends

Impressions Of Afghanistan In August 2010

From: Leila Abdul

By William R. Polk
8-27-10

One of the advantages of being an “old hand” in the Middle East or Central Asia is that almost anything one does conjures up memories that make for interesting contrasts. My first visit to Afghanistan back in 1962 began by car, driving up the Khyber Pass from Pakistan. I was accompanying Governor Chester Bowles, then “the President’s Representative for Europe, Asia and Latin America,” that is, the holder of a title but with no real authority. As befit his title, we had an American military airplane but, as governed by the reality of his lack of power, it had broken down. So we drove. I liked that better since I had poured over Kipling as a boy, and the Khyber was, of course, where the wild tribesmen hung out.

They still do. We didn’t then see any of them, but read the signs of the passing of the British and Indian regiments carved into the rocks. It was a wonderful way to reach Kabul. And it was a portent of the future.

In those days, Kabul was a rather sleepy little city of about 50,000, roughly the size of the Fort Worth, Texas into which I was born. Fort Worth was cleaner but Kabul was far more interesting. And it had the most marvelous rug stores. It was also the jumping off place for my 2,000 mile trip around the country by Jeep, horseback and the occasional plane. I fell in love with Afghanistan from the first. To me it is “the wild East.”

My second visit was a decade later. Kabul had hardly changed but the regime had. Afghanistan was in a sort of golden age of reform. Everyone was full of hope. The markets were full of furs, rugs and the melons Babur Shah thought worth more than all of India, Hippies, then known as “world travelers,” flooded into the country equipped with their parents’ credit cards to the delight of local merchants. But what was really impressive was the university. Filled with earnest young men and bright, alert and daringly dressed young women, it had an air of excitement.

Today’s entry into Kabul is not less exciting but is stunningly different.

The “advised” way to go these days is by air from Dubai. The take-off point is Dubai airport which is a huge shopping mall, almost entirely manned by Filipino expatriates, with attached airlines from every part of the world. So large is the terminal that I was taken from the lounge of the feeder airline, Safi, to the gate by one of those little electric carts that are now standard airport transport. Even the speedy cart took a quarter of an hour to make the trip.

Settling back in my seat on the Safi plane, a modern Airbus with pilots of dubious background (one moved over from, as he put, “Libya, you know Qaddafi”) I flipped through the airline magazine. There, instead of the usual ads for perfume and watches, were advertisements for fully armored cars

You are moving in a dangerous region, you find yourself in the wrong place at the wrong time, within a matter of seconds; your vehicle has become a target. Not a problem if you have to have an armored vehicle from GSGGSG’s armoring provides you with valuable time, enough for you to grasp the situation, assess the threat and be able to react appropriately.

German Support Group.com.

If this did not make you want to rush to Afghanistan, the airline magazine also provided enticing pictures of shattered buildings.

My reading complete, I was ready for Kabul’s “International Airport.” It was even more spartan than the airport I knew in the 1970s, but this time, as we moved toward the terminal, we paraded past dozens of planes of other airlines. To judge by the tarmac, it was bustling. What was particularly striking was that Kabul is the “hub” of a United Nations virtual airline of helicopters and jets. And, although the Americans run a far larger airport at Bagram, their planes and particularly their jets, overflow into Kabul. Nothing like that was to be seen in my earlier trips.

When we got into the terminal, I found the Afghans to be still the same polite and welcoming people I had known in previous trips. Then signs began to appear of the ugliness of civil war. I would see many such signs in the days ahead, but a hint came in the first minutes. I was met outside the customs by an American embassy expediter. He had been expecting me, he said. We shook hands; then he sat down. Or rather squatted since there were no chairs. Why were we not walking out to the car? I waited for him to speak, but he just motioned me to sit. Slightly annoyed, I asked what we were waiting for. He replied that he had seven other arriving Americans to escort into Kabul. They were just a trickle in the daily flood. Indeed, it appeared that half Kabul was made up of new American arrivals. However, the expediter, seeking to assuage my impatience, rather proudly said that I had been honored with a special car. Then why, I asked, could I not just get in and go. “Ah,” he said, “it is not that easy.” It turned out that not even embassy cars were allowed to within about two hundred yards of the terminal, so everyone had to walk from the exit to the guarded car park. And, naturally, as “nature” is defined these days in Kabul, one could not do that without an escort.

First lesson: nothing in Afghanistan is easy.

Before I got to Kabul, I had received an email from the escort officer assigned to me, saying that since Kabul is a “high danger” area, the embassy wanted me to rent from a private security company known as “Afghan Logistics” an armored Toyota “4 Runner” and hire both an armed security guard and a bullet proof vest at 20,000 Afs (roughly $450) daily. I was to be reassured that the rates included the driver’s salary, fuel and taxes. No bullets were stipulated. I guess they were extra. However, the daily rate was only for 8 hours and overtime was at double rate, Kabul being presumably more dangerous at night. But my embassy escort officer said, these arrangements were both necessary and standard procedure, and with them I would thus be reasonably well protected.

I declined. My doing so was not a sign of bravery but a calculation that such a display would mark me as a worthwhile target.

Flashing through my mind were memories of experiences in other “high danger” areas. I had arrived in Algiers in 1962 shortly before the return of President-designate Ahmad Ben Bella (and met him at the airport with our ambassador-designate). During that confused and nearly frantic week, when the French had more or less completely pulled out and the “external” army of the Provisional Algerian Government had not yet taken over, the “internal” or wilayah guerrillas were not only settling scores with the French and the Algerians who had collaborated with them, but also with one another. The wilayah underground fighters were impressive fellows; they had fought an army 30 times their size and had worn it down, but almost none of them could read. So documents were more objects of suspicion than passes. A smile and a handshake were better than passports. But many people, particularly those associated with the Organisation Armée Secrète, had little experience in smiling and if their hands shook it was because they were carrying heavy weapons. Not surprisingly, CIA sources indicated that in those few days some 16,000 people were “disappeared.” Yet, I felt safe walking around the city. Two years later in Saigon, I watched a fire-fight one night from the Embassy roof, standing next to former Vice President and then Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Everyone even then knew that the Viet Minh “owned the night.” But, during the day, I felt no hesitation in walking about the city.

* * *

Kabul today provides a very different experience from those. First of all, signs of danger are all about. Thousands of armed private security guards from many nationalities as well as Afghans are scattered throughout the city on virtually every block. Cars are checked at intersections by Kalashnikov-wielding Afghan policemen or men who I assumed to be police although some I saw were not in anything resembling a uniform. Never mind the “bad guys,” gun toting policemen, many said to be high on drugs and virtually all untrained, were enough of a menace.

Most Kabulis feel that menace, since Kabul is said to be now under the control of President Karzai’s police, and the police are rough with civilians and often shake them down. But the 140,000 American and American-led troops and the scores of thousands of mercenaries and private security guards pay no attention to the police. Nor, as I was to find, do various privileged Afghans. Anyone who counts has his own private army. So, taken as a whole, the 50,000 or so “security” forces constitute a new virtual nation or actually nations, plural — as they come from everywhere, Gurkhas from Nepal, Malays, Samoans, various Latinos and Europeans with a mixture of what looked like a delegation from an American weight-lifting club — alongside of Afghanistan’s already complex mix of nations.[1]

President Karzai would like to rid Afghanistan of the “private security forces,” whom he accuses of fostering corruption and committing human rights violations. He announced as I began my tale on August 17 that he will abolish these private armies within four months, withdrawing their visas, expelling them and closing down the 50 or more firms that hire them, but he probably cannot. They are “embedded” with our military and with all the diplomatic missions and the Afghan power elite.

Without any sense of irony, diplomats and generals admit that they do so actually to protect their own officials and even their soldiers. Our ambassador, to cite one example, travels with a guard of mercenaries rather than one of Marines who, in my days in government, were charged with guarding the embassies. British Deputy Ambassador Tom Dodd told me, with what I thought was a flash of pride, that the British had a ratio of 1 mercenary for each Englishman whereas the American ratio was 3 to 1. The numbers are so large, I asked him to account for them. “Money,” he replied. “They are cheaper than regular soldiers.”

I find that hard to believe. It must be a toss-up. Each soldier costs us $1 million a year, but foreign (as distinct from Afghan) mercenaries earn $1,000 or more day just in salaries, not counting housing and food, transportation several times a year back and forth to their homes and, perhaps most significant, life insurance.

So much for the foreigners, so why do Afghans hire bodyguards? Partly prestige, no doubt, but also because of a genuine fear of private vendetta or assassination by one or other of the scores or even hundreds of warlords. These men cannot, or at least do not, trust the regular police to protect them. Having a dozen or so gunmen is also the road to riches. And, most believe, it is the best way to stay alive to enjoy those riches.

But it isn’t just the rich and powerful whose condottierri lord it over the ordinary Afghans: assorted other gunmen, including unemployed young men and even off-duty policemen, routinely shake down passers-by, shop keepers and even households. Scruffy fellows they may be, but loaded down with Kalashnikov machineguns, grenades and pistols, and cavalier about reading government documents, they pose an implicit threat to almost everyone. The “on-duty” police can do nothing about them because no one can tell who they are or who stands behind them ministers, heads of government departments, bigger warlords or the Taliban.

Let me dilate on that. We think of the Taliban as a coherent unit. No doubt it is partly that. But it is diversified in command structure because of the weakness of their embattled communication system. So whatever the “center,” which is presumed to be far away in Quetta, Pakistan, decides may not be known in a timely fashion, if at all, by more or less isolated cadres. Moreover, the organization has many, perhaps not always wanted, part-time volunteers. Although they may operate in the name of the Taliban. Many of these people are not auxiliaries but opportunists. Because of an insult or the presence of a target, groups of young thugs often carry out assaults or kidnappings on their own. Such events are different from the well-planned attacks (like the one on this hotel a few years ago) involving suicide bombers and commando units. The aim of the independents is not political; it is either revenge or money, or both. This makes their danger unpredictable.

Unpredictable it is but it is more or less ever-present. It comes not only from these casual thugs, the Taliban or even other major insurgent groups. Indeed, almost anyone with enough money or willing kinsmen can set himself up as a “power broker.” A Washington Post reporter earlier this month wrote about what must be a fairly typical minor strongman whom she described as “an illiterate, hashish-producing former warlord who directs a semiofficial police forcehe is also a key partner of US forces.” He has 40 “soldiers” and rules only about 4 square miles. So you have all the elements: drugs, protection money, command over a small piece of the supply route and alliance with US forces.

Groups like this are all over the country and in the aggregate the payoff to them is huge. An American Congressional investigation entitled “Warlord, Inc., Extortion and Corruption Along the U.S. Supply Chain in Afghanistan,” published in June this year, showed that to implement a $2.16 billion transport contract the US military is paying tens of millions of dollars to warlords, corrupt public officials and (indirectly) the Taliban to ensure safe passage of its supply convoys throughout the country.” Dexter Filkins of The New York Times (who incidentally won a George Polk Award) put it bluntly, “With U.S. Aid, Warlord Builds an Afghan Empire.” He described “an illiterate former highway patrol commander [who] has grown stronger than the government of Oruzgan Province, not only supplanting its role in providing security but usurping its other functions, his rivals say, like appointing public employees and doling out government largess. His fighters run missions with American Special Forces officers, and when Afghan officials have confronted him he has either rebuffed them or had them removed.” How did he do it? Money. Filkins points out that his company charges $1,200 for each NATO cargo truck to which it gives safe passage and so makes about $2.5 million a month. How does he get away with it? As Filkins wrote, “His militia has been adopted by American Special Forces officers to gather intelligence and fight insurgents.”

Afghanistan today is somewhat like medieval Italy, a land of warlords. The big ones are just the more impressive of hundreds if not thousands of small bosses, some with only a dozen “guns,” who operate in a single neighborhood or along a short stretch of road. While many are involved in the drug trade, others draw their funds from offering protection or engaging in casual kidnapping. They are known to work with or at least around the police or even, themselves, may be part-time members of the police force and/or private security details. I imagine that every Afghan knows who’s who in his neighborhood, but an outsider can easily blunder into a messy situation. Canny outsiders, like the members of the resident press corps, as Dexter Filkins later told me, feel relatively safe because they know where not to go.

In two ways, this is a very old system in the Middle East. In the cities, merchants kept a sort of peace because they wanted people to visit their shops, but Nineteenth century European and native travelers in outlying areas often “rented” free passage from local lords. Payment for passage is common and very profitable, as the Congressional study made clear — today in Afghanistan. Trucks moving fuel or supplies, even for the American Army, almost anywhere in the country do so by paying off the local strongmen. The American command is criticized for this practice, but it is notable that even when they supposedly ruled Afghanistan, the Taliban engaged in the same practice. What is new is that this system has spread to the cities. Even restaurants are fenced in with huge concrete walls and steel gates and “rent” protection.

I went Thursday evening to a little Lebanese restaurant called “The Taverna” for dinner with Dexter Filkins. I found it to be packed with people. The owner happened to be from the Lebanese Shuf mountains. On a silly impulse, I asked him if he were a Junbalti or a Yazbaki. He looked astonished and asked how I knew of such things. When I replied that I had written a book on his land, he sent over dish after dish, “on the house.” Nevertheless, the meal was fairly expensive. The reason was obvious: four armed men, in fact moonlighting policemen, were guarding the entrance. They are the new thing not bouncers but “doorstops.”

The biggest doorstop of all, of course, is the American embassy. Embassy is hardly the right word. It is a vast urban fortress, a city in its own right. Indeed, it is now the largest in the world with roughly 1,000 civilians and is flanked by a military garrison that is far larger and a comparable but unmentioned CIA complex. The American “city” has its own water purification and electrical system, roads, dormitories, offices, shops, coffee houses and an “eating facility.” (It would be libelous to call it a restaurant). Virtually every piece of the American bureaucracy representatives of more than 60 agencies — is in residence. And by residence I mean working, eating, sleeping, exercising, and being entertained. I spoke to several people who had left the grounds only a few times in their one- or two-year tours of duty. They are not allowed to walk anywhere in Kabul (or elsewhere) but must go only in armored cars, wearing a full suit of body armor and helmet.

The Embassy compound is less than a mile from the airport, but to get there is to run an obstacle course through a man-made valley of high, concrete blast walls. Every few yards is a steel telegraph poll to be raised, a group of security guards to be satisfied, a guard dog to sniff the car’s contents, a mine detector to be run under it. Then, as each barrier is passed, the driver zigzags, like a giant slalom skier, around massive concrete blocks to the next check point. I counted half a dozen. At each check point the identification procedure starts all over again to satisfy a new group of sober-faced, heavily-armed mercenaries. I particularly noted that in addition to their weapons, each man carried in his flak jacket at least a dozen extra clips of bullets ­ ready, no doubt for a prolonged siege. Overhead, a sausage-shaped balloon equipped with sensors keeps watch on the entire city and helicopters circle frequently. Armored cars and machine gun nests are discretely scattered about. No wonder the Afghans believe they are under occupation and that the Americans intend to stay. Not your typical happy neighborhood.

I had been invited to spend my first night as a guest of Ambassador Lt. General (rtd.) Karl Eikenberry and his charming wife, Ching. I will come back to them in a few moments, but I want first to continue with the physical aspect of life in Kabul.

Since Senator John Kerry had swooped in, unannounced until the last minute, I had to move over to a hotel on the morning of my second day in town. Getting there was not easy, but (obviously to clear the way for the Senator my threat to become Republican did not save my bed) the embassy “speeded” me on my way in an armored car with an American-employed Afghan guide.

* * *

Muhammad Naeem Anis is a graduate student of law in Kabul University who works for the US AID mission, As we drove toward the hotel along the nearly empty Kabul River, he pointed out the window at the swirling, densely packed, but surprisingly polite mass of people, many obviously poor but to my eye with no beggars among them, and said, “this is our problem”

My first thought was that he meant that they or we were in peril from the chaotic torrent of trucks and cars. That seemed a good guess since many showed the scars of previous encounters. Then I thought he might have meant that we could be caught in a riot, like an Embassy car, driven by contractors from the mercenary firm DynCorps, was last month, killed four people. In that instance the latent anger of the Afghans boiled over with a crowd shouting “death to the Americans.” We might be lynched if we ran over one of the pedestrians. That also seemed highly likely. It was obvious that anger was there, just under the surface and that it could easily be set off.

The explosive mixture as at hand: Neither pedestrians nor cars paid any noticeable attention to one another. No give was offered at any point by anyone, but somehow each driver knew when he was defeated just before a collision would have happened. The men and often-burque-ed women pedestrians performed as though in a Spanish bullfight. The “bulls” tore along, dashing around or between one another when they could, diving into temporary gaps, passing on both sides without any notion of on-coming traffic or of the presumed lanes into which the road might be divided, while the pedestrians, like toreadors, nimbly dodged in and out (of if old, blind or one-legged as a number I saw were, entrusted themselves to God’s mercy). Accidents were surprisingly few; I saw only two in a quarter of an hour. Sitting often in jams when traffic congealed with both streams head to head with one another, it struck me that if the Taliban attacked, they would have no chance to get away. Traffic may be Kabul’s most effective security force.

But I was missing Mr. Anis’s point. He was giving me my first lesson in Afghan politics. It wasn’t traffic regulation but the rule of law that he was thinking about. He went on: “we have laws, very good laws, but no means of enforcing them. These people,” he gestured toward the closed and locked window, “don’t even know that we have a constitution and certainly don’t know what their rights are, while the rich and powerful, who do know that we have a constitution and laws, don’t pay any attention to them. They just do what they want and take whatever they like. And there is no one to stop them.”

I asked if this was also true in Taliban-controlled areas. Without the slightest hesitation, he said, “no. It is not. There is no corruption where the Taliban are in control.”

When we arrived outside the Serena hotel (which incidentally is owned by the Aga Khan), we were stopped by the first group of armed guards outside its battlements. They were more tightly spaced but even more impressive than those at the embassy. Blankly before us was a wall made of a 30 foot-high steel gate. As we were identified by a group of guards, the gate was slid back on its rollers. Slowly we drove in. There we were stopped by a steel poll and faced a second high steel gate. Then the outer gate was rolled shut. There was just enough space between them for a large car. Locked securely from behind, the car was checked with a mine detector for bombs. Then the pole was raised and the second steel gate was opened. We were in, or at least the embassy armored car was in. Then the steel panel at the rear of the car was opened to reveal my suitcases which, in turn, were passed through a detection system. My little camera was particularly worrying to the security guard, but finally he shrugged and let it (and me) through.

Then to the “front desk” to register. Despite the view through the glass window of the dozen or so guards, laden with their weapons, milling around the driveway and five others more or less discretely, but with bulging double-vented suit coats, standing around the hall, everything began to seem just like a normal hotel. Except, as I scanned the parking lot, I could see that the gates were fixed to even higher concrete walls. They were, I guessed, 40 to 50 feet high. I would later have a chance to see that the whole hotel and its charming Persian-style garden, an area of perhaps ten acres, was surrounded by a similar wall of which most was capped with additional barriers or razor wire. The Serena Hotel, whatever else it may be, is a castle.

Mr. Anis accompanied me to my room. I thought this showed a somewhat excessive concern for my security since we were surely as safe as walls and gates and guards could make us, but his move turned out to have another meaning — as so much in Afghanistan these days seems to have. This is Ramadan, the month of fasting, and Mr. Anis could not eat or drink in public so he asked, rather sheepishly, if I would be so kind as to order him a sandwich and a Coca-Cola in the privacy of my room.

I was glad I did because this gave us a chance to talk rather more freely than in the embassy car which, I presume he thought was bugged. He told me that while the Shiis, of which sect he belonged, also keep the fast of Ramadan, he did not. He did not explain but from other experiences I gather this was in part his way of saying that he was a modern, educated man.

As we waited for the sandwich, he told me a bit about his life. He could not, he said, admit that he worked for the Americans. And certainly not for the Embassy. So he told his family that he worked for a private construction firm. He was afraid to visit his native province, in the Tajik area, because even a Tajik relative might denounce him to the Taliban for collaboration with the Americans. However, he said, since his wife was from the same area, he sometimes had to return, but he dreaded each visit.

I asked about his roots. His father, he said, had been a doctor who was chased out during the Russian occupation; so Mr. Anis grew up a refugee camp in Peshawar like hundreds of thousands of other Afghans. When the Russians pulled out of Afghanistan in 1989, his family moved back and settled in Kabul. Since Kabul has grown from a city of about 50,000 in 1980 to 5 million today, his is a common experience.

I shamelessly used our wait for the sandwich and coke to pursue our talk in the car about the rule of law. What about property? I asked.

“There is no security in property,” he said. “If a person owns, for example, a house, and the local strongman wants it, he just tells the owner to get out. The owner has no choice. If he does not obey, he is apt to be beaten or killed. There is no recourse through government even if the owner has all the proper papers.”

But much “private” property, he explained, is not registered. It is either what people took over during the civil wars or is owned by custom, perhaps generation after generation. Under the circumstances of lawlessness, however, the distinction between registered and unregistered property is meaningless since neither can be upheld by any authority.

This is true, he continued, even of government property. If the “intruder” is powerful enough, that is well enough connected to one or other of the inner circle, he can simply take over government lands or buildings. Then even government officials can do nothing to make him vacate. In fact, he may be a minister himself, a member of the “inner circle.”

* * *

The inner circle includes but is not limited to the Hazara Vice President, Karim Khalili; Kabir Mohabat, an Afghan with American citizenship; “Marshal” and now Vice President Muhammad Qasim Fahim, a Tajik; and “Marshal” Abdul Rashid Dostum, the Uzbek warlord who disdains any government post but is the President’s “right hand;”[2] Zara Ahmad Mobil who ran what is regarded as the most corrupt organization in Afghanistan, the Ministry of Interior, and (as an editorial in The Guardian put it) “is now in charge of the opium industry;” and, of course, the Karzai family. In their meeting with Senator John Kerry, the American press corps bluntly described the regime as Afghanistan’s native mafia.

President Karzai was himself described, in two dispatches in November 2009 from our Ambassador to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (which were leaked to The New York Times and published in January 2010), with great diplomatic caution, as “not an adequate strategic partner.” After being dressed down by President Obama for doubting Karzai’s integrity or rather not being willing to overlook it in order to get on with the war and to get along with General McChrystal, Ambassador Eikenberry, now is even more cautious. At least in public. As I will later point out, in our late night chat on the embassy terrace, he was more realistic. But, he the points out that Karzai is all we have as an alternative to the Taliban. In short we are in a position not unlike the one we faced in Vietnam.

As a general, Eikenberry was a previous commander of the then smaller American force in Afghanistan. Prior to that he was the military attaché in the American embassy in Beijing, under my friend Ambassador Chas Freeman. Eikenberry’s charming wife, Ching, is from China’s far northeast and so is of partly Mongol background.

A scholarly, intelligent, hard-driving and honest man, Eikenberry tries to be optimistic; that goes with the job. He has to be optimistic no matter what he feels to keep up the spirits of his staff, but in his confidential dispatches of last November, he wrote, “The proposed troop increase [the “surge”] will bring vastly increased costs and an indefinite, large-scale U.S. military role in Afghanistan, generating the need for yet more civilians. An increased U.S. and foreign role in security and governance will increase Afghan dependencyand it will deepen the military involvement in a mission that most agree cannot be won solely by military meansPerhaps the charts we have all seen showing the U.S. presence rising and then dropping off in coming year in a bell curve will prove accurate. It is more likely, however, that these forecasts are imprecise and optimistic.”

Here I do not want to go into detail on our private talk on the Embassy roof, which lasted until midnight, because I am writing a paper for him, based on my study and my talks here, on what I think we must now do. Let me just say that I do not believe he has changed his November assessment. Indeed, both he and all the knowledgeable people with whom I have talked believe the situation is far more dire now than last year. It is not just the statistics on casualties and wounded, although they show an accelerating downward trend and the wounded, in particular, are much more numerous than is reported and their wounds are both more grievous and much more expensive to compensate for. (A person with a head injury will cost the Treasury over his lifetime about $5 million in medical bills. Such costs are not figured into the figures given out by the Defense Department on the cost of the war.) But, it is clear that we do not have a coherent or long-term strategy and are trying to make up for that deficiency by throwing money and people into the fray more or less without any way of judging whether they help achieve or prevent us from achieving our vague objectives. Meanwhile, the Afghans appear to be sick and tired of Americans.

So back to my first informant, Mr. Anis. When I asked him about the local feeling toward the Americans he was so guarded that I did not press my question. All he felt he could say was that there are too many and their constant presence and display of power are galling. But Ambassador Eikenberry, he said, was personally very popular. Why? I pressed. “He goes everywhere without a big escort, and the Afghans like that,” was his reply. Eikenberry later told me that he tried to appear often even in the supposedly unsafe market area with only a couple of bodyguards whom he kept as unobtrusive as possible. I don’t know whether the Afghans admired his bravery or were just happy that he was not flaunting his power. But, whatever the reason, I was to hear repeatedly that he is indeed popular.

In my day with him, I was astonished by his performance. It was the very embodiment of the Washington adage: “the urgent drives out the important.” Managing his vast staff, including four subordinate ambassadors (talk about bureaucratic inflation I have never heard of an American embassy with more than one ambassador!), over 60 US agencies (over many of which he is not in ultimate command) and a thousand people, meeting daily with General Petraeus and his senior officers, holding frequent conferences with the Afghan press and influential Afghans, giving sometimes several speeches a day, escorting and briefing visiting VIPs like Senator John Kerry, meeting with, listening to and admonishing President Karzai, and touring the ubiquitous trouble spots and even, while I was there, walking the four-mile perimeter of the embassy walls to personally check out the security arrangement, he is run ragged. I sat in on the briefing of his “country team.” There he was the coach, trying to build morale; the teacher, urging the men and women from agencies not under his control to get “out into the field” and to show more sensitivity to the Afghans; and the diplomat, complimenting each person by name for some act he had heard about. It was a remarkable performance. Then he rushed off to meet Kerry, flew with him to a remote post, assembled the American press corps for a briefing, and in the evening held a dinner for the entire Afghan television station owners and reporters at which he gave another speech. As I chided him, he never has time to sit back and think about what all our frantic activities are really all about. He must have been alarmed to hear Senator John Kerry say in an interview here in Kabul on August 19, “We have to remember that this is the beginning, just the beginning”

* * *

From reflecting on our, the American, problems, I went to pay a call on Dr. Sima Samar. She is the head of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) and a highly articulate, intelligent and well informed person. She also must be physically and morally brave because the environment in which she operates is incredibly difficult and she has not real power.

As I was getting used to doing, I arrived at her office gate which, like so much of Kabul today, is massive and steel. A peep hole, like one might see on the cell door of violent prisoners in a jail, was pushed open several inches so I and my embassy guide could be scrutinized. Several minutes passed. Then a section of the massive gate was swung open to let the two of us inside. Once we were identified, the full gate was swung back to enable our embassy car, also identified, with suitable painted messages and a sort of inside license plate in place of a sun visor, to be driven in. Then the gate was rolled shut.

As in most of the other buildings, heavily armed Kalashnikov automatic rifles, hand grenades, pistols, flak jackets, helmets, radios, etc. guards eyed us balefully. They were Afghans. Then an unarmed civilian appeared, half bowed, shook hands and said hoda hafez. Turning, he led me, but not my Afghan companion Mr. Anis, up a narrow flight of stairs onto a non-descript and rather threadbare landing. It was in stunning contrast to the massive “security” outside. My first thought was ‘all this protection for so little!’

Then Dr. Samar emerged, seized my hand and led me into her crowded office. She is an impressive woman, bright eyed, with a ready smile, of (I guess) 60 years. She had somehow read about me so our preliminaries were very brief, just the mention of mutual friends, particularly the grand lady of Afghanistan, my friend Nancy Dupree, who had particularly urged me to see her. Then without the usual offer of tea (since it is Ramadan), we got down to business.

The situation here, she said, is really neither black nor white. In some ways it is better than it was a few years ago, but the real opportunity was missed in 2002 when the Taliban had been defeated. Had a relatively small American force been left here then, an acceptable level of security could have been created and maintained. Today, she went on — as I found in most of my talks, everyone began on an optimistic note and soon this faded into a somber mood — today, the real casualty is hope. People today do not believe that an acceptable level of security can be achieved.

The fundamental problem, she said, is the warlords. They are so deep into the drug trade, are making so much money, and are so tied into the government at the very top that there is little hope for any sort of reform. Putting in more troops will not accomplish anything.

But, then, to my surprise, she went on to say that the Afghan army and police force are really improving. They need time. Will they get it? She asked me. I said that I doubted that, despite US government statements, the American commitment was open-ended. Indeed, America itself is so beset by financial problems that the mood is shifting. She nodded and sighed.

Then our conversation virtually began anew. From warlords and improvement of the security forces, she shifted to what obviously is the bottom line: the issue of corruption. Can the regime survive? Many people here — but not she, she matter-of-factually said have dual nationality. They send their children abroad, a son in England, another or a daughter in the US or Canada, etc. and perhaps their wives as well. They also send along with them or at least to foreign banks as much money as they can. The reason why they do is simple, they have little trust in the existing government and less in the future. Why not? She asked. They have nothing to fall back on. What they are doing is personally prudent even if it is nationally disastrous.

As I listened, my mind went back to Vietnam. Afghanistan is in so many ways Vietnam redux. Everyone is preparing his bolt hole and wants to be sure that it is well padded with money. Afghan Minister of Finance Umar Zakhilwal admitted that during the last three years over $4 billion billion — in cash had been flown out of Afghanistan in suitcases and footlockers (like I thought only Mexican drug dealers used) destined for private accounts or persons abroad. While money in those amounts has a serious effect on the faltering Afghan economy, what is even more important is that it shows that commitment to this regime and to Afghanistan is fragile and declining among the inner circle, Afghanistan’s power elite.

Back to Dr. Samar. What else, could she put her finger on? I asked.

“Foreign corruption,” she said. “Oh, of course, it is not the same kind. But when a contract is awarded to a foreign company and it then either does a bad job or does not finish its work and yet exports 80% or 90% of the contract funds, is that not also corruption? We would understand even 50% but few take that little. Is that not corruption too? But you Americans pay little attention to it; yet it serves as a model for our people.

“Even when corruption is not involved,” she continued, “there are two tendencies that undercut the benefit your actions might have brought. The first is the use of machines. Of course, I know,” she went on, “machines are faster and may even do a more beautiful job, but they displace labor. And unemployment is one of our most serious problems. It would be far better to use shovels and give people jobs.

“Also bad is the tendency of your contractors to draw on labor from outside the place where a project is undertaken. Of course, contractors draw on the cheapest source of labor. So they might use Tajiks to do a project in a Hazara area, for example. Then the local people have no sense that it is theirs. We see this often. But, if a road, for example, is built in a village by local people, they feel it is somehow theirs and will take care of it. But Americans show no sensitivity to Afghans and their way of living.”

Nothing was to be gained, she said, by adding more troops. There are already probably far too many. Each new soldier gives rise to a new Talib. And troops do not address the core issue.

But, she was not in favor of a total withdrawal at this time. Time , she said, must be given to enable the police force, at least, to improve. That, she agreed, was not much solace but it was the best that could realistically be offered from here.

* * *

I next went to see the Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary General, the former German Ambassador to Iraq, Martin Kobler. His immediate superior, Steaffan de Mistura, a friend of my good friend and neighbor, Samir Basta, who was his boss had told me that he is an excellent man and here, I found he is said to be one of the best informed men in town Unfortunately, he was away on leave, so Ambassador Kobler filled in.

Ambassador Kobler’s headquarters, UNAMA, was understandably under massive protection. No UN person could forget the killing of the UN team in Baghdad, including my dear friend, Nadia Younes, who had just been appointed Assistant Secretary General for the UN General Assembly. How and why this tragedy happened is a story I will tell at another time, but here it is memorialized in concrete, steel and a small army of guards.

Ambassador Kobler launched into our talk by emphasizing how the UN people moved out around Afghanistan. He did not say it, but almost everyone else I spoke to did: the Americans stay huddled in their compounds. Even when they are in “the field,” they don’t get out and around very much. It is mainly to move its workers around that the UN maintains the “airline” I saw when I landed in Kabul. Kobler himself, he said, tries to make at least one trip a week, often two, outside of Kabul to one or more of the 40 some odd project headquarters the UN maintains.

As most of the officials I met were to do, Kobler started rather sanguine about the current situation, but slowly retreated into major worry about how to reconcile the two and contradictory objects of the essentially American policy — the thrust to build up a central authority (which, as he said, violates the national genius of the Afghans) while working with the manifestations of local autonomy (which is the Afghan tradition). The Americans, he commented, are trying to swim against the tide of Afghan history by their emphasis on central authority. Afghanistan always had a weak central authority that allowed the provinces much freedom of action.

But the Americans are even carrying out their own policy ineffectively, he said. About 80% of all aid funds flow outside the control of the central government so effectively the American program (as in Vietnam) substitutes itself for the central government and so in the eyes of the public diminishes it. Later I was to hear from the director of our AID program, Earl Gast, that actually 92% of aid money bypassed the central government. It was now down to 80% and his, Gast’s, objective was to reduce it to 25%. It is cleaner that way, of course, but it shows Afghans that they do not have a government other than us.

Kobler continued: since the American military has virtually all the disposable money, and the Afghans regard America as intending to dominate the country into the future, they regard all foreign aid efforts as a tactic of the war — as General Petraeus is endlessly quoted as saying, “money is my main ammunition.”

These thoughts led us into the issue of our Afghan traditions versus ours. To work here in any capacity, he said, we must be sensitive to Afghan traditions, which we often are not. Every time our soldiers bang on a door, or break it down, and enter a house to search for an insurgent, going into the women’s quarters and even checking on, or otherwise manhandling, the women and children and opening up their private closets etc., which they feel they must do as an insurgent who might kill an American the next day, may be hiding there, the soldiers (or more likely the Special Forces) inevitably lose that family to the Taliban or at least make them hate the Americans.

But, at the same time, he went on, we must stand up for the values we hold. We do and must absolutely oppose such awful acts as stoning to death people who violate Sharia laws. There can be no give on this issue.

Perhaps the most interesting piece of information Kobler gave me was on the Taliban reaction to last week’s UN Report on Taliban killing or injuring Afghan civilians. Although the Taliban denounced the report, and the UN for making it, their press release contained what Kobler thought was a major new development: they called for the creation of an international tribunal including the Taliban to investigate the charge. Kobler rightly saw this as a ploy to give the Taliban a sort of recognition as a quasi governmental “player,” but admitted that it may have lifted the veil slightly on a form of cooperation. He said, of course, the Americans and the UN would not agree.

I objected, wondering if there were not a way to use this demarche. Perhaps we should remember, I said, a precedent of the Algerian war. I laughed and said that of course no one remembered any precedents from previous wars. He (and later others including the Russian ambassador ) agreed. Everyone said that at the start of each new year we throw away all our memories of the actions and reactions of the past year and start all over again.

But what did I have in mind? He asked.

It was not a complete analogy but some adaptation from the Algerian war might be useful to consider. Toward the end of the Algerian war of independence, America had a crippling diplomatic problem: .we were closely allied to France which was fighting the Algerians, but we were emotionally on the Algerian side and thought that, in any case, they would prevail. The State Department was torn apart: the European Bureau wanted to have nothing to do with the Algerians while the African Bureau was keen to recognize them. President Kennedy hit on a typical Kennedy solution: use the family. He sent Jackie Kennedy’s half brother, Hugh Auchincloss, up to New York to hang out at the UN. He had no official title, but he was to be there as a friendly presence. Identified as he was with JFK, his job was to make representatives of the Provisional Algerian Government, which had observer status at the UN, feel welcome. I wondered if some sort of adaptation might open up contacts with the Insurgents. Was there no way that at least the beginnings of foundations for future bridges might be laid? He said he doubted it.

* * *

From each of my forays, I found it a relief to return to the hotel. Again, tradition. Inside the forbidding walls was a delightful “Persian” garden, where two fountains playing into water channels which were flanked by beds of roses. I felt back in “my” Middle East. Alas, the one of fading memory. Then, I had dinner in the hotel courtyard, listening to traditional Afghan music. Suddenly came the distant call to prayer. The drummers were silenced, but the moment the call ended, they took up their drums, not concerned about prayer time but only about the announcement of prayer. The Taliban would have been outraged. And, as the Russian ambassador later told me, the ambassador from the United Arab Emirates certainly was: the accent in Arabic was terrible and the several calls to prayer across the city paid no attention to timing. In the UAE, he said, they pushed a button and the whole country heard one call!

At noon the next day, I drove over to the British embassy to see Deputy Ambassador Tom Dodd. To say the least, this is an unusual British embassy. It is the UK’s largest, although dwarfed by the American establishment. It echoed the Americans in its elaborate security but, to me more striking, was the abrasion of Foreign Office formality. The email I received from one of the clerks setting up the appointment was addressed, “Dear William,” and saying that “Tom” would be happy to see me. I thought how the British ambassador I had known of old would be turning in their graves.

Mr. Dodd Tom is a new arrival, and not, I inferred from his rather vague remarks about his background, a regular Foreign Office man. He was indeed a civil servant but of what kind I could not tell. He was more optimistic than most of those I met. He said that while the situation in Kandahar was the worst, some of the other cities, such as Mazar-i-Sharif, Herat and Kunduz, were better. What distinguished them? I asked. He said it was simply that the local warlords were more willing to share their loot with their followers. So there was a sort of “trickle down effect,” but in Kandahar the President’s half-brother was stingy. I laughed to think how the phrase “trickle down,” coined by my former colleagues, the Chicago economists, was applied to Afghanistan “security.”

Not noticing my reaction, he said that if the programs of his government, the US and the Afghans have five years, the situation in Kandahar would be better.

Not much gain for five years in that word “better,” I replied. Moreover, I thought a more realistic time frame was 6 months to a year. And I pointed out how a number of the very people who fervently advocated the war, like Richard Haass, the current president of the Council on Foreign Relations, have now turned against it. As he wrote in Newsweek two weeks ago, “We can’t win and it isn’t worth it.” I didn’t feel that this registered.

When he got on to the military aspects, Dodd said he did not interface with Petraeus, but he went on to say one positive and one negative thing: the positive thing is that apparently there are many fewer Special Forces night raids, although, he said, he is not privy to them. (That too rather surprised me. As the UK’s acting senior representative, I should have thought he needed to be privy to everything that affected the UK’s position.) The negative thing is that the policy of killing off the Taliban old guard (he pointed out that here “old” means 50) is bringing forward younger and more violent men who have none of the experience or subtlety of the older generation. This cannot be good, he said. I would later hear much the same from a former senior Taliban leader, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, although he would tell me that much of the old guard is till alive and in command.

One interesting aspect of the government of Karzai, Dodd said, is that he can pick up a mobile phone and call almost anyone in the country and connect within half an hour, and, he said, “the Afghans love to talk.” So presumably Karzai is in contact almost continuously with people all over the country.

Despite the fall in public support in the UK for the British position here, he said, Britain has a more important stake than America since it has about 1 million Pakistani and 3 million Indian residents/subjects in the UK. But, he said, with I thought something like wry amusement, in the event of any sort of settlement, interim or otherwise, “Britain has no money for projects of any magnitude. When it leaves, as it inevitably must, it will be able to maintain its special forces and a training mission for the army or police. Nothing more.”

When we got onto the cost of the war, to my surprise, he misspoke or was totally misinformed: he said that the American war effort here was, after all, “cheap.” I must have looked astonished because he went on to clarify his remark: it was only $7 billion a year. That is even less than the published figure perhaps half the real cost not for a year but for a month.

* * *

Speaking of money leads me to my meeting the next day, Wednesday, August 18, with US AID Mission Director Earl W. Gast, America’s senior man on the Afghan economy.

Gast was refreshingly candid. Also relatively new to his job, he was proud of what he was doing. His favorite program, he said, was the “Afghanistan’s National Solidarity Program,” which is described as “the largest development program in Afghanistan and a flagship program of the Afghan government.” It was begun in 2003 and claims to have financed over 50,000 projects in all of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. In the words of its MIT-led evaluation, the program “is structured around two major village-level interventions: (1) the creation of a gender-balanced Community Development Council (CDC) through a secret-ballot, universal suffrage election; and (2) the disbursement of grants, up to a village maximum of $60,000, to support the implementation of projects selected, designed, and managed by the CDC in consultation with the village community. NSP thus seeks to both improve the access of rural villagers to critical services and to create a structure for village governance on democratic process and the participation of women.”

Nation building in high gear! But as a jaded old hand in reading government handouts, I asked Gast if it really made any difference. By way of a reply he gave me the report of a study group sponsored by MIT under contract to AID. The contractors did a random survey in 250 areas and gave a mixed report. Their report was, indeed, the opposite of what I would have expected: they found a strong impact on selected aspects of village “governance” but none on economic activity. Reading closely both what they said and what they did not say, however, I doubted that the program had much impact on anything except on our feeling that we were doing something.

Doing something, Gast said, was his major problem. He is under intense pressure from Washington to show actions of almost any sort.

Before he arrived, he said, one of the big efforts at doing something was down in the newly conquered province of Marja. The US military had run the Taliban out — or so they thought — and General McChrystal was bringing in a “government in a box.” Perhaps the most important piece “in the box” was to be the creation of jobs. So AID set up a program to hire 10,000 workers virtually all the adults in a local population of about 35,000 people ­ but only about 1,000 took up the offer. Why? The answer was simple: the local people knew more about guerrilla warfare than the American army did. From years of experience, they knew that the guerrillas had done what guerrillas are supposed to do, fade away when confronted with overwhelming force and come back when the time is right. They are back. And, as other insurgents have done in all the insurgencies I studied in my Violent Politics, they have punished those they regarded as traitors. The 9,000 Afghans who turned down the AID offer were what we would call “street smart.”

* * *

Did we learn anything from this experience? To get another opinion, I met with Dexter Filkins, an “old” that is not in my terms but at least a decade old — Middle East hand, who has spent years in repeated assignments here, in Iraq, India and Pakistan and who is one of the few who really gets about the country, on his own, not “embedded,” and not loaded down with flak jacket, body guards and minders. He is just young enough and daring enough to see a different picture, I thought. I was right.

First, he said, the Kandahar operation is already in full swing. It isn’t just the assassination squads of the “Special Ops” (aka Special Forces) but large-scale regular army action although the Military here, known as ISAF, are not talking about it. And it is essentially, as I wrote in June on “changing the guard but not the drill,” the same as the Marja operation, just bigger. The failed Marja campaign is the template for the Kandahar campaign. And it too will fail, Filkins predicted.

Filkins said that Petraeus was essentially trying to apply what he did in Iraq to Afghanistan without much thought that the two countries are very different. I disagreed, as I have in print: Petraeus is replaying not only what the Americans did in Vietnam but even the French in Vietnam.

But to my surprise, Filkins was relatively complimentary about the military high command and particularly about Petraeus. What he found most favorable was that, unlike all the civilians holed up in the embassy fortress, the military get out into “the field.” Had Ambassador Eikenberry heard this, he would have agreed. Much of his admonition to the members of his Country Team meeting was to get out and see.

But, is this really such a good idea? I wonder. Almost everyone with whom I spoke mentioned how disturbing it was to the Afghans to see so many Americans. True, there are large areas of the country with no American military or civilian presence, but from Kabul west, south and east, Americans are thick on the ground. Would adding more be beneficial? And particularly adding more when decked out in helmets, flak jackets and goggles like my escort officer, a nice American woman had to wear even up in the supposedly “secure” northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. Not speaking any of the local languages, almost entirely new to the country (very few have little preparation before they come, stay here longer than a year and have little contact or, apparently, interest while they are here) and prone to tell the locals how to manage their lives, they conjure the phrase common among even our close friends and allies, the English during World War II, about the Americans, “over sexed, over paid and over here.”

* * *

To get a non-American and “historical” view on foreign intervention in Afghanistan, I arranged to have a dinner and long talk with Russian Ambassador Andrey Avetisyan. Since we had not met before, I asked him to tell me about himself. He is a Pashto language specialist who has served in the Russian Foreign Office, in Belgium and for three stints here including once during the Soviet occupation. I met him courtesy of my old friend Evgeny Maksimovich Primakov, the former Russian Foreign Minister, Director of the KBG and Prime Minister.

Avetisyan and I covered much the same ground as I did my previous talks with, obviously, different angels of vision. I will report only the differences here.

Avetisyan was quite categorical in saying that there was no hope of winning the war militarily. Then he went into a bit of the history of the Soviet campaign. Two things he particularly singled out were ones that, he thought, the Russians did rather better than the Americans. First, they separated economic and military actions. Their “civic action” projects, unknown to most outsiders, actually accomplished a great deal. We discussed my favorite, the vast plantations of olives and the production of oil (both casualties of the civil wars in the 1990s) from which the memory lingers to this day. He is often approached, he said, by Afghans, even former anti-Russian fighters, who compare the Russians favorably to the Americans.

The second aspect of the Russian economic program he thought was better was that they did not provide cash to the Afghans. Of course, he said, they paid salaries, but they brought in the equipment that was needed and paid, directly, for work done with it. So, he believed, the problem of corruption of the Afghan government then was far less than today.

The military policy of the Americans, he said, was roughly comparable to the Russian. That is, except that it was more simple then: you either fought or you collaborated. Today, the mixing of civic action, counterinsurgency, military occupation and special operations makes a complex combination. However, reliance on the military did not work for the Russians and, he believed strongly, would not work for the Americans today.

What about the Russian involvement today? I asked.

There are two aspects, he replied. First, the Russians are worried about the Central Asians and Caucasians who have come to fight for the Taliban. What are they going to do when they go home? He wondered. “Some people,” he said, “think that they will have just grown old and become tired of war. But I am not so sure.” They are hardened veterans, and maybe they will take home what they learned here. The second aspect, he said, is that if the Taliban win, they and their version of PanIslamism will make an impact on the republics of former Soviet Central Asia.

I laughed and said, “the Domino theory in reverse.” He nodded.

“However,” he continued, “wherever the al-Qaida people are today, it is important to remember that they were involved here before the Taliban arrived. The Taliban found Usama bin Ladin already here. I suppose their getting together was a matter of money. The Taliban had almost none and the Saudis had a lot. It was a natural alliance.”

I commented that I understood that about a year ago, the Taliban put Usama under what I guessed could be called “cave arrest.” Avetisyan laughed and said “there are many reports.” Unquestionably, there have been severe strains in their relationship. I do not think that they will exercise major influence on the Taliban. Nor will the Taliban give them a free hand.

Returning to my major interest, I pressed about how and when one could think of getting out. He said that it would take at least 5 years to develop an Afghan army, and that to get out quickly now would probably plunge the country back into civil war.

I pursued the point. Should we consider early negotiations or wait? He replied that to negotiate now would be difficult because the Karzai government is so obviously weak. The Taliban, he said, have their men in every office of the government and there are no secrets from them. I mentioned that after the Vietnam war ended, we discovered that the South Vietnamese President’s chief of office admitted to having worked for the Viet Minh throughout the war. “Well,” he said, “it is even more pronounced here. The Taliban are everywhere.”

I mentioned that I was hearing that there are three options: get out now or very soon; pull out the main military forces but leave behind “Special Ops” forces; or negotiate.

He replied that, of course, we must negotiate. Indeed, he said, his information was that it was now on-going among the Afghans, but that the Pakistanis were disturbed when the Afghans tried to do it alone. He mentioned the Pakistani arrest a couple of months ago of two senior Taliban who were involved in negotiations. (This was reported and variously interpreted in the Western press.) But we could and must help the negotiation process, he said. He felt that in the context of negotiation, it would be possible to begin to pull out, but that it should not be precipitate.

The worst of all, he said, was what I had set out as the second option: to take out the regular military and leave behind the Special Forces which operate like the Soviet Spetssnaz. It would be far better to keep the regular army even at the high point it has reached (which is larger than the Soviet force level) than to rely on the Special Forces. The Special Forces are particularly hated by the Afghans, as were the Spetssnaz, and, actually, are responsible for most of the really glaring abuses here. They would ruin what reputation we have left. That would not be good for anyone, Russia included.

I remarked that of course we could not control negotiations. He agreed and said that he thought the Afghans could handle that when they decided that they had to.

Could we not create that condition? I asked. That is, by setting a firm date for withdrawal? That would not undercut our position or marked affect the Taliban strategy. After all, I pointed out, assuming that they are reasonably in touch with the outside world, the Taliban leaders will know that support for continued military action here has dropped to near zero in much of Europe and is in free fall among those Americans who previously were the war’s main advocates. As an example I mentioned the recent Newsweek article by Richard Haass (the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, which I have mentioned above) under the title, “We can’t win and it isn’t worth it.”

What setting a date would do, I argued, would take us to the position he had just mentioned the Russians were careful to create, separating the economic from the military policy. The purpose of what I had in mind, I went on, was to change the “political psychology” of the war. Then, or gradually, village shuras, jirgas or ulus would come to see that the opening of a clinic or building a canal was not a tactic in the war. Rather, it was a benefit to the villagers. They would want those things and would protect them. Then, if the Taliban opposed, they would lose the support of the people. He said that he absolutely agreed with this. “It is the only way.”

I then laid out what I would like to see happen here: the reassertion, with suitable modifications, of the traditional idea of the state. That is, a central government with sufficient military power to protect itself and punish aggression but with most emphasis on the economic and cultural means of integration. For example, using foreign aid, controlled by the central government through something like the American Corps of Engineers to undertake the major infrastructure projects. Under this arrangement, the central government would control foreign affairs including the generation of foreign aid while the provinces would handle their local affairs in accordance with their cultural traditions. Over time their policies would be influenced or swayed by the central government through the offer of opportunities for technical training and education and funding for development projects. Fairly rapidly, I thought, people in the provinces would be attracted to the things the central government could offer. Again, he agreed, saying that is the only real hope for the country.

“One can see,” he amplified my thought, “that we have done far too little on education. There is no point in doing more big projects if the Afghans do not know how to handle them and do not regard them as their own.”

We finally came to an issue on which he thinks we could beneficially cooperate. The Salang Pass through the Hindu Kush mountains needs to be rebuilt. It is the only feasible, economically viable passage between Central Asia and the Indian Subcontinent. It would enable the Afghans to ship their goods more cheaply to the outside world. It also is the supply route for the American army. And, perhaps most important of all, it could be a joint Russian-American project which would both symbolize and effect the transition from the still-remembered Cold War to a new era of peace and stability. I promised to discuss it both with our AID director here and with friends in Washington. I think it could really be the best thing to come out of Afghanistan in many years.

* * *

Sadly, I was not able to see either the former Minister of Finance, Ashraf Ghani, or the current Minister of Finance, Omar Zakhilwal, both of whom are out of the country. Ghani, I am told, really ran Afghanistan for several years until President Karzai became jealous and decided to get rid of him. Zakhilwal, I was told, is not of his caliber but is also an able and intelligent man. As people here said a threat or a promise, I am not sure “next time.”

Always seeking balance in what I was hearing, I arranged to have dinner with the Afghanistan correspondent of The Guardian and The Economist, Jon Boone, and the correspondent for The Times, Jerome Starkey, at a little restaurant with banquets in place of tables and chairs, the Afghan style, called “the Sufi.” I was wary about going there because the name sufi means “woolen” and is applied to that group of Muslims who most closely resemble the mendicant followers of St. Francis of Assisi and they certainly did not care much about the quality of their food! It actually turned out to be a very pleasant place that is, after one passed through a cordon of armed guards and the metal detector — with an Afghanesque seating arrangement on rugs with cushions. But after an hour, I began to feel my legs, tucked up underneath me, grow numb. No longer am I the man who rode a camel across Arabia! I could not be sure quite what I was eating in the dim light, but the food, very Afghan, was very tasty. Anyway, I was not there for the food but to listen to their opinions on the current situation.

Their opinions differed. Boone, an Oxford man who has been here three years, thought that any serious move toward evacuation would throw the country back into civil war while Starkey thought that a descent into civil war much less likely and that, since leaving would happen anyway, it was a good idea to begin negotiation soon. Both agreed that the current government is hopelessly corrupt and not really reformable. Boone placed his hopes on the police, which he thought would take five years to get in shape. He thought parts of the army, particularly the Afghan Special Forces, some of whose officers had been trained at Sand Hurst, were relatively sound, but only in the officer corps. The regular soldiers, he and Starkey agreed, were at best unmotivated and at worst would swing quickly to the Taliban.

Both commented on the massive flight of money, which I have discussed above. Boone remarked that the amount being exported shifted, depending on the Afghan evaluation of the length of the American commitment. He also pointed to an aspect of the Karzai policy I had not been aware of: the government goes into the market place, here literally a market place, once a week and buys up Afghan currency (Afs) with dollars. This has the effect of driving up the price of the local currency, and so enables those who want to take out dollars to buy them more cheaply and giving them a profit even before the money gets abroad. In short, Afghan government financial practice was subsidizing the flight of currency to the benefit of the inner circle and the warlords.

What do the Americans know about this? I asked. Probably everything, both men replied, but this thought led them to comment on the fact that practically no American ever leaves the Embassy compound. That was only in part a criticism as both Boone and Starkey men thought it was probably better that the Americans were less evident because, decked out in their body armor and helmets and surrounded by guards, they were not popular. Both said the most disliked were the Special Forces (aka “Special Ops”) who are believed to carry out at least a thousand raids a month (!) and often with considerable brutality and always with little regard for Afghan customs. Both remarked that until WikiLeaks published some of records, no one even here had any idea about the scale or impact of this intrusion. Both regarded these raids as a major cause of hatred of Americans and a great danger to the American strategy.

My last journalist contact was Joshua Partlow of The Washington Post. He very kindly invited me to his house which he more or less inherited when an attack on the UN guest house induced the UN to make all of its personnel leave outlying houses. The house, by American standards, was modest, but like all the buildings I entered, it mustered its complement of armed guards and the double door entry. As I walked in, I mused on what percentage of our income is today devoted to “security.” Here in Afghanistan, it must just about match the amount paid out in bribes.

As I walked into the living room, I saw a huge double bass in the corner. How wonderful, I thought, for a young reporter way off in the Wild East to have brought this monstrous fiddle with him. What a task that must have been! He must be really devoted to music. When I asked, he laughed and said, no, he did not play and did not even know where the fiddle came from. It was in the house when he moved in, perhaps abandoned by some previous occupant. Now, he said, it was just decoration.

Partlow shared the house with several other people including another Washington Post reporter, David Nakamura and, Victoria Longo, a young woman working at the UN office here. Also joining us for dinner were Keith Shawe, a English botanist who worked for The Asia Foundation, an organization that was already active in Afghanistan when I first came here in 1962, and a young Chinese-American women, fresh from working at the USAID mission in Kandahar.

To my astonishment, Partlow produced a rare bottle of wine, and powered by the unusual event, we went unraveled the Afghan predicament. Of course, that meant going over much the same ground as all my other conversations, violence, corruption, the question of how much or little the official Americans saw or understood of the country, and where this is all heading. In summary, I found that they were just as pessimistic as the better informed of my other contacts. The young Chinese-American woman, Bayfang, had worked as a reporter before joining AID to work in Kandahar. So she had experienced both the freedom of the reporters and the “security” of the officials. She remarked on how hard it was to get permission to go out of the guarded compound where, as in Kabul, all the official Americans lived, and then only in body armor and with guards. No wonder, she said, the Americans could not understand the country. They hardly saw it. The reporters, of course, used local transport, mainly taxis, and usually went by themselves to call on Afghans or foreigners in pursuit of their stories. The evening turned into a sort of college bull session. They were all pessimistic. Things are going down hill.

* * *

Now I have the last and most interesting of all my talks now to relate. Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef was the Taliban’s head of the central bank, deputy minister of finance, acting minister of defense and ambassador to Pakistan. In short, he was one of the most important men in the Taliban establishment. When Pakistan withdrew its recognition of the Taliban government in 2001, he was abducted and packed off to Bagram prison, to another prison in Kandahar and finally to Guantanamo. Among them, as he recounts in his autobiography, My Life With The Taliban, he was humiliated, repeatedly tortured, almost starved, sat upon, spat upon, cursed, almost always deprived of a chance to pray, had his Qur’an sullied and deprived of sleep for days on end. Finally after four years he released in 2005 without charges and allowed to return to Afghanistan. He now lives, more or less under house arrest, in Kabul.

Arranging to see him also brought back memories for me: many years ago in Cairo, I met and got to know Prince Abdul Karim al-Khatabi, the leader of the failed Rif war of liberation against the Spaniards and the French. He too was packed off to exile and held incommunicado by the French during the entire period of World War II. Khatabi’s and Zaeef’s lives and personalities and social background were very different, as were their experiences Prince Abdul Karim was treated with respect whereas Mullah Abdul Salam was tortured — but both were leaders of their national revolts. So, I approached this opportunity with excitement. I thought I could learn a great deal from him.

By taxi, I went to see Mullah Abdul Salam with a translator. It took about an hour to reach his neighborhood. We wandered about for a long time, unable to find the house. The district had been virtually destroyed in the civil war and the area where his house showed all the effects of both war and Afghan poverty. The streets were flanked by the usual open sewers (juis) and almost blocked by rubbish and the remains of collapsed buildings.

When we arrived, I went into the doorway past the usual collection armed guards and up a modest flight of cement steps, then, as custom required, after taking off my shoes, I went into Mullah Abdul Salam’s bare, but sofa-encircled reception room.

Rising, Mullah Abdul Salam greeted me shyly. I was not surprised. After all, I was an unknown American and from his book and the comments of my journalist new friends, I expected that he would be at least wary if not hostile. I wasn’t sure what language we would use so I said to my translator to say how much I had looked forward to meeting him after reading his book. The translator spoke a few words to him, paused and then said, “sir, he wants to speak in English.” Since Pashto is Zaeef’s native language, my Farsi speaking translator was perhaps in as weak a language position as I. So, during our talk, we went back and forth between English and Arabic which, as a religious scholar, he spoke very well.

Mullah Abdul Salam is now 42 years old and was born in a village near Kandahar. His father was the imam of a village mosque and the family, probably even more than any of his farming neighbors, was very poor. His mother died when he was a baby, of what he does not know, perhaps in childbirth. His older sister died shortly thereafter and his father, when he was still a child. As he recounts in his autobiography, his youth was grim. He was shunted from one relative to another and had to struggle for the little education, both religious and secular, he got.

When the Russians invaded in 1979, he joined the great exodus of millions ­ ultimately 6 million or about one Afghan in each two to Pakistan where he lived in several of the wretched refugee camps. At 15, he ran away from “home,” if one can call a refugee tent that, joined the resistance against the Soviet invasion, fought as a guerrilla, was caught in some nine ambushes and was severely wounded. During this time, he joined the Taliban, as he told me, because it was more honest, less brutal and more religious than the other resistance groups. By the time, he joined it, Mullah Muhammad Umar had become the Taliban leader. At the end of the Soviet occupation, the various guerrilla factions split, fought one another and, in the desperate struggle for survival, becoming “warlords,” preyed upon the general population. Meanwhile, the leaders of the Taliban, as he recounted, had stood down or, more accurately, had returned to their schools and mosques. Finally, in reaction to the warlords’ extortions, rapes and murders, the Taliban coalesced and reemerged. Then began a period of negotiation, missionary activity in the name of Islam and finally fighting that led the by-then greatly expanded Taliban into control of most of Afghanistan and catapulted Mullah Abdul Salam into its most difficult civil tasks.

Today, those difficult times, and his even worse years in prison, hardly show. He has just been removed from the UN and US “blacklist,” and now, as I found, lives modestly in Kabul. He is a big man, not fat but portly, with penetrating black eyes and a modest black beard. I was at some pains to establish at least the beginnings of trust between us and must have succeeded because we spoke with some humor (always a good sign) and candor. In our talk, I found no sign of animosity toward me or even, as I expected from his autobiography, toward America and Americans.

After preliminaries, I asked what he saw ahead and how the Afghan tragedy could be solved.

In reply, he said, ” it is very hard to devise a way, but we should know that fighting is not the way. It won’t work. And it has many bad side effects such as dividing the people for the government.”

Given his background I was surprised by his concern for Karzai’s government. But as we talked, it was clear that he was thinking in terms broader than Karzai. He meant that the Afghans must have an accommodation to government, per se, if they are heal their wounds and improve their condition.

The only realistic way ahead, he went on, “is respect for the Afghan people and their way whereas America is now relying wholly on force. Force didn’t work for the British or the Russians and it won’t work for the Americans.”[3] The word “respect” often figured in his remarks, as from my study of Afghanistan and the Arabs and Iranians, I knew it would.

But instead of working toward peace, he said and I paraphrase, America has created obstacles to peace which only it can remove. But here, he said, was a complete block: America has put the Taliban leaders on a black list, a “wanted” list, and they know that they will be killed if they surface to negotiate. Without their removal from the “capture or kill” list and a guarantee of safety from kidnap or murder, they cannot negotiate; trying to make contact with the Karzai regime is sure to get them killed. Perhaps they have even tried. He said that he did not know if Karzai and any of the Taliban leadership were in contact, but under these circumstances, he doubted it.While he admitted (and the Taliban have announced) that he is not authorized to speak for Mullah Muhammad Umar, he thought that the American troops did not need actually to pull out before negotiations could begin. If it was certain that they were going to do so, then negotiations could be got underway. That seemed to contradict some of the Taliban pronouncements, demanding withdrawal before negotiation, but it is, I believe, itself a negotiable issue.

So how do the Taliban see a post-US-controlled Afghanistan? I asked.

He replied that “it all depended on how it comes about. If it comes through negotiation, then probably the Taliban will be content with genuine participation in the government, but if it comes through force, then the Taliban will take everything.”

I asked about what he has been doing since his autobiography was translated. He perhaps did not quite understand my question and said that he was in Guantanamo until he was released. He suddenly asked me how old I am and, when I replied with my august status, he said “good. There was a man in Guantanamo who also was old and he was gentle with me. The younger men were not.”

That brought up the question of the American policy of targeting and killing the leadership. I said that I thought that such actions would open the way for younger, more radical men. Yes, he agreed, that would certainly happen but the senior, “old,” leadership is still intact, living, he said, off somewhere in Pakistan. The usual guess is in the city of Quetta, which historically was a part of Afghanistan.

I turned to the issue of al-Qaida, saying that their activities, their composition and their relationship with the Taliban was what really interested most Americans. He confirmed what the Russian ambassador had told me: Usama bin Ladin was already operating in Afghanistan before the Taliban came into power. Of course, Mullah Abdul Salam said, almost echoing the words of the Russian ambassador, the Taliban needed money and Usama was almost the only available source. All the Afghans, Mullah Abdul Salam emphasized, have the tradition of granting sanctuary (melmastia) to a guest. It is mandatory. Moreover, Usama was the enemy of the enemies of the Taliban. So there was an understanding. But after 2002, he said, “that understanding lapsed, asylum for Usama was withdrawn and the Qaida fighters, including Usama, are no longer in Afghanistan. [American military and intelligence sources have publicly confirmed this.] They will not come back. The Taliban will not allow them to return.”

When Mullah Abdul Salam returned to Afghanistan, he said, he three times met with President Karzai who asked him to participate in the great national assembly, the Loya Jirga. He said he told Karzai that it was not proper to have a Loya Jirga during occupation by foreign forces and urged him not to hold it. He also told Karzai, he said, he personally could not, under the circumstances, participate.

I asked if he saw Americans. Yes, he replied an American general once came to call on him, asking what was the best way to arm Afghans to fight the Taliban.

He didn’t laugh, as I expected he would.

What about the American aid program? I asked. Granting aid, he said, had a bad effect “because it split families. If a man took American money, making him a traitor to Afghanistan and to Islam, his own brother was apt to kill him.” But, I said, in other circumstances would it not be good? “Oh, certainly,” he replied. So, I added, then we must change the circumstances. He nodded.

Musing, he said he was often asked to compare the Russians and the Americans. On the good side, he said, the Russians came by invitation from an existing government whereas the Americans invaded. But, on the bad side, the Russians were far more brutal than the Americans, bombing whole villages, killing perhaps a million people. On their side, he went on, the Americans at least brought the UN with them and that was a good thing for Afghanistan. The Americans, however, were here only in opposition to the Russians and when there was no Russian threat they left. I was surprised by what I inferred was almost nostalgia in his remark. It was nearly what I had heard from Dr. Samar on the role America could have played in 2002.

I then raised the issue of the brutality of the Taliban. I did not mention the recent UN report on the injuries inflicted by the Taliban on Afghan civilians as I am sure he would think that these are inevitable in a guerrilla war. Instead, I raised the issue of the execution by stoning of an Afghan woman. I remarked that such barbaric practice gave a horrible image of the Taliban even though such execution was authorized by both the Old Testament and the Qur’an. But we no longer believed in it. Can the Taliban modernize? I asked.

He shrugged. “What can you expect now? The Taliban are completely isolated, under constant attack, and naturally this throws them back onto old ways. They cannot afford to relax even on such matters.”

I asked about his own religious observance. It being Ramadan, he was of course fasting. I asked if he went to the little mosque I had seen nearby in his capacity as a mullah. Oh no, he said, he was not allowed to for his own safety. That remark also surprised me. Was he afraid of the Taliban? I asked. He rather ducked that question, saying only that he did go to the mosque for the Friday congregational prayer. But, although he did not specify, it was clear that in the circumstances of Afghanistan today, as I saw everywhere I turned, almost anyone of any standing was unsure where danger might arise. Also, the government would not probably not approve his attendance at a place where he might influence the population. Better to pray at home.

He said he has written a second book, also in Pashto, somewhat like his first. The publishers of his autobiography, he said, refused to pay him royalties as he was on the black list. So he asked that they just hold the money, but, in the end, they refused to give him anything. I suggested that he should write an article on how to end the war and plan to contact Rick MacArthur to see if Harpers would be interested.

Abdul Salam has been invited, he said, by the European parliament to visit Europe. But he had not applied for a visa. He said he had only recently been free to do so, and he had to remember that he was a guest in the country and must not do anything that might embarrass his hosts. [WRP: I have discussed elsewhere the limits of refuge and the control of “guests.”]

As I was leaving, he said that he was expecting the German ambassador. And, indeed, as I went out, there were four big armored cars with a dozen or so men armed with wicked looking machine guns, eyeing me suspiciously, and a small group of German diplomats, waiting to go in.

I was amused that they did not even look sheepish when, by myself without armed guards, I walked passed them to my taxi.

William R. Polk
August 24, 2010
Kabul, Afghanistan

Astonishing to hear Senator John Kerry say in an interview with an American news outlet, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty here in Kabul on August 19, “We have to remember that this is the beginning, just the beginning” — after 9 years of war!

The commander of one of the strike forces in southern Afghanistan, Lt. Col. David Flynn, who also served in Iraq, told a reporter from the Mclatchy Newspapers on August 19, “We’ve killed hundreds and thousands of Taliban over nine year, and killing another thousand this year is not going to be the difference.” He thought he had established rapport with the shura in a village called Et Babur, but when he and his men tried to set up an outpost, the villagers led them “off to a remote corner of the village where they’d just faced a sustained Taliban attack.” In short, they were being led into an ambush.

Although not publicized, as Dion Nissenbaum of the Mcclatchy Newspapers wrote on August 19, “American and Afghan forces are methodically targeting Taliban strongholds in southern Afghanistan.”

[1] The Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, Turkmen, Aimaqs, Kirghiz, Nuris, Baluchis and others; no one group is the majority of Afghans. They tend to be grouped in discrete areas, but there is much mixing, particularly here in the capital, but throughout the country. This would make any notion of the division of Afghanistan along ethnic lines either impossible or would cause horrible suffering.

[2] Dostum deserves an Olympic gold medal for opportunism. A leader of the Uzbek people of the North, he fought the Russians, then joined them to fight the insurgents; then he joined the insurgency to fight the Russians; next he joined the Taliban; then he switched sides again to join the anti-Taliban “Northern Alliance” and is infamous for suffocating in steel lift vans in the sweltering summer captured Taliban soldiers. Now for how long? he is a supporter of President Karzai.

[3] I doubt that Mullah Abdul Salam could have heard it, but his opinion was borne out by the commander of one of the US strike forces in southern Afghanistan, Lt. Col. David Flynn, a career officer who also had served in Iraq. He told a reporter from The Mclatchy Newspapers on August 19, “We’ve killed hundreds and thousands of Taliban over nine years, and killing another thousand this year is not going to be the difference.”

A correction from William Polk:

In my account of my short visit to Kabul, I misspoke and gave a wrong impression in three places, and would be grateful if you could print a clarification.
First, while the term “mercenaries” is often applied (as I did) to the guards employed by the American and other embassies, this gives an unintentional pejorative interpretation of them. They are well-trained paid contractors led and carefully supervised by the State Department security service; they are not freewheeling mercenaries in the old-fashioned sense of condottieres. My choice of words was unfair to the people involved.
Secondly, I should have been clearer on the most important point. I inferred from the issue of the leaked cables and particularly the press reaction to the episode that Ambassador Eikenberry had been “dressed down by the White House.” In our talks, Eikenberry made no mention of anything like that. I conflated what I heard and read in the press with our talk. As I went over my notes, I found that Eikenberry had said that Obama had called for a candid assessment but that he was “adamant that after he decided then everyone had to get on board and work to effect his policy. Eikenberry thinks that is now happening better than before both between him and Karzai’s regime and with all the American parties. I certainly hope he is right. I have to say, however, that my time in Kabul still led me to conjure up images of Vietnam.
On the Karzai regime, all Eikenberry said was that Karzai is the elected head of state. Of course, the press has reported its corruption, export of money and other weaknesses, but in our talks Eikenberry was careful not to go into that issue. In fact, he emphasized to me his commitment to his assignment and in my observations of him in meetings with his staff he was, as I wrote, extraordinary in his dedication. Indeed, to the point of working literally around the clock. I watched him and was amazed at his energy and the skill with which he handled a wide variety of people and sensitive issues. I would say that, without doubt, he is one of the two or three most impressive and dedicated ambassadors I have observed over the last half century. And certainly he is the hardest working.
On the same point, I inferred, largely from my talks with the reporters and from statistics, that the situation in Afghanistan is more dire than before. Whether or not this is Eikenberry’s private interpretation I do not know. Certainly in all of his remarks and in his appearance, for example, the talk he gave to a large group of prominent television station owners and reporters, he was most sanguine. What I wrote was, as I am sure you know, the interpretation of the press corps and I mistakenly allowed their impression to sluff over to him. Frankly, I was surprised that he was as encouraged and encouraging as he was. I am not, but that is my interpretation, not his.
I would be grateful if you would put this out as a correction to my “impressions” of Afghanistan.

Somalia & Uganda: Two More Ugandan soldiers dies in fresh fighting with Al-Shabaab in Mogadishu

Reports Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

The semi-official government owned daily the NEWVISION has reported this morning that two Ugandan soldiers were killed on Wednesday in the fresh fighting in Mogadishu between Somali government forces and al-Shabaab Islamist militants.

Army spokesman Felix Kulayigye yesterday said the two peacekeepers were killed while defending the presidential palace.

Independent sources in Mogadishu said the dead included 27-year-old private Ismael (second name withheld). The New Vision could not immediately establish the identity of the other soldier.

The Ugandan soldiers were serving with the AMISOM, the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia.

“The soldiers were blown up in a bomb during a brief exchange with the Somali militants at 4:00pm,” the source narrated yesterday.

Kulayigye said the bodies were expected in the country last night. “We have been clashing with the militants since Monday when al-Shabaab attacked State House. Our soldiers were killed in defence,” he explained.

This latest attack comes just days after al-Shabaab attacked Somali government positions and other establishments guarded by AMISOM.

Ismael hails from a soldiering family in Lima village, Ludara county in Koboko district. His father (name withheld) served in different armies, including the Uganda Army and the National Resistance Army, now UPDF, before he retired at the rank of a sergeant in 1993.

Lima is survived by two wives and three children. He married both wives while on short leave from the peacekeeping mission. His first wife, who bore two children, hails from Bundibugyo district.

Ismael was last at home in 2008 when he married his second wife before returning to Somalia.

“It is a big blow to our family. The last time he came here there was merry-making in the family,” his brother, Ayimani, said on phone yesterday. Ismael was one of the 16 children in his family and the first-born of his mother.

“This boy shared everything he had with his family. When he came on leave from Somalia, he gave some of his earnings to his siblings to start up small businesses and farms,” Ayimani added.

Uganda and Burundi are the only countries which have contributed troops to the African Union peacekeeping mission in the war-torn Somalia.

Fighting in Somalia has killed at least 18,000 people since 2007 and sent hundreds of thousands more fleeing from their homes. Al-Shabaab, believed to have links with al-Qaeda, is fighting to overthrow the newly-established transitional government headed by Sheikh Sharif Ahmed.

On Tuesday, the US promised to step up assistance to the AU forces. The US warned of a growing threat from militants linked to al-Qaeda in Somalia and nearby Yemen. The US military assistance is expected to include additional equipment, training, logistical support and information-sharing, said Gen. William Ward, the commander of the US Africa Command.
There are about 6,300 Ugandan and Burundian troops protecting key sites in Mogadishu. There have been calls for their mandate to be widened to include enforcing the peace. The African Union Summit starting in Kampala soon is expected to discuss the issue.

Ward played down the impact of the recent bombings in Uganda on the resolve of the US to help and African states to send more forces to Somalia.

“At this point, they (troop-contributing nations) remain committed to it. So we take them at their word and we’re hopeful that will be the case.”

Ends

AU & Somalia: Kampala AU summit may broaden AMISOM presence in Somalia

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

THE Africa Union (au) summit due to sit in Kampala plans to give the peace-keeping forces in Somalia a new mandate to enable them confront the Al-Shabaab terrorists.

The AU peace and security commissioner, Ramtane Lamamra, on Monday said the heads of state will consider giving the African Union Mission for Somalia (AMISOM) commanders broader authority when they convene on July 25 at Speke Resort Munyonyo.

“We would certainly give lee way to the forces so that they accomplish their mission in the most comfortable manner. The mission is quite complex, but we are confident in the good people on the ground,” he explained.

In an interview with Voice of Africa, the commissioner said if sufficient logistical support is got, another 2,000 troops will be sent to Somalia by September.

The US, the main AMISOM financial and logistical supporter, last week indicated it would back the proposed buildup.

The summit will also consider raising AMISOM’s strength from 8,000 to 20,000 troops. The forces will include troops from neighbouring countries.

A UN security council resolution had discouraged countries neighbouring Somalia from contributing troops as this could be viewed as part of the problem rather than the solution.

However, experts argue that after the Kampala bombings, there is renewed sense that frontline states such as Ethiopia and Kenya should join AMISOM, arguing that these countries are at a greater risk if Somalia became a base for the Al-Qaeda terrorists.

The Al-Shabaab militants on July 11 carried out twin bombings in Kampala, which they said was retaliation for the Uganda People’s Defence Forces’ deployment in Mogadishu.

President Yoweri Museveni has demanded a change of mandate to enable AMISOM enforce peace in Somalia.

Since Monday, AU commissioners and ambassadors have been holding pre-summit meetings at Munyonyo. Today, the AU executive council will meet ahead of the summit.

Non-AU dignitaries expected include Mexican president Felipe Calderon, Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, and UN secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon.

Ends

East Africa: IGAD is considering sending 2000 fresh troops to Somalia to deal with the terrorists

Security News By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

MEMBER states of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development {IGAD} are reportedly in the process of adopting a hard-line stance towards the Somali based al-Shabaab, which bombed the Ugandan capital Kampala on July 11, killing 7u6 people.

Top security chiefs from the member states this morning {Monday 20thjuly 2010} started a three days crucial security meeting in the Ethiopia capital, Addis Ababa. The meeting is to decide as to which countries will be contributing the troops.

Apart from increasing troops, members of the African Union Commission, which is in charge of the AMISOM has been under heavy pressure to change the mandate from peace-keeping to become peace enforcement, a move that would allow full scale engagement of the AMISOM troops.

After the two bombs exploded in a crowded public joint in Kampala and left 74 people lying dead and scores fatally injured, the Alqaeda backed al-Shabaab Islamist militia in Somalia claimed the responsibility. Two other victims succumbed to their injuries and later died at the Mulago Hospital where they were rushed for treatment, bringing the number of the toll to 76.

In response to the attacks, the IGAD member states which comprises of Uganda, Sudan, Eretria, Kenya, Djibouti, and Ethiopia agreed that 2000 extra peace-keepers should be dispatched immediately to Mogadishu in order to beef up the 6,100 AMISOM troops already on the ground. This will bring the total number of AU soldiers in the horn of Africa nation, which has remained ungovernable for decades to a total 8,100.

“This act of terrorism against innocent Ugandan citizens has only strengthen IGAD member countries resolve to deal with Somalia problem by increasing the number of troops to be stationed there,” IGAD’s Executive Secretary Mahboud Maalim in a telephone interview.

The additional troops will increase the number of IGAD member states soldiers serving under AMISOM to 8,100by the end of next month {August 2010}.

However, the proposed change of the AU peace keeping force to a reinforcement troops in Somalia faces some technical hitch. It requires that the change of the mandate of the AU Commission to seek permission of the UN Security Council, since the AU mission is under the UN and as such any move to have the AMISOM mandate change must get the UN permission.

I a recent interview with the region’s most influential weekly, the EASTAFRICAN, the Amisom’s overall Commander Maj-General Nathan Mugisha maintained that the AU peace keepers I Somalia have succeeded in securing key installations such as the Mogadishu Airport and the Seaport, which are now fully operational as normally as before, and that the force main mission is not to engage in military combat.

“Our job is to create an environment for negotiation and reconciliation. The solution to the Somali problem must be a political one and not military,” Said Gen Mugisha. However, after the attacks in Kampala, pressure to change the AU peace keeping forces mandate is likely to intensify in the near future.

Meanwhile information emerging from the Kenya capital, Nairobi revealed that East Africa’s Defense Chiefs met there last moth and recommended the UN’s ban Somalia’s immediate neighbors from sending peacekeeping troops to that country be lifted.

The UN Resolution 1725 does not allow Somalia’s neighbors like Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya to contribute peace keeping force to beef up the mission. Though for example Djibouti had requested to be allowed to send 450 soldiers to Amisom forces in January this year. It was forced to stop doing so by the UN.

In 2006,Ethiopia with the support of the United States of America, sent troops to Mogadishu to back up the interim government and drive out hardliner Islamists from power. It is this intervention which sparked off insurgency that gave birth to Al-Shabaab after the Ethiopian soldiers pulled out in 2009.

IGAD, which comprises Kenya, Djibouti, Eritrea, Somalia, Sudan and Uganda, is also reportedly planning to push for an increase of troops to Somalia to 20,000,by lobbying African Union members to provide the troops and foreign donors, the necessary funds. The regional body argues it is the only way to stabilize Somalia.

Reports says, some non-IGAD countries have offered to provide troops to AMISOM, but the only problem being availability of funds to sustain the extra troops in Somalia.

At the moment, our plan is to get additional troops comprising ethnic Somalia trained by neighboring countries, IGAD member states and East African Community members states” ,says the executive secretary.

Ends

ICC: OCAMPO turns down Otunnu’s request to prosecute Museveni and UPDF

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

PRESIDENTIAL aspirant Olara Otunnu yesterday failed to convince the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Luis Moreno-Ocampo, that the UPDF and President Yoweri Museveni are partly responsible for war crimes in northern Uganda.

Ocampo instead challenged Otunnu to produce concrete evidence, and not engage in “political debate”.

The two men had earlier met at the Speke Resort Munyonyo near Kampala, the venue of the ongoing ICC review conference, which started earlier this week.

After the meeting, Otunnu called a press conference and said he had asked the ICC to take action and investigate Museveni over crimes committed during the LRA decades-long war in northern Uganda.

“I had a meeting with Moreno Ocampo on his request and I asked him to investigate Mr. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni over crimes against humanity, war crimes, genocide and aggression,” Otunnu told journalists.

He said he was disappointed that the ICC had not investigated Museveni, and that despite his protestation, the State Parties had instead selected Museveni to host the review conference.

“It is a travesty and a mockery of the ICC, that Museveni, who has the longest record of impunity, should be the host of the review. I fear that the ICC risks losing its way if it agrees to be used,” he said.

He said Museveni should be investigated for his role in UPDF operations in the DR Congo in 1998, the deaths in the Kampala riots last September and the creation of IDP camps in northern Uganda over the last two decades.

“I have provided all this information and he (Ocampo) has requested for more. I shall be providing more in regard to the atrocities against the people of northern Uganda and Congo,” he said.

Otunnu’s comments prompted Ocampo to call his own press conference at which he said his investigations had found the “LRA responsible for most atrocities”.

“We selected the gravest cases in northern Uganda and it’s a fact that thousands of these were committed by the LRA. It is clear Joseph Kony committed most of the crimes in northern Uganda.”

He described Otunnu’s remarks as “political debate”. “As the prosecutor of the ICC, my role is to ensure the control of massive crimes with tangible evidence,” Ocampo added.

“If he (Otunnu) has information he wants to submit, let him give it to me but I cannot follow political statements. I follow crimes committed after July 2002, which include crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide,” he said.

Ocampo, however, promised to assess Otunnu’s information, provided the alleged crimes were committed after July 2002 when the court was founded under the Rome Statute.

“If we see need to open new investigations we shall, but I will not be bothered with political debates. We are open to more information,” he said.

Ocampo further said he had received complaints against the UPDF, which he is analysing.
However, most of the issues pre-date 2002, meaning the court cannot handle them. In such a case, Ocampo advised, Otunnu should go to the High Court of Uganda.

He also advised Ugandans to only involve the ICC in cases which they feel the national legal system is inadequate to handle.

Otunnu’s remarks also prompted an impromptu press briefing by the deputy Attorney General, Freddie Ruhindi, who advised Otunnu to report the matter to the Police instead of the press if he had a strong case.
Otunnu is also wanted by the Police for alleging that Museveni funded Kony’s LRA rebels and masterminded the northern Uganda war for over 20 years.

The ICC has already issued arrest warrants for the top LRA commanders including their leader Joseph Kony, Dominc Ongwen, Vincent Otti (now dead) and Okot Odhiambo.

The effort, however, has failed since Kony and his rebels fled to the vast Congo jungles and lately to the Central African Republic, leaving a trail of massacres and devastation.

Ends

UGANDA: PRESIDENT MUSEVENI SAYS HE IS WILLING TO COMPENSATE THE VICTIMS OF JOSEPH KONY’S ATROCITIES IN NORTH

From: Leo Odera Omolo

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has said the Lord’s Resistance Army victims in northern Uganda should be compensated without waiting for the trial of the perpetrators.

“I entirely agree with Prosecutor Ocampo. The LRA victims don’t need to wait for the trial to be assisted,” he said.
Museveni was speaking at the opening of the ICC review conference at the Speke Resort Munyonyo.

Museveni, ICC chief Sang Hyun, Tanzania’s Jakaya Kikwete and UN boss Ban Ki-moon at Munyonyo yesterday

The ICC prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, had earlier called for urgent assistance and compensation for the millions of LRA victims.

He had also called for the integration of development efforts with the work of the court.

Ocampo, however, added that the arrest of Joseph Kony and his fighters should remain the priority.

The ICC has a trust fund which provides victims with support like vocational training, counselling, reconciliation and reconstructive surgery for those maimed by the rebels. Over 40,000 victims from across the world are benefiting from the fund.

In his address, Museveni also called on the ICC member states to make a distinction between just and unjust wars in the Rome Statute.

The statute governs the ICC. “Our contribution to this meeting is to urge you to introduce words that I don’t hear anywhere in the Rome Statute. For us in Uganda, we make a distinction between just and unjust war. I don’t know whether the Rome Statute has this, a definition must be made,” he said.

The Kampala conference is the first opportunity for the State parties to review the statute since its enforcement on July 1, 2002.

The delegates will consider proposals of amendments, including a definition of the crime of aggression.

Museveni said in case a war is deemed to be just, there should also be means used to execute the just cause being pursued. “Do you use terrorist methods like indiscriminate targeting of non-combatants, women and children, and destroying means of sustenance like food? That is what makes a difference between a terrorist and a freedom fighter.”

The President cited the wars by the Africans and Asians against the colonialists as just, but added that hijacking planes carrying women and children would not be a justified means.
He said Uganda had such extra-judicial killings and terrorist methods, adding that over 800,000 people had been killed this way.

A genuine war targets barracks and infrastructure like railways and not hospitals, restaurants and other human settlements, Museveni said.

He chided the ICC for what he called its soft approach, describing their jails as five-star hotels. “In Uganda, we believe in the law of Moses, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. What is good for the goose is also good for the gander. I hear that a five-star hotel is in waiting for Kony.”

“In the last 20 years, we have executed 22 soldiers and another 147 have been condemned to death. That is how we have built one of the most credible and disciplined armies,” he added.

Museveni also said provisional immunity should be considered by the Rome Statue as a way of encouraging peaceful resolutions.

He gave an example of Burundi, where provisional immunity was given to the parties involved in the war as long as they took part in the peace process.

Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said for a long time, the world has gone through a dark chapter, noting that the ICC is one of the noble achievements.

He said the ICC, as the court of the last resort, should endeavour to end impunity and its actions should be a deterrent for the perpetual actors in wars. Kikwete noted that aggression as a crime would help eliminate the culture of impunity and guarantee accountability.

“We as African Union leaders have set a pace in fighting impunity. We reiterate our commitment to work hand in hand with the court to ensure it prevails,” he said.

Ends

USA & Uganda: Obama ‘s signing of the law to help Uganda fight rebels most welcome

Report By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

US President Barack Obama on Monday signed a law aimed at helping Uganda and its neighbours fight Joseph Kony and his Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebels.

According to a White House press statement, Obama called the LRA rebels “an affront to human dignity that must be stopped”.

“The legislation crystallises the commitment of the US to help bring an end to the brutality and destruction that have been a hallmark of the LRA across several countries for two decades,” he said in a statement.

The law requires the Obama administration to develop a comprehensive strategy with regional governments for dealing with the rebels, including steps to protect the civilian population, provide humanitarian assistance, apprehend the LRA leaders and disarm its followers within six months.

The legislation was introduced by US senators Russ Feingold and Sam Brownback and supported by the Republicans and Democrats, as well as humanitarian and human rights groups.

The LRA is considered a global terrorist group by the US, which has been providing logistical support to the Ugandan army.

The Government yesterday welcomed the move and implored the US to implement the law as soon as possible to stop the ongoing killings by the rebels in the Central African Republic (CAR) and the DR Congo.

“We hope the US puts it (the law) into practice by providing intelligence services, equipment and logistics,” said international affairs minister, Okello Oryem.

The Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act of 2009 is designed to provide humanitarian aid to Uganda and neighbouring states to support regional efforts to end the conflict and bring LRA leaders to justice.

The law states that for over two decades, the rebels used brutal tactics in northern Uganda, including mutilating, abducting and rape. It adds that the LRA have abducted about 66,000 people.

LRA leader Joseph Kony and two of his deputies, Okot Odhiambo and Dominic Ongwen, are wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.

Representatives of the Government of Uganda and the LRA began peace negotiations in 2006, mediated by the Government of Southern Sudan.

But the talks failed when Kony refused to turn up for the signing of the final peace agreement in May 2008.
His forces have since launched attacks in the DR Congo and CAR.

In December 2008, the Ugandan army and those of the DR Congo and Southern Sudan launched a joint operation against the rebels.

However, the armies failed to apprehend Kony, and his forces retaliated with a series of new attacks, killing about 900 people in two months.

The US military’s African command, Africom, continues to give communication, logistical and intelligence support to the UPDF in its military operations against Kony’s rebel groups.

Ends

UGANDA: THE EU AND UGANDAN MILITARY FORCES ARE JOINTLY TRAINING SOMALI TRANSITIONAL GOVERNMENT SOLDIERS

Reports Leo odera Omolo In Kisumu City

THE European Union (EU) and the UPDF will train 2,000 Somali forces. The EU head of delegation, Vincent de Visscher, announced yesterday that 150 EU officers will conduct the training at Bihanga Camp in Ibanda district.

The commander of the EU Training Mission to Somalia (EUTM), Col. Gonzalez Elul, said the recruits will be trained to counter mines and improvised explosive devices.

He said they will also undergo training in communication, combat operations and trainer of trainers’ courses.

Each session, Elul explained, will have 1,000 trainees, 330 of them non-commission officers at junior management level and 670 fresh recruits. EUTM began flying in the trainees in groups of 250 yesterday.

“Our aim it to have a smooth transition in Somalia. It’s important that we link security to development,” De Visscher said

The commander of the land forces, Lt. Gen. Katumba Wamala, welcomed the EU’s involvement in the mission.

He said the Somalia mission is achievable if the troops are raised to the required 8,000.

The general said the three years the UPDF has spent in Somalia disapproved those who thought the peacekeepers would be routed on landing in Mogadishu.

“I appeal to those countries which said, ‘lets wait and see’ to deploy in Somalia.”

Katumba noted that Somalis can only be helped to restore stability through intervention.

“Many people in Somalia want to see peace. They wanted it yesterday. This wish is held hostage by a few armed militants,” Katumba said.

“If the Somalia government doesn’t have the capacity to run after these rag-tag gangs with guns, then it will not be able to implement its programmes.”

Asked whether the AMISOM peacekeepers would demand a change of mandate to confront militants, Katumba said the troops are only allowed to defend themselves when attacked.

Asked about fears that the trainees could defect to join the Al-Qaeda-backed Al-Shaabab, Katumba explained that after the training, they would be armed, fed, earn a stipend and on landing in Somalia would undergo mentoring to help them stay focused to ‘rebuilding Somalia.”

The political adviser to the EUTM, Patrick Geysen, said the training is part of the wider global engagement in Somalia.

“Piracy is a problem on the Somalia coast. Ships that were bringing humanitarian aid to Somalia were attacked. We had to ensure that aid coming to Somalia reaches the right people,” he said.

UPDF has in the past trained 1,200 security forces, including police, for Somalia.

The Somalia Transitional Federal Government President, Sheikh Ahmed Sharif, last month passed out 627 Somali and 120 UPDF soldiers at Bihanga training school in Ibanda district.

Sharif and President Yoweri Museveni last year passed out 500 Somali soldiers,also trained at Burahanga.

Ends

USA: Re: Press Release: World Religious Leaders Condemn Terrorism at Baku Summit

forwarded by lattif shaban

— Dr. William F. Vendley wrote:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:

Ms. Andrea Louie, Religions for Peace
New York, USA
Tel: (+1) 212-687-2163
alouie@religionsforpeace.org

Senior Religious Leaders of Different Faiths
Condemn Terrorism and Misuse of Religion

—World Council Co-Presidents from Religions for Peace are among delegates from 32 countries at Baku interfaith Summit —

(NEW YORK, 29 April 2010)—Co-Presidents from the World Council of Religions for Peace, the world’s largest and most representative multi-religious coalition, were among the senior religious leaders from 32 countries who this week condemned terrorism and any attempts to use religion for destructive purposes.

The senior religious leaders from Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Hindu, and Muslim faith traditions were attending the World Summit of Religious Leaders on 26–27 April 2010, in Baku, Azerbaijan. The religious leaders spoke about their concern regarding extremism, terrorist acts, the use of weapons of mass destruction, human rights violations, and drug abuse.

Among those present providing leadership to Religions for Peace were Co-Presidents of its World Council: H.E. Prof. Dr. Ali Bardako?lu, President, Presidency of Religious Affairs, Turkey; His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch of All Armenians, Armenian Apostolic Church; and The Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky, Director of External Affairs, Orthodox Church in America and Moderator of Religions for Peace. One of the conveners of the summit was His Holiness Kirill I, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, and a former Religions for Peace Co-President.

“People who sow death and destruction attempt to use religious slogans to conceal their objectives,” the religious leaders said in a statement. “In present conditions, the cooperation of traditional religious communities becomes more and more vital. The responsibility for the future of the world motivates us to declare together that compromises in the choice between sin and goodness are inadmissible and to stand together against egoism, violence and enmity.”

A full text of the Baku statement may be found here.
http://religionsforpeace.org/news/press/press-release-world-summit.html

The Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky’s remarks at the summit are below.

—###—

Greeting to the World Summit of Religious Leaders

Baku, Azerbajan

26-27 April 2010

The Very Reverend Leonid Kishkovsky
Moderator
Religions for Peace

On behalf of Religions for Peace, I bring greetings to the organizers and participants of the World Summit of Religious Leaders. The initiative of His Holiness Patriarch KIRILL of Moscow and All Russia and His Eminence Sheikh-ul-Islam Allahshukur Pashazadeh, Chairman of the Caucasus Muslim Board and Chief of the Advisory Council of the Commonwealth of Independent States, taken in the framework of the Interfaith Council of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), is an important, valuable, and timely initiative. Its significance goes far beyond the Caucasus region and beyond the Commonwealth of Independent States. The World Summit has a global importance. Its voice will be heard globally.

Religions for Peace, as a global alliance and fellowship of religious communities and inter-religious councils stands in solidarity with the Interfaith Council of the CIS, which is a most valuable partner in the Religions for Peace alliance.

As we reflect on the theme of “Globalization, Religion, Traditional Values,” we seek to articulate and to put into action the religious, spiritual, and moral resources of the great religious traditions in the context of the challenges of our time.

Globalization sometimes is understood – or rather misunderstood – as a process which leads to the blending of faiths and religious traditions. Such blending would violate the integrity of the religious traditions, depriving them of their spiritual power. It is the calling of each religious community to affirm the fullness of its faith. It is also the callling of each religious community to respect the other religious communities. Adherence to these two principles is necessary in order to achieve the collaboration of religious communities in building a peaceful and just world.

There is power and effectiveness in multi-religious collaboration. Together, we can accomplish far more than any one of us can accomplish alone. Multi-religious cooperation for peace can in many situations be more powerful – both symbolically and substantively – than the efforts of individual religious groups acting alone. The witness to peace and to the overcoming of fear, hostility, and violence is always made stronger when religious communities of different faiths act together.

The symbolic strength arises when multi-religious cooperation helps to prevent or stop conflicts that can – directly or indirectly – involve different religious communities. Symbolic actions by religious leaders can open the way to reconciliation and peace.

The substantive strength arises when cooperation helps diverse religious communities to address common challenges together, offers them creative ways to take advantage of their different strengths, and positions them for partnerships with others.

In each religious tradition there are teachings and narratives which mandate respect and love for one’sneighbor. This respect and love extend to persons and communities beyond each religious, national ,or ethnic circle. The teaching to respect and love the “other” is not a suggestion or option, it is a radical commandment and a mandate for action.

Meetings, conferences; and indeed, this World Summit of Religious Leaders, are not only words. They are events and actions which build trust, and which strengthen the voices of communities of faith. Religion is often enough co-opted, even manipulated and high-jacked, for political purposes and malevolent ends. Inter-religious collaboration helps to resist this cooptation and manipulation, helps to protect the integrity of religious communities and the authenticity of religious faith and action.

Religious communities and states and their governments have different and quite distinct identities, mandates, and capacities. Cooperation between them should respect these differences, even as it helps us all to build the peace for which our hearts hunger.

Religious faith and religious communities can translate the moral imperative of love of the neighbor into a political vision of “shared security.” Today, my security depends on your security. If you are vulnerable and insecure, I am also vulnerable and insecure. This is not only an insight into the personal dimension of the human condition. It is also applicable to states and nations and societies.

The global family of religious communities in the framework of the World Conference of Religions for Peace welcomes and affirms this World Summit of Religious Leaders. The initiative in convening the World Summit in Baku is an important stage in the journey – the pilgrimage – of religious leaders and religious communities towards deeper dialogue, mutual trust, and common action for peace.

RELIGIONS FOR PEACE—the world’s largest and most representative multi-religious coalition—advances common action among the world’s religious communities for peace. Religions for Peace works to transform violent conflict, advance human development, promote just and harmonious societies, and protect the earth. The global Religions for Peace network comprises a World Council of senior religious leaders from all regions of the world; six regional inter-religious bodies and more than seventy national ones; and the Global Women of Faith Network and Global Youth Network.

777 United Nations Plaza | New York, NY 10017 USA | Tel: +1 212-687-2163 | Fax: +1 212-983-0098 | www.religionsforpeace.org

Kenya, African Union: Human Rights Watch accuses Kenya and AU of fueling Somali conflict

Folks,

Why would Kenya be involved in this kind of mess? Who is behind this?

Whats up? Kenya Government should investigate. This is worrisome.

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – – –

Group accuses Kenya of fueling Somali conflict

A new report has accused the Kenyan government and African Union (AU)…

By Agencies

A new report has accused the Kenyan government and African Union (AU) forces of engaging of facilitating ‘illegal’ activities relating to decades long conflict in the lawless Somalia.

The latest report by Human Rights Watch accuses Kenyan government officials of directly co-operating with Somalia government military recruiters who conducted “a massive drive” in the Dadaab refugee camps last year, the report says. The report says the recruitment aided by Kenyan authorities was carried out under “false pretences”. It cites numerous sources who say the recruiters lied to potential conscripts about payments and told teenagers to falsely state they were adults in order for them to join government forces. The new report says the role of Kenya in recruiting Dadaab residents to fight inside Somalia violates humanitarian principles and refugee law on which they are based.

The rights group calls on the Kenyan government to acknowledge that the recruitment effort was “unlawful.” The African Union Mission in Somalia, made up of 5,300 Ugandan and Burundian troops, has conducted “numerous mortar attacks against enemy forces in densely populated areas of Mogadishu without regard for the civilian population, causing a high loss of civilian life and property,” the report says. And according to the report, the laws of war prohibit attacks that are indiscriminate. The report points out that in launching their own mortar shells from civilian areas, Islamist insurgents appear to be encouraging indiscriminate counter-attacks that “would kill civilians and thereby generate useful propaganda.” Human Rights Watch urges the US government to stop supplying mortars and shells to the Transitional Federal Government until the TFG respects the laws of war.

The report further suggests that Washington, the United Nations and African Union must stop turning a blind eye to their allies’ abuses on the ground. By strongly supporting the TFG, these outside interests often play a “counter-productive” role in Somalia, Human Rights Watch observes. Many analysts find it “simplistic” to base policy on the view that the TFG represents a real chance at peace and good governance for Somalia, while al-Shabaab is the potential leading edge of international terrorism in the region,” the report states. “The TFG remains a weak faction,” Human Rights Watch observes. And while some al-Shabaab leaders do have ties to al-Qaeda, the Islamist insurgency in Somalia is “far from a monolithic tool of Osama bin Laden.” This came after reports that the UU-backed TFG in Somalia and its Kenyan allies have recruited hundreds of Somali refugees, including children, to fight in a war against al-Shabab, an Islamist militia linked to al-Qaeda, according to former recruits, their relatives and community leaders. Many of the recruits were taken from the sprawling Dadaab refugee camps in northeastern Kenya, which borders Somalia.

Somali government recruiters and Kenyan soldiers came to the camps late last year, promising refugees as much as $600 a month to join a force advertised as supported by the United Nations or the United States, the former recruits and their families said. Across this region, children and young men are reportedly vanishing as all sides in Somalia’s conflict continue to recruit desperate refugees to fight in a remote battleground in the global war on terrorism from which they fled, community leaders say. It is unclear whether recruiting by the governments of Kenya and Somalia is really ongoing. However, according to reports, their military officers continue to train refugees at a heavily guarded base near the northern Kenyan town of Isiolo as the Somali government prepares for a long-planned offensive against the Shabab. A second camp is in Manyani, a training station for the Kenya Wildlife Service in southern Kenya, according to former recruits, relatives, community leaders and UN investigators. The Kenyan government has acknowledged that it is helping train police officers for Somalia’s weak interim government but said that the recruits were flown in from Mogadishu.

But another recent UN report on Somalia early this year insisted that recruitment of refugees, including underage youths, for military training was going on. Kenya’s training program, the report said, is a violation of a UN arms embargo, which requires nations to get permission from the UN Security Council before assisting Somalia’s security efforts.

Sudan is supporting LRA rebels fighting Ugandan government, claims captured rebel

THE SUDAN GOVERNMENT SUFFERED A MAJOR SETBACK WHEN A CAPTURED LRA REBEL CLAIMED THAT KHARTOUM IS SUPPORTING THEM WITH LOGISTICS AND TRAINING.
Reports Leo Odera Omolo in KIsumu City

Kulayigye listening to captured LRA boss Okello

Kulayigye listening to captured LRA boss Okello addressing journalists in Kampala yesterday

A captured LRA commander has told the Ugandan military officials that the Sudan government is support the rebel fighting to oust the elected Uganda government of President Yoweri Musevgeni, the semi-government-owned NEWVISION reported this morning.

THE Sudan government is in touch with the Lord’s Resistance Army command and has given the rebels fresh supplies of food and medicines, a captured commander has said.

The LRA political commissar, Okello ‘Mission’, told journalists in Kampala that he was part of the LRA team that trekked to the Darfur region in Sudan where they met officers of the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) on October 4, 2009.

He said their delegation was led by Caesar Acellam and they met with the SAF brigade commander in Darfur, Col. Hamdou, and an un-named lieutenant colonel said to be the regional chief of intelligence.

He said Khartoum solicited for the meeting.

“The subject of the discussion was to resume the partnership with the government of Sudan,” Okello Mission said.
He first narrated that the SAF commanders told them they were welcome to Darfur as long as they disarmed.

When pressed, he said SAF promised to give the LRA a “safe corridor” to central Sudan, as well as food and medicines.

The Khartoum government has been denying reports that the LRA is in Darfur or that Sudan is still supporting the rebels.

“These claims are merely irresponsible accusations, disinformation and propaganda against Sudan,” the Sudanese embassy said in a statement last month.

“In his recent visits to South Sudan, President Omar el-Bashir made it very clear that Kony will not be given refuge inside the country. He vowed to arrest him if he entered Sudan territory and hand him over to Uganda,” it added.

Army spokesman Felix Kulayigye yesterday said the Government takes Okello’s statements seriously but they would be addressed at state level.

He said Okello confirmed earlier intelligence information that the LRA group met Khartoum officials in Darfur.

The LRA has been under military pressure from the joint operation by the armies of Uganda, Congo, Southern Sudan and the Central African Republic.

The combined air raids and infantry assault on the LRA bases in the densely populated Garamba forest in eastern Congo in December 2008 sent the rebels in disarray.

They have been oscillating between Congo, Southern Sudan and the Central African Republic. Many commanders were killed, captured, or surrendered.

Okello Mission, 30, was captured by UPDF soldiers at Ezo in Southern Sudan after a brief shoot-out in the evening of March 31. Okello was in a unit of 10 rebels, led by Felly Otimi, an escort to LRA leader Joseph Kony.

He graduated from Makerere University in 2004 with a bachelor’s degree in computer science and joined the LRA as a peace negotiator in 2006. A relative of Kony, he hails from Lalogi in Gulu district and holds a Democratic Party (DP) membership card.

He joined the Juba peace talks at the same time with Santa Okot, Peter Obina, Yusuf Adek and Quinto Kidega. He said he remained with the rebels to explain the draft final peace agreement to Kony.

Okello told journalists at the CMI headquarters in Kitante that he sacrificed himself for the sake of peace, adding that the Government was aware of his mission.

He said he volunteered to go to Kony after President Museveni raised concerns that people in the diaspora claiming to speak for LRA were out of touch with reality.

“I was arrested on March 31 when I was assigned to convey a message to the Government requesting for (the resumption of) peace talks,” he argued.

However, Kulayigye refuted the story, saying Okello would be charged with treason.

“The man faces prosecution since he joined the LRA voluntarily. He launched war on a legally elected government,” he remarked.

Okello described the multi-pronged attack by the regional armies on LRA as the day he thought he would die. “It was my first time to see air strikes. The whole sky was full of gunships.”

Asked about the Christmas massacres conducted by the LRA in Congo in the aftermath of the attacks, Okello said Kony was avenging the onslaught on them.

He described life in the bush as horrific. “I did not expect I would ever live such a life. It’s too painful. You walk from morning to sunset. You get problems like knee pain. We fed on wild fruits.”

Asked about the whereabouts of the LRA leader, Okello said Kony was in eastern Congo with his army commander, Okot Odhiambo. He estimates the number of fighters left at 200.

The army yesterday also paraded ‘Second Lieutenant’ Geoffrey Okello, ‘Sergeant’ Geoffrey Okonga and ‘Captain’ Jasper Moroto who surrendered on March 16 in DRC.

They reported to the UPDF with three guns and an abducted girl, Agnes Amune, who came back with two children.

Okonga is the son of Yusuf Adeke, a member of the LRA peace team who the army described as “a big LRA collaborator in the north”.

Okonga, 23, said he was taken to Garamba in April 2007 by his father, purportedly for a mental ailment which only Kony could treat.

He said he was supposed to come back to Uganda but his return was overtaken by the launch of Operation Lightning Thunder.

“The chairman (Kony) told me since they have launched an operation on him, I should stay and do duties he would assign me,” Okonga recalled.
He said he was trained to shoot a gun and later given a weapon which he said was to protect himself from enemies.

“I left because I didn’t go there for any job. I went to get healed,” he pleaded. Okonga, who had just finished his ‘O’ Level classes at Kitgum High School, said.All the LRA fighters go through rituals to protect them while fighting.

Ends

Press Statement by Truth Be Told Network on Behalf of Families of victims and survivors of Wagalla Masacre

Press Statement by Truth Be Told Network on
Behalf of Families of victims and survivors of Wagalla Masacre
25 Years of Wagalla Massacre

It is exactly 25 years since the Wagalla Massacre occurred. Wagalla Massacre was a crime of genocidal proportions in which the Kenya security forces killed more than three thousand members of a small Somali clan in Wajir District. Wagalla Massacre was preceded by the Burning of Garissa and the killings in Malka Marri in Garissa and Mandera respectively.

This anniversary is being marked all over the world with processions in front of Kenyan High Commission in Canada, processions in Wajir and media events all over the world. The families of victims and survivors of the Wagalla Massacre are gathering in various localities marking this day.

The victims and survivors of Wagalla Massacre have been seeking justice from the Kenyan authorities for twenty five years now and no one has responded to their cries. There have been public petitions with more than 10,000 signatures presented to the Attorney General on two occasions in 2003 and 2004 and informal requests have been made through various channels which have failed to attract the attention of the Kenyan Authorities to accord justice to the victims. A court case has been instituted by the survivors of Wagalla Massacre in 2004 and which has only been heard three times in seven years despite the modest nature of the prayers sought from the court.

The families of victims and survivors of Wagalla Massacre once again appeal to the Kenya government to appoint a judicial commission of inquiry to carry out an inquest into events surrounding the Wagalla Massacre, unearth the truth and provide reparations to the people affected. The families of victims and survivors of Wagalla Massacre believe that despite the fresh appeals at this point, all legal and political avenues for settlement have now been effectively exhausted to resolve the Wagalla Massacre in Kenya. We have therefore instructed our lawyers to file the case at the African Commission on Human and People’s rights (ACHPR). We believe the ACHPR will provide a better forum for the victims of Wagalla Massacre to present their case and get a chance to be heard. Other avenues are also being discussed at this point and will be communicated once a decision is reached.

The families of survivors and victims of Wagalla Massacre believe that the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) lacks both credibility and capacity to take on the Wagalla Massacre. The TJRC as constituted and chaired by Ambassador Bethuel Kiplagat suffers from lack of credibility because there is conclusive evidence that the chair attended a security meeting at Wajir District Commissioner’s Office on 8th February 1984 along with highly placed civil servants and military commanders. This was a day before the military operation that led to the death of more than 3000 people began. The TJRC also suffers capacity problem because they will not have the mandate to handle issues of genocide which Wagalla Massacre and other killings in Northern Kenya falls under. We therefore call upon the TJRC to disqualify itself from dealing with issues of genocide in Northern Kenya in the last 46 years.

Signed:
Salah Abdi Sheikh
Truth Be Told Network (TBT)
On behalf of the Families of victims and survivors of Wagalla Massacre

Copied to:
Hon. Mohamed Ibrahim Elmi MP
Hon. Gitobu Imanyara MP

Uganda beefs up security on the disputed Migingo Island

FRESH ROW HAS ERUPTED BETWEEN KENYA AND UGANDA OVER KAMPALA’S REINFORCEMENT OF MORE SECURITY PATROL PERSONNEL ON MIGINGO ISLAND IN LAKE VICTORIA

News Analysis By Leo OIdera Omolo.

Fresh diplomatic row is in the offing, following claims that Uganda has brought aboard on the disputed Migingo Island 17 more new marine police officers, to reinforce the contingent which has been there for the last twenty months.
Thre Ugandans are said to be demanding payment of Kshs 500 per day from each Kenyan fishing boat operating on the island. The money is said to be a levy payment for security patrolling, to meet the fuel cost and other overhead expenses incurred by the Ugandan authorities.

Preliminary research revealed that Kenyan fishermen have about 200 or slightly more fishing boats stationed on the disputed island. If all are made to pay Kshs 500 per day, the Uganda revenue authority would mint close to Kshs 120,000 per day in revenue collection from this island, which Kenyan fishermen believe and view as part and parcel of Kenya.
The disputed island is said to be rich in fish, especially the economically important Nile perch.

Statistics made available to us show that Kenyan fishermen are landing between 10 and 12 tons of Nile perch on the island on a daily basis, which when translated into cash money, according to the current high prices of fish, is amounting to over Kshs One million per day.

The bulk of the catches are transported overland to the mainland fish processing plants in Kisumu, Migori, Homa-Bay, Nairobi and Mombasa,and for eventual exports of fishing fillets to European Union countries, Middle East, Japan, Israel and the US.

Ugandan fish merchants are also making purchases and transporting their catches to Kampala for the processing plants, sparking cutthroat business competition for the Lake Victoria resources by the two countries.

The Ugandan marine police based on Migingo Island have told Kenya fishermen that they either pay for the levy charged or they will be forcefully evicted from the disputed fishing island.

This harsh directive issued by Ugandan marine police prompted a group of fishermen to travel to Nyatike District Commissioner’s Office early this week where they sought to know whether Migingo Island is in Kenya territorial waters or in a foreign country. The fishermen said they were tired with the consistent harassment and extortion by the Ugandan security personnel.

Dispute over the ownership of the one acre rocky island was the subject of intensive diplomatic thaw between the two countries, and even at one time posed a serious threat to the existence of the much touted East African Community {EAC}.

However, the tension was calmed down when the two countries agreed to establish a joint survey work, by teams of experts from the two sister states of the EAC. The survey work was to look into century old records of the British colonialists. But somewhere in the midway, the Uganda’s team of surveyors abruptly walked out of the work, saying it needed to consult Kampala before resuming its work.

The joint survey was to cost a colossal amount of Kshs 240 million. Each country had agreed to contribute half of the required amount. The Kenyan team continued with its work and completed its side, but the report is yet to be made public. The two teams of surveyors are supposed to compared their notes and agree in principles. But the issue seems to be lingering for too long, before the much awaited landmark decision is made public.

Historically, Ugandan authorities have so far annexed eight islands inside Lake Victoria, which were previously part of Kenya. In early 1970s Field Marshall Idi Amin Dada seized Sigulu Island, the largest and most important of all the islands, with a population of close to 10,000, mainly of Banyala [Luhyia origin} and others from Suba region, particularly from the twin islands of Rusinga and Mfangano, and Luo residents, mainly from locations like Sakwa Bondo, Uyoma and Yimbo locations.

Sigulu is rich with fertile and productive land, indigenous trees, some of them as old as over 100 years, which carpentry artisans used as timber for the construction of durable fishing boats, particularly “MvuleTree’ that soaks in water like rubber.

The Kenyan residents of Sigulu have since the early 1970s became naturalized Ugandan citizen, and have their representatives in Ugandan Parliament as well as in other local authorities in Samia Bugwe and Bugiri districts of Eastern Uganda. The Kenyan government, then led by the founding President, the late Jomo Kenyatta, did not lodge any diplomatic protest, and the matter went quietly like that. The seizure of Sigulu has since divided many Banyala people into two countries, with some of the kin remaining at Port Victoria on the Kenyan mainland, while half of their families became Ugandan citizen against their wishes.

The former Budalangi MP and long serving cabinet Minister, Hon James Osogo was the only lone voice that protested against the annexation of Sigulu Island by the Ugandan authorities, but he received no backing and support from his fellow Luhyias and other Kenyan MPs during those days of KANU regime.

Kenyan fishermen claim to have lost million of shillings to the Uganda officers, who have been patrolling the controversial fishing island ever since 2004. They have lost fishing gears like outboard engines, fishing nets, boats and catches. The petty kiosks and small shops traders claim to have lost goods, either confiscated or consumed by Ugandan security men without paying any cent to the traders.

Last year a Ugandan policeman shot and seriously wounded a Kenyan fisherman, who was involved in a fight with a fellow Ugandan fishermen, and the Kenyan survived as he was rushed for treatment on the mainland at a hospital in Muhuru Bay.
If Kenyan fishermen are forced out of Migingo Island, some of the fish processing plants in Kenya will closed down with the loss of hundreds of jobs, and money in foreign exchange earnings. The country is minting close to Kshs 8 billion mainly from export of fish in foreign exchange earnings.

Ends
leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

UN body warns Africa of the impending conflicts over the scarce water resources

UNDP WARNS AFRICA ABOUT THE IMPENDING DANGER OF ARMED CONFLICTS IN SOME FLASHPOINT OF THE CONTINENT FOLLOWING SCARCITY OF WATER RESOURCES.

Environmental Features By Leo Odera Omolo.

A UN body has predicted that the main conflicts in Africa during the next 25 years will be over the scarcity of water, as countries are likely to wage war against each other for access to the scarce resources.

The United Nations Development Programe {UNDP} says in a study just released at the turn of the century that water wars are likely in areas where rivers and lakes are shared by more than one country.

The inter-play of climate change, indiscriminate destruction of forests, poor agriculture techniques, and runaway population growth has worked against the continent’s once abundant water resources.

Africa has 63 international river basins that collectively cover 64 per cent of its surface area. They contain over 90 per cent of its surface water resources.

Most of these rivers are shared by two to four countries. Some are shared by many more, like the Congo river{1} and the Niger river {10}, Lake Chad and Zambezi River {8}. There are also many smaller shared basins.

The problem is complicated by the fact that trans -boundary river system are endoergic, they do not terminate in the Ocean. Rather, they flow into low-lying inland areas. Endoergic system in drier environment are considered the socio-economic lifeline of communities living in low lying areas.

The United Nations Environmental Program {UNEP} cites the saline or alkaline basins of Lake Chad, Lake Natron, and Lake Turkana ,and the fresh water Okavango-Makgadikadi and Cuvelai basins, as water systems in danger of failing.

At the same time Lake Turkana in Northern Kenya will soon be the scene of a major conflict in the near future, environmentalists, have warned.

Ten years ago, the then Egyptian Foreign Ministe,r Boutros Boutros-Ghali had predicted that the next major world war in Africa would be over the scrambles for water.

Now water diplomacy is starting to take center-stage in African, and globally. Experts are tracing fights over water rights and shortage as the root cause of many civil conflicts on the continent over the past three decades.

The influential weekly, the EASTAFRICAN reported in its latest edition that “As Kenya and Ethiopia enter series of deals on electricity generation and supply, the livelihood of close to 200,000 people is threatened. These people have for centuries depended on a lake that is fed by rivers threatened by a giant hydroelectric power project in Ethiopia.

The Gilgel Gibe 111 hydroelectric dam, which at a cost of USD 1,7 billion, will be one of the largest in Africa, is already causing concern among environmentalists and the local communities living around the Lake Turkana in Northern Kenya.

Opponents of the project says it will destroy the livelihood of thousands of people, especially the nomadic Turkana and Rendile communities, as well as the smallest tribe in Kenya, the El-Molo, that depend entirely on the fish of Lake Turkana.

Situated on the Omo River Valley, the dam is expected to have a mammoth reservoir that will hold thousands of cubic meters of water. The environmentalists and locals believed this will interfere with the livelihood of these tribes.

The other flashpoints across Africa that the UNEP and UNDP have cited include the Nile, Niger, Volta and Zambezi basins.
The UNDP report says population growth and economic development will lead to nearly one in two people in Africa living in countries facing water scarcity, and water stress in 25 years. Water scarcity is defined as less than 1,000 cubic meters of water available per person per year, while water stress means less than 1,500cubic meters per year.

According to UNDP, by the year 2025, 12 more African countries will join the 13 that already suffer from water stress or water scarcity.

“Water disputes in Africa revolve around one or more of three issues; quantity, quality and timing. These play out differently on various scales, whether international, intra-nationality, regionally or indirectly, “says the UNDP funded study report titled “Hydro political Vulnerability and Reliance Along International water in Africa.”

The Nile Basin, which encompasses nine countries –including Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, has been mentioned area potential source of conflict because of the high number of people who depend on it.

For example, if the combined population of just three countries –Ethiopia, Egypt, and Sudan- through which the Nile runs, rises as predicted from 150 million people today to 340 million in 2050, there will be intense pressure, which could easily spill over into war. This is according to the EASTAFRICAN weekly. Sudan, Ethiopia, and Eritrea are among the Nile Basin states that are most vulnerable to climate variation.

The amount of water left when the Nile water has also been drastically declining is also proof that the up take along its course is rising. In case water levels reduces drastically Egypt, being at the lower end of the Nile River will be most affected.

Ends

The Case of Two U.S. professors Meddling with Kenyan’s Genocide Case at the Hague

Folks,

First of all, the title of this news report is wrong……not all Americans are out to stop Ocampo….it is the known two dons, professors we read about …..which now brings very interesting questions………

Why would these Professors be interested to stop Ocampo and, Where were they at the initial stage…..Whose interest are they serving……Which category of mandate gives them access. What basis do they lay their grounds to stop Ocampo……..lastly Who invited them?

….or in who is who, Who are they hobbledehoy pompey of Kenya ? ? ? .

Who are their clients?……These two Professors are a big joker …… they have no idea how much Kenyans have suffered, they have no clue how our feet burned in dry cold winter of Washington DC, when we paraded demonstrating to bring calm – they are not even Citizens
of Kenya, their mothers were not hacked to death nor raped. What are they trying to do?

Before they go to Hague, they should stop their Mickey Mouse and Frog Hops and come clean publicly first, tell us who they are in this drama, what is their interest in the Kenya’s quagmire, lets know their Agenda, then tell us what they mean by this their going to Hague to stop Ocampo.

Regards,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

Lawyers tell off American professors over suit

By Beauttah Omanga
The Law Society of Kenya and lawyer Paul Muite have said the move by two Americans to stop the International Criminal Court (ICC) from investigating the post-election violence will not succeed.

LSK Vice-Chairman James Mwamu and Mr Muite said it would be ridiculous for an international court to stop investigation into any alleged crime.

Mr Mwamu said: “I see that application being dismissed because the ICC Prosecutor merely wants permission to commence investigation into commission of an international crime against humanity. There is no application as yet for prosecution of anybody.”

The two lawyers said the post-election violence perpetrators wanted to derail the process at the expense of the victims who want to see justice done and impunity addressed.

Kenyan hand
Muite questioned the logic behind the two Americans’ move, saying he suspected a hidden Kenyan hand.

“On whose interest are they seeking the orders?” posed Muite, who urged local human rights bodies with their international partners to seek leave to be enjoined, as well as the post-election violence victims.

He said the victims and the human rights bodies should urgently instruct reputable lawyers to move to the ICC and file papers demanding to be party to the strange suit.

“That suit is demonic in the first place. How were the two Americans affected by the Kenyan chaos? They must also be pressed by the Kenyan human rights lawyers to reveal on whose behalf they are acting,” said Muite.

Who is behind Americans out to block ICC’s case on Kenya?

By Ben Agina
Two prominent Americans have launched a bid to block International Criminal Court from handling Kenya’s post-election violence trials.

Their suit echoes an earlier objection by a Belgian non-governmental organisation with the same aim.

The two, a lawyer and a political science professor, filed a suit on Tuesday that has raised questions as to their interest in the matter.

The International Criminal Court at the Hague. Two Americans, Prof Max Hilaire, who chairs Department of Political Sciences at Morgan State University, and a San Fransisco lawyer William Cohn, filed a suit at the Hague over the Kenya case, even though their country is not signatory to the statute that created the ICC. [PHOTO: courtesy]
They are seeking suspension of prayers by ICC Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo for the court to take up Kenya’s case for at least 30 more days, so that they can raise their arguments. Their argument is Kenya’s case was, in legal terms, “overstretched” or “exaggerated” and does not meet ICC’s threshold for crimes against humanity. They say bringing the issue before the trial chamber (the phase where it is now) was unnecessary.

“We want to know why the case should go to The Hague since Kenya is not a failed State and efforts have already been made by the President and the Prime Minister to set up a local tribunal,” their suit document reads.

They also demand to know of “efforts to set up a local tribunal and actions of the President and the Prime Minister on the complementarity principle.”

The Americans want the ICC pre-trial judges to determine if the Kenyan situation qualifies as a “crime against humanity” or a “matter of civil unrest”.

Former US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Fraser in 2008 described the violence as falling short of genocide but rising to the level of crimes against humanity.

Earlier, the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) filed an objection to restrain the ICC from intervening in Kenya.
The Brussels-based NGO claims it has global membership but Kenyan activists claimed it is linked to powerful individuals in the Cabinet.

“It is instructive that this organisation has had no known basis or track record of commenting, acting or participating on any Kenyan issues,” they said.

Though their country is not a signatory to the Rome Statute that created ICC, Prof Max Hilaire who chairs Department of Political Sciences at Morgan State University, teamed up a San Fransisco lawyer Prof William Cohn to file a suit at The Hague.

In the suit, among other seven legal issues they intend to raise, are questions on whether Kenya’s case qualifies to be taken up by ICC.
Though the two booklovers could on academic joyride or serious academic venture, locally where President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga flatly declined to formally refer the Kenyan case to ICC, it will be speculation galore.

Pre-trial judges
Documents obtained by The Standard authored by the two show they want to be amicus curiae (friends of the court) before the Pre-trial chamber. If granted the status, they want the pre-trial judges, who were appointed to weigh the admissibility of the Kenyan case, to grant a stay on the decision on Moreno-Ocampo’s motion seeking their authority to commence investigation on Kenya’s high-profile suspects.

The arguments put up by the two professors are similar to those earlier advanced by PS Foreign Affairs Thuita Mwangi in a commentary critical of ICC’s handling of Kenya’s case.

The two Americans, however, have put up a disclaimer they are not affiliated to any organisation in Kenya or have taken any partisan position with regard to the Kenyan situation or any known suspect.
Three days before Moreno-Ocampo’s arrival in Nairobi, Mwangi dispatched an opinion article to newsrooms in which he criticised the prosecutor’s mission in Kenya.

Arguing it was too early for him to intervene, the PS questioned the legitimacy of the ICC’s jurisdiction over Kenya. He argued the ICC should not override Kenya’s justice system.

End impunity
Exuding confidence in the ability of the Judiciary to handle perpetrators of post-election mayhem, Mwangi petitioned Moreno-Ocampo to give Africa an opportunity to prove to the world she is ready, willing and able to end impunity.

In their submissions to pre-trial judges dated January 11, 2010, the Professors put out believe ICC intervention would ruin the political careers of key suspects said to be the Waki Envelope.

The professors want to know from the pre-trial judges the “long-term political and social aspects” relating to the prosecutions that have a bearing on the decision to commence investigation.

Professors Hilaire and Cohn would also want to know the cumulative effect of the efforts to set up a local tribunal and actions of the President Kibaki and Prime Minister on the complementarity principle and the interest of an investigations.

If granted the amicus curiae status, the professors would also want to know the extent of and progress in investigations and prosecutions of crimes against humanity in Kenya and the effect thereof on the complementarity principle under the ICC statute.
setting precedent

They are also questioning the timing of Prosecutor Ocampo’s application to the pre-trial chambers. In their justification to the court, the Americans said the orders sought by the prosecutor were precedent setting.

“This is the very first time in the history of ICC that the prosecutor seeks authorisation. It is important that the court clearly establishes the parameters for the exercise of jurisdiction in circumstance where a state with functional judicial system has not referred a situation to the court,” said the professors.

They noted as the prosecutor’s Motion under article 15 of the rules is essentially ex-parte, (for or by one party) it may be useful for the chamber to listen to other views and submissions on the applicable legal principles.

This development comes exactly a week after Imenti Central MP Gitobu Imanyara and human rights activists spoke of their disappointment at attempts to delay the Pre-Trial Chamber’s decision on Kenya’s post-election violence case.

An international lawyer’s organisation filed an objection to the case with ICC. The activists have also raised the red flag over an alleged plot to intimidate potential witnesses of the post-poll chaos through death threats, particularly in the North Rift and in internal refugee camps.

Addressing the press on Friday, last week, Imanyara, along with rights activists Ndung’u Wainaina, Haron Ndubi and Ken Wafula, said that a Cabinet minister who feels he might be on the list of suspected perpetrators was behind the plot.

Go slowly
The minister, Mr Ndubi claimed, had been promising the witnesses land for resettlement, money, jobs, and scholarships among other inducements.

In their statement, the activists said that the minister was said to have held a meeting with officials of the internally displaced from all camps in the Rift Valley on November 25, last year. He allegedly urged them to influence other camp residents to “go slowly” in submitting their views ICC.

Americans out to stop Ocampo
International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo (left) meets with President Kibaki (center) and Prime Minister Raila Odinga (right) at Harambee house . Photo/FILE

International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo (left) meets with President Kibaki (center) and Prime Minister Raila Odinga (right) at Harambee house . Photo/FILE

By OLIVER MATHENGE and BERNARD NAMUNANE

Posted Thursday, January 14 2010 at 21:00

In Summary

* Two professors are questioning mandate of ICC in taking over Kenyan poll case

Two American dons have gone to the International Criminal Court seeking to stop Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo from taking over the post-election violence case.

However, the government immediately disowned their intervention and asked them to stop the uncalled for application, which could delay the ruling by the pre-trial chamber.

Professors Max Hilaire and William Cohn filed an application on Monday at The Hague asking the pre-trial chamber to suspend making a ruling for at least 30 days to allow them to raise their objections to the intentions of Mr Moreno-Ocampo to start investigating the masterminds of the post election chaos.

“May it please this honourable pre-trial chamber to stay the decision on the prosecutor’s motion pending the decision on this motion, and allow the applicants to appear as Amicus Curiae (friends of the court) and to file their brief within 30 days or within such period as the Chamber may direct,” they say in their plea to the three-judge bench tasked to hear Kenya’s case.

Professors Hilaire and Cohn, in their application, say they will question ICC’s mandate to investigate the crimes that were committed during the post-election chaos; whether the crimes committed qualify as crimes against humanity; and the clause which Mr Moreno-Ocampo used as the basis to place his case before the pre-trial chamber.

Prof Hilaire teaches at Morgan State University and Prof Cohn has practised as an attorney in California.
“This is the very first time in the history of the ICC that the prosecutor seeks authorisation under article 15. It is important that the court clearly establishes the parameters for the exercise of jurisdiction in circumstances where a state with a functional judicial system has not referred a situation to the court,” they argue.
Into any hotspot

They refer to Article 15, which details the ways the ICC Prosecutor can use to obtain permission from the pre-trial chamber to start investigations into any hotspot.

It allows the prosecutor to receive information from governments, UN agencies, NGOs and other reliable sources.

“If the prosecutor concludes that there is a reasonable basis to proceed with an investigation, he or she shall submit to the Pre-Trial Chamber a request for authorisation of an investigation, together with any supporting material collected,” the article states in part.

Justice and Constitutional Affairs minister Mutula Kilonzo described the two law professors as “busy bodies” who were interfering with the process of delivering justice to the victims of the violence.

“ They should cease and desist from interfering with Kenya’s choice to submit itself to the ICC,” he said.

He said Mr Moreno-Ocampo was allowed by the President and the PM to seek the permission of the chamber to investigate the violence that rocked the country after the December 2007 elections.

“It is surprising that lawyers from countries which are not even members of the ICC are interfering with the process,” he said.

Was not involved
Attorney-General Amos Wako said he was not aware of the development and that his office was not involved.

Mr Kilonzo said the decision as to whether investigations into the post-election violence would proceed lay with The Hague.
Mr Moreno-Ocampo went before the pre-trial chamber at the end of last November seeking permission to start investigating the plotters and executors of the election violence in which 1,133 people were killed and another 650,000 uprooted from their homes.

There have been reports that the government intends to use international lawyers to challenge Mr Moreno-Ocampo’s request at The Hague.

However, government officials have denied the claims.

Carrying of weapons banned along the Luo-Maasai border areas

THE GOVERNMENT HAS BANNED THE CARRYING OF WEAPONS ALONG THE VOLATILE LUO-MAASAI BORDER, AND ORDERED THE SURRENDER OF ALL ILLEGAL GUNS WITHIN TWO WEEKS.

News Analysis By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

The government has banned the carrying of all kinds of weapons in public places along the entire border of Rongo districts, and at the same time told those holding illegally acquired firearms to surrender them to the security agents within two weeks period of time, or else face the music.

These were parts of the contentious resolutions passed at a well attended border meeting held at Angaga market on the Rongo-Trans-Mara district border. The meeting was called to reconcile the two warring Maasai and Luo communities

Cabinet Minister Dalmas Otieno, and the Southern Nyanza and South Rift regional commissioners Erastur Ekidor and Naftally Munyadhia attended the meeting. Also in attendance were the Trans-Mara and Rongo District Commissioners, as well as district police chiefs.

This is the border area where two people were killed after being shot with arrows, when skirmishes erupted between the Maasais and Luos.

The dispute, according to police and administration sources, was over the parcel of land plot, which a Luo farmer is said to have bought over 40 years ago, and settled  his family on. An administration chief, whose location is lying along the border area, is said to have developed the interest on the piece of land, and has been the tool of incitement, pitting the two communities.

The latest skirmishes came hardly two months after the previous clashes, which resulted in the death of two people, and close to 16 houses torched on both sides of the volatile border.

During the incident on Sunday morning, a large number of people believed to be Maasai morans, armed with a mixture of lethal weapons, launched a surprise dawn attack against the sleeping Luo villages, and killed two people among the Luos.  Several hundreds of acres of sugar cane, both mature and immature were also set ablaze in the fields.

The government immediately dispatched a contingent of General Service Unit {GSU}, to supplement the regular and administration police teams already on the ground, to calm the situation. Both the Trans-Mara and Rongo D.C’s also rushed to the border and held the meeting, and appealed to the combatants from both sides to lay down their arms and allow the government to sort out the messes
The two Regional Commissioners announced their banning of carrying of weapons in the area, and also the surrender of all illegal firearms within two weeks.

Before the public rally took place, Dalmas Otieno, who is the Minister for Public Services, and the two teams held a close door meeting, which lasted for four hours, while members of the public waited patiently at the meeting venue.

 In his address, Mr. Otieno told the Luos and the Maasais to live peacefully and harmoniously, respecting each other’s constitutional and legal rights to live in any part of the country, so long as the land on which one is living on is legally acquired.

The Minister said he had consulted widely with cabinet colleague, the Minister for Internal Security, Prof. George Saitoti, and his Kilgoris counterpart Gideon Konchellah, and all agreed that peace and tranquility must be maintained at all costs. The use of private militia by anyone community against their neighbor is not permitted by the law, said the Minister.

Mr Otieno announced that three more police posts would be established along the borderline, so that the security agents can monitor the area, with the view to ensure that peace prevailed, and nobody is harassed. The move will also ensure an end to constant skirmishes along the border. He told the residents to resolve their disputes, even those affecting land, amicably and through the established court of laws, instead of resorting to the use of violence.

As a result of last Sunday skirmishes, a location chief is in policed custody, and the Nyanza P.C, Johnson Mutie, has confirmed that the chief would soon appear in court to answer charges of incitement.

Contacted, the Security Assistant Minister, Joshua Orwa Ojode said that anyone arrested and charged in court with the offense of inciting Kenyans against each other, must be interdicted immediately if such a person is a civil servant. He said that is what the law says, and added his voice to the two communities to maintain law and order, and to discard those inciting them for personal gains and interests.

Last Monday, a team of CID police arrested Chief SamsonOle Muntet of Olontury Location, that lies along the borderline between Nyanza and Rift Valley.

The Nyanza P.C, Johnson Mutie, confirmed that he chief would soon appear in court to answer the charges of incitement. The police were also looking for other persons including, another chief, suspected to be war-mongers along the border areas.

Ends
leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

Are Kenyans safe in Sudan?

Three Kenyans murdered in cold blood in Juba.

From : Elijah Kombo

The back page of the DN, as well as the three major media houses reported three Kenyans murdered in cold blood in Juba. Nothing so far has been speculated and with due respect, we would like to know whether our brothers and sisters are safe. Approximately 70,000 Kenyans work and live in Sudan after the CPA. South Sudan is appropriate for Kenyans for simple reasons: free life with no restrictions. In North Sudan, for example, taking beer is forbidden, as well holding hands with opposite sex in public! That makes Foreigners in NS behave. A 300ml beer is worthy Usd 10 in Khartoum, and in an underground pub – while in SS paltry 5usd in a discotheque. The life of Kenyans cannot be dictated by the restrictions.

I have been privileged to work in both North and South Sudan for approximately two years. I will note here authoritatively that the Embassy in the North is actively involved in taking good care of Kenyans in North Sudan. All Kenyans are required to register. The Ambassadors has dedicated his services to Kenyans undeservedly. Ambassador Mutua (?-cant remember his name) hosts a Kenyan bonding party during public functions. A typical example is during one Madaraka day, he invited all Kenyans to his residence – receiving VIP reception to a party where foreign dignitaries including Sudanese government official were present. The Kenyan Embassy in NS knows where every Kenyan lives. Every Kenyans are mere brothers and sisters to the Sudanese, and the friendship is well recognised in government offices. Why this cant happen in South Sudan?

In the South – there is a slight difference. I found out that the Kenyan Consular is fully of laxity in handling affairs that concern their citizens. A large segment of Kenyans work in the South as compared in the North and there welfare is not assured. While the South is predominantly Christian, and yet represent the larger conflict between neighbouring countries – Kenyan receiving the larger portion.

The border at Nadapal is a show case of laxity from both governments. Hundreds of fire arms are traded through Nadapal to Lokichoggio. The conflict between the Torposas and Kenya Turkana(?) – is live. The No Man’s land is a fertile ground that can be used for other economic activities but both governments have ignored the fact that it represents a danger for peace and security. Buying a small gun at the border will only cost Usd 300 at the border. The Immigration officers are only vigilant to deter Ugandans crossing the border. Sudanese cross the border with impunity, in the name of doing business of buying from Lokichoggio and selling to Sudan. Hundreds of Sudanese posses Kenyan identity cards – and can pass the border without a hitch from the security apparatus. The Lokichoggio airport is one serious security zone. The airport lacks facilities to detect metals, and the officers use their bare hands to screen travelers!

As much as Kenyan are peace living citizens, we also have made through the local hurdles of poor governance and corruption. Those Kenyans working out there need a responsible government that will, not only facilitate safety, but also guarantee them the right to contribute to national issues such as security etc.

Will the Kenyan government official see the reality? Both Prof Saitoti and Kanjwang have tasted what it means traveling through or to Nadapal. The No-Man land basically belongs to Kenya, and we have the muscle to secure the place and guarantee security of all Kenyans living there. If ever you will trust having a minister like Kajwang, who even interviews a plumber for a work permit in Kenya, then you will understand what kind of responsible ministers we have. I have personally seen a Somali from Bosaso acquire an identity card in a matter of weeks – it only needs between Usd 400 to 800! And lots of these is happening under the watch of the embattled lawyer Hon Kajwang. And yet if you report – it becomes mere gutter press to the authorities.

Without further kwe kwe – i would conclude by highlighting the recent ‘arms deal’ to Rift Valley in preparation for 2012. A senior NGO official hinted at a security meeting that thousands of firms arms are being transported from Sudan and Somali to Rift Valley. I was one of those who challenged the validity and authority of his statement. That was in September this year. Later, it became clear that – yes, arms are being transported as revealed by the major media houses. The issues was down-played and we no longer hear of it anymore!

How secure are we at home? One Kenyan who works in South Sudan says that we are safe in Sudan than being in Kenya. Why? By virtue that in Sudan everyone owns a gun and therefore, one is assured of security. How about in Kenyan – a certain community is armed to the teeth? Then all security assurances are down-graded to level 3.

Kenyans have suffered a lot: in the hands of Ugandans during the PEV, and subsequent Migingo problems, in the hands of South Sudanese, and in hands of Somalia – in the name of peace deals.

We wait the report from the GOSS on why innocent Kenyans were murdered and their safety was not guaranteed afterall.

KEO