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Karzai blames Pakistan of enslaving Afghans
KANDAHAR (Afghanistan)—President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday lashed out at
Pakistan for the third time this week, accusing the neighboring country
of trying to make “slaves” of the Afghan people.
Karzai’s rhetorical barrage against Pakistan started in a tearful speech
Sunday, when he said terrorists from Pakistan are killing Afghan
children. He ratcheted up his criticism Tuesday, directly charging the
Pakistan government with supporting the Taliban.
On Wednesday, he again took direct aim at Afghanistan’s eastern
neighbor. “Pakistan hopes to make slaves out of us, but we will not
surrender,” Karzai said in a school courtyard, in a 90-minute speech
punctuated by frequent applause from several hundred students. He said
Afghan students may aspire to lofty career goals, but that “Pakistan
wants you to be a gatekeeper at the hotel in Karachi.” Afghan and
Western officials have long blamed Pakistan for not doing enough to stop
terrorists from training on its soil and then crossing the border to
attack in Afghanistan. Several suspects recently arrested for allegedly
planning suicide bomb attacks have come from Pakistan.
Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Tasnim Aslam, said the Taliban
are operating well inside Afghanistan, and reiterated that Islamabad is
standing up to the problem. “Pakistan is doing whatever is needed to
counter extremism and terrorism and not to allow its territory to be
used for militant activities in Afghanistan. We have deployed 80,000
troops. We are taking military action,” she said.
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan has to do
more, Aslam said. If Afghan refugees living in Pakistan return to their
home country, “this would remove the presence of Afghans close to the
border, which appear to prompt the allegation from Kabul,” she said.
Pakistan Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri said Karzai was misinformed
and was merely looking for a scapegoat. “To those who say this, I would
like to say that it is a common human reaction when you have
difficulties, you find somebody else to blame. I am not talking about
President Karzai,” Kasuri said Wednesday in Islamabad. “People who are
well-informed ... they know better. They know what Pakistan is doing,
they know the price that Pakistan is paying,” Kasuri said. According to
a tally based on reports from Afghan, NATO and coalition officials,
nearly 4,000 people have died in violence during 2006 — mostly militants
but also including about 300 civilians. The embattled Afghan president
Hamid Karzai warned Tuesday that his country’s enemies “will burn in
hell with us” if Nato fails to stem a tide of Taliban violence emanating
from neighbouring Pakistan, Guardian reported on Wednesday.
Mr Karzai made the impassioned outburst in Kandahar, where tensions are
running high after a spate of Taliban suicide bombings and angry
accusations that British troops shot at least seven civilians.—Agencies |