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UN opposes
mining Afghan border
KABUL (Afghanistan)—A top U.N. human rights officer said Wednesday that
Pakistan’s plan to mine parts of its border with Afghanistan would only
add to civilian casualties in a region already littered with unexploded
ordnance. Pakistan said Tuesday it would plant land mines and build a
fence on parts of its 1,500-mile frontier with Afghanistan to fend off
criticism it does too little to stop Taliban and al-Qaida guerrillas
from crossing the border.
“From a human rights perspective, we would be concerned about any
mining, including this,” said Richard Bennett, the U.N.’s chief human
rights officer in Afghanistan. “Human rights advocates are solidly
opposed globally to the use of land mines. The U.N. is opposed to the
use of mines.”
Afghanistan is one of the world’s most mine-affected countries, with
thousands of civilian deaths and maimings in the past 25 years of war.
The frontier region is inhabited on both sides by Pashtun tribespeople
who travel freely across the border.
Taliban-led insurgents have stepped up attacks in Afghanistan over the
past year, triggering the worst violence since U.S.-led forces ousted
the hardline regime five years ago and threatening the shaky rule of
Hamid Karzai, the nation’s first popularly elected president.
Aleem Siddique, a spokesman for the U.N. assistance mission to
Afghanistan, there needs to be better coordination between Pakistan and
Afghanistan to fight the insurgency. “It’s difficult to see what value
laying fresh mines could bring to the people of either country,” he
said.
Relations have been souring between the neighbors, which are key U.S.
allies in its fight against terrorism. Afghan and Western officials
contend militants operate from sanctuaries in Pakistan, but Islamabad
insists it does all it can to stop them.
A spokesman for the NATO-led security mission in Afghanistan said the
Pakistani mining plan should be discussed by Afghan, Pakistani and NATO
commanders. “We obviously applaud any statement about further efforts to
improve border security, but the methodology should be discussed in the
tripartite council,” said Mark Laity, senior civil representative
spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force.
Afghanistan quickly objected to the idea of a fence along the rugged
border, whose demarcation is disputed by the two nations. But Pakistani
Foreign Secretary Riaz Mohammed Khan said his country would be acting on
its own territory and did not need Afghan consent.
Khan told reporters Pakistan also will send unspecified military
reinforcements to the frontier, joining about 80,000 soldiers already in
the country’s northwestern tribal regions. He did not say when the
mining and fence work would start.—Agencies |