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Monday, September 14, 2009

Gaza Health Ministry: UNRWA holding up shipments of medical supplies

September 3, 2009

Gaza – Ma’an – The Ministry of Health in the de facto government in Gaza accused the UN refugee relief agency UNRWA on Thursday of withholding a shipment of medical supplies and equipment for months.

In a statement, the de facto Ministry of Health said that "the seizure of drugs by UNRWA has affected the lives of thousands of patients who needed treatment and medicine urgently. Dozens of patients have died because of the lack of medicine and because of the ongoing [Israeli] siege."

Ma’an contacted UNRWA officials in Gaza who said they were preparing a response.

The statement continued, "A group of staff from the Ministry of Health went to receive the medicine which was in the UNRWA warehouses near the Karni crossing. There were large quantities of medicines and medical equipment with labels indicating they were designated for the Palestinian Ministry of Health and for Ash-Shifa Hospital in Gaza."

Kidney dialysis equipment and medications used to treat cancer were among the detained goods, the ministry of health said.

Israel’s two-year-old blockade of the Gaza Strip has causes shortages of critical medical supplies.

The ministry said this action was not befitting UNRWA’s otherwise impressive record as an organization. "We in the Ministry of Health condemn such behavior by UNRWA, an agency we have known for years, that has stood up and supported the Palestinian people and defend them in all international forums."

The statement went on to accuse UNRWA of complicity in the blockade of Gaza.

The Ministry of Health demanded that UNRWA hand over the materials as soon as possible.

Israel Schemes in Kurdistan

By Les Blough, Axis of Logic

September 3, 2009

On August 12, 2009, Radio Netherlands announced, "New Israel-Kurd magazine surprises Arab world". The article is republished below for the reader's convenience. Axis of Logic correspondent, analyst and writer, Cherifa Sirry writes from Egypt:

"Why the new magazine, 'Israel-Kurd' has been created for "building bridges between Israel and Kurdistan" to promote 'Israeli emigration to Iraq' is the obvious question. This is quite strange considering the amount of money spent by "the Jewish state" on attracting Jews and now even 'converts' to immigrate to the 'Jewish state'. Demography is one of Israel's worst enemies. So what is the objective of this new magazine?"

Cherifa raises a good question. Perhaps the following conditions provide some context for understanding this push to build "Israeli-Kurd bridges":

*
The U.S./Israel war objective to break up and remap Iraq into 3 entities which gives the Kurds U.S.-controlled "autonomy" in Northern Iraq.

*
The Kurds' cross-border raids from Northern Iraq into Southern Turkey and Turkey's bombing of PKK targets inside Northern Iraq.

*
The push for Turkey to open trade with Northern Iraq and their reluctance to do so.

We can't be sure what the specific goals of the U.S. and Israel are for the new magazine, immigration of Jews into Northern Iraq or the pretext of strengthening relations between Israel and the Kurds. As Cherifa says, there are reasons to doubt their pretext of sending Kurdish Jews in Israel back to Kurdistan. The argument in the article - that this move is meant to protect Israel from Arabs turning the Kurds against Israel - also begs credibility.

More probable explanations for sending a few Kurdish Jews from Israel into Northern Iraq involve military objectives and money:

* This migration plan allows Israel to create cover for Mossad's covert operations in Northern Iraq and eventually, an overt military presence in the region.

* The Israelis seeks to gain control of the petroleum in Northern Iraq and to position themselves for doing business in the region. "Business" would include one of their most lucrative exports - weapons.

The Turkish government has always been unprincipled in choosing it's trading partners, motivated by greed for the ruling elite. It has been a whore for trade with Israel since they signed a trade pact in 2000 and between 2002 and 2008 their trade volume with Israel went from $1.4 billion to $3.3 billion, increasing 36% in 2008. Israeli-Turkish trade was launched with a contract for Israel to modernize M-60 tanks for $668 million, 300 military helicopters for $57 million. Three other contracts to modernize Turkey's war jets landed Israel $850 million.

The problem Turkey has with this Faustian pact can be summed up in "the people". Like all capitalist governments, Ankara operates not in the interest of the Turkish people but in the interest of their leaders and corporate-led special interest groups. Ankara criticized Israel's slaughter in Gaza in 2008-2009 and Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan stormed out of the Gaza session in Davos for one reason only - to pacify the vast majority of Turks who support the Palestinians and flatly reject doing business with the Jewish state. In 2006, 50,000 Turks rose up in protest against one Israeli assault on Gaza in which 12 Palestinians were killed and many more wounded. On January 2, 2009, thousands of Turks again protested Israel's killing of over 1,300 defenseless Gazans. The general population, some opposition party members, intellectuals, 19 bar associations and other groups demanded that Turkey cut military and trade relations with Israel. Their government responded with empty words of condemnation but no concrete action against Israel, ignoring the demands and simply telling their people that cutting military and trade ties would not stop Israel's attacks on Palestinians.

The new Jewish migration scheme gives Israel an official, overt presence in Northern Iraq, seeping into Turkish Kurdistan and Iranian Kurdistan, threatening Turkey, destabilising the region and building military and economic power for the Jewish state. Meanwhile, Radio Netherlands, namesake of a Mossad stronghold in Europe, wraps the new "Israel-Kurd" magazine in worn out slogans of "freedom of expression ... interest in the history of Kurdish Jews ... building bridges" and of course, with a mission to save the Jewish State, known for its narcissism-victim syndrome, from persecution by those nasty Arabs.

From a Farce Elections to Genocide

Afghan Resistance Statement
From a Farce Elections to Genocide
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan

Ramadan 15, 1430 A.H, September 6, 2009


In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate

The recent staying away of the Afghan Mujahid people from the foreign-dominated electoral process and their clear-cut opposition to the farce election showed once again that the Afghans have decided to resist all ambitious goals and projects of the invaders. This is because the election being conducted by direct bullying, intimidation and arrogance of the invaders has no validity in their eyes. Their unambiguous posturing portrayed that they are not ready to live under the yoke of colonialism even for a little while.

It was more becoming for the Americans to have behaved in a reasonable and mellowed manner after the failure of the election parody; they should have expressed their anger and hopelessness, which was brought about by the election boycott of the Afghan nation, in such ways as news conferences, statements, commentaries etc.

We know the Americans deserve to be offended and angered at the boycott of the Afghan people because they spent billions of dollars and passed through eight prolonged years of belligerence but still they were not able to prevail on the Afghans to leave their houses to cast votes , ironically, in an American project. Ostensibly, the project was aimed at showing to the American people that the Afghans were voluntarily taking part in the election despite the military presence of USA in the country.

But the severe explosion in Kandahar city which killed innocent citizens of Kandahar at the time of sunset when they were to break their fast, showed the polling day frustration and disappointment has driven the invaders to frenzy, fury and bestiality they even are not sparing to exact revenge for the low turnout during this month of fasting and shed blood during these sacred days.

If the Americans believe that they can mislead the Afghans by resorting to explosions and civilian killings, they are wrong. They must know that their crimes will not remain secret from the knowledge of the public for good. You will never be able to spread the cobweb of hatred and division by perpetrating mass murders through pre-planned explosions and fish in troubled water by implicating the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan in such heinous events. The Afghan know whose hands are behind such gruesome incidents.

The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, for his own part, does not believe that such wicked and horrific events will ever bring victory. The Mujahideen affiliated with the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan venture to confront the invading enemy and their surrogates face-to-face in combat in order to avoid civilian casualties. Using this tactic, the Mujahideen daily attack the enemy and take them by shock and awe.

The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan is greatly concerned over the sanguinary event of Kandahar and shares the pains and grief of the bereft families and prays to the Almighty Allah to save this miserable nation from further tragedies, grief and anomalies.

Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan

Assad to visit Turkey for talks on peace process

DAMASCUS (AFP) - President Bashar al-Assad is to visit Ankara on Wednesday for talks with his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul focused on the Middle East peace process, Syria's ambassador to Turkey said on Monday.

His talks in Ankara will also cover "means to calm the political situation" in the region, Nidal Qabalan told AFP, contacted from Damascus.

Apart from brokering indirect Israeli-Syrian peace talks, Turkey has also been trying to defuse tensions between Damascus and Baghdad after Iraqi accusations that Damascus was sheltering insurgents.

Referring to Arab newspaper reports that Assad could meet Iraqi ministers in the Turkish capital, Qabalan said it was "normal for such meetings to take place when the conditions are right," without elaborating.

The Iraqi government said on Monday it will send a delegation to Turkey on Tuesday with evidence backing its allegations that terrorist groups based in Syria orchestrated deadly bombings in Baghdad.

Assad has dismissed the allegations as "immoral" and politically motivated.

Philippines to send 336 peace-keeping troops to Syria

Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. Monday said Manila will send a 336-strong peacekeeping battalion to the Golan Heights in Syria.

Teodoro, who returned from a visit to the United States, told reporters at the airport that he assured UN Undersecretary for Peacekeeping Alain Le Roy in New York of Philippines' un-swerved commitment to the UN peace-keeping missions.

"Despite our own constraints and requirements, we can be expected to continue to fulfill our obligations as a responsible and reliable troop-contributing country," the defense chief said.

He said the first batch of Filipino troops to the Golan Heights will leave Manila at the end of this month. The entire contingent is expected to be on the ground and take over the peacekeeping responsibilities of the Polish Battalion in the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) mission area before the end of October.

The Philippines sent its first UN peacekeeping forces to Congo in the 1960s. Since then, Manila has contributed military and police personnel to UN missions in Cambodia, Burundi, Georgia, Haiti, Iraq, Kosovo and Nepal, the Department of Defense said in a statement.

At present, the Philippines is the 29th largest troop contributor to UN peace operations with a total of 611 Filipino peacekeepers, made up of 295 troops, 22 military observers and 294police officers serving in Afghanistan, Cote d' Ivoire, Darfur, Haiti, Liberia, Sudan and Timor Leste, it said.

In rich Norway, tight election is underway

Norwegians have begun voting in a tight election, as opinion polls show the country divided between the Labor-led coalition and the center-right opposition.

Voting began on Sunday and polling stations are due to at 9 pm on Monday, with exit polls expected to be released soon afterward.

Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg stands a fair chance of leading the world's second-richest nation for another four years, but opposition is also enjoying favorable odds with the promise of tax cuts, experts say.

"It's almost 50-50 if you look at the polls … The trend in the last few elections is that the sitting government loses some of its support even if they do fairly well," Bloomberg quoted Johannes Bergh, a political scientist at the Institute for Social Research in Oslo, as saying.

Stoltenberg, in power since 2005, has built his campaign on his success in guiding Norway through the economic crisis, a process that saw the 50-year-old and his partners -- the Socialist Left and the Center Party -- pump $420 billion of the national oil revenue into the economy to steer clear of the financial slump while ensuring the lowest unemployment rate in Europe.

If re-elected, the premier would be the first leader to enjoy another shot at power in 16 years.

Meanwhile, the splintered four-party opposition says Stoltenberg has failed to uproot poverty and improve healthcare.

In two out of five polls in the days leading to the vote, the opposition, led by the Progress Party and the Conservatives, had a majority of parliamentary seats.

The premier's main challenger, Progress Party leader Siv Jensen, has also vowed to cut down on immigration.

IAEA approves Japan's Amano as next chief

Yukiya Amano has been formally appointed the next director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to succeed Mohamed ElBaradei.

Amano, who was chosen by the IAEA's 35-member board of governors in July, was approved by the 150 members of the UN nuclear watchdog on the first day of the agency's annual weeklong general conference on Monday.

Amano is to replace ElBaradei on December 1. He will serve the agency for four years.

"I humbly accept the appointment to this prominent post and express my sincere gratitude to the member states for their support and trust," said the 62-year-old Amano in his first address to the IAEA.

In his speech, Tokyo's envoy to the IAEA acknowledged ElBaradei "for his outstanding contribution to the agency during his 12-year tenure".

While Amano did not refer to Iran in his speech, the outgoing IAEA chief urged Iran to "engage substantively with the agency."

ElBaradei said that "a number of questions and allegations that cast doubt on the peaceful nature of (Iran's civilian nuclear) program are still outstanding," adding that these concerns are a matter of 'confidence-building' and can be easily overcome through 'dialogue'.

"I therefore welcome the offer of the US to initiate a dialogue with Iran, without preconditions and on the basis of mutual respect," he concluded.

Fatah accepts postponing Palestinian elections

The Palestinian Fatah faction says it would postpone presidential and parliamentary elections in an effort to put an end to the current rift with the rival Hamas.

Mahmoud Abbas' faction said in a statement Monday that it had accepted an Egyptian proposal to delay the January 2010 elections, Reuters reported.

"We have decided to accept the Egyptian proposal, including holding the elections during the first half of next year and no later than this date," said Abbas Zaki, a member of Fatah's Central Committee, the group's executive body.

Fatah officials said that Hamas had told Fatah during past round of talks that it prefers an extended delay in holding elections.

Nabil Shaath, another Fatah official, said that the group did not mind a delay but "there should be a specific date and not to leave the matter open as if we do then it could be postponed again."

Hamas however said it would state its position regarding the proposal after the Muslim holiday of Eid Al-Fitr, marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan, due next week.

Abbas had formerly said that he would hold the elections on time with or without a deal with his Hamas rivals.

Egypt, who is mediating between the two rival groups, proposed last week to hold the elections during the first half of 2010 in an effort to allow more time for working out a power-sharing deal between the two camps.

The proposal also stipulates that the two rival groups free the political activists of the other faction after a deal is reached.

Witnesses: Foreign troops kill 2 in Somali town

By MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN, Associated Press Writer

MOGADISHU, Somalia – Foreign troops firing from helicopters killed at least two people in a car and then took two others captive Monday in a town controlled by Islamic insurgents, witnesses said.

Eyewitness Abdi Ahmed said the helicopters fired from the air and hit a car near Barawe. He said foreign soldiers, who were white, left with the two wounded men.

"There was only a burning vehicle and two dead bodies lying beside," he said.

It was not clear who conducted the attack or its purpose. But Barawe is controlled by al-Shabab, an insurgent group the U.S. accuses of having links to al-Qaida. The town is some 155 miles (250 kilometers) from the capital, Mogadishu.

Many experts fear the country's lawlessness could provide a haven for al-Qaida, offering a place for terrorists to train and gather strength — much like Afghanistan in the 1990s. Al-Shabab has hundreds of foreign fighters in its ranks and the group controls much of the country.

Somalia's weak government has very few resources and does not have helicopters or other modern equipment. One witness, Dahir Ahmed, said the helicopters took off from a warship flying a French flag, but that could not be confirmed.

France has launched commando raids in the past to rescue French nationals held by insurgents and pirates in this lawless African nation. Calls to the Defense Ministry in Paris rang unanswered Monday.

The U.S. government — haunted by a deadly 1993 U.S. military assault in Mogadishu chronicled in "Black Hawk Down" — is working to lower the growing terrorist threat without sending in American troops. The Obama administration recently increased aid to Somalia by pouring resources into the weak government.

Various Islamist groups have been fighting the U.N.-backed government since being chased from power 2 1/4 years ago. Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, sees near-daily battles between government and insurgent forces. Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed.

Somalia's lawlessness also has allowed piracy to flourish off its coast, making the Gulf of Aden one of the most dangerous waterways in the world.

Netanyahu: There will be no construction freeze

By AMY TEIBEL, Associated Press Writer

JERUSALEM – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rebuffed U.S. demands for a total West Bank settlement freeze on Monday, digging in his heels before a crucial meeting with Washington's special Mideast envoy.

Netanyahu told parliament's powerful foreign affairs and defense committee that Israel would consider suspending any new plans to build in the West Bank for a limited time, according to a meeting participant.

But Netanyahu said he would allow approved construction plans to go ahead in order to strike a balance between Israel's desire to resume talks with the Palestinians while at the same time enabling "normal life" in the settlements, a euphemism for building to accommodate the growing settler population.

Israel will continue to build some 3,000 apartments that have already been approved, and will also keep building without restrictions in east Jerusalem, Netanyahu said, according to the meeting participant.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting's contents were not officially made public.

Netanyahu has voiced the same position recently, but the timing of his comments — a day before huddling with U.S. envoy George Mitchell — gave them an added note of defiance. Washington has urged Israel to freeze all settlement activity in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, which the Palestinians claim as part of a future state.

Israel captured those territories in the 1967 Mideast war, and nearly half a million Israelis now live in them. The Palestinians say they won't resume negotiations with Israel until all Israeli construction in those territories stops.

With his offer of a limited settlement freeze, Netanyahu is trying to please the U.S. without alienating a coalition government dominated by hardline supporters of the settlements. It remains unclear whether the balancing act can succeed.

Both Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas are traveling to New York next week to attend the opening of the U.N. General Assembly. Israeli and Palestinian officials have spoken of a possible meeting between the two leaders on the sidelines of the U.N. event, but that would depend on the outcome of Mitchell's visit to the region.

The U.S. envoy is to meet with both leaders on Tuesday to try to wrest enough overtures from both to allow a meeting to take place. It would be the first face-to-face encounter between the two since the hawkish Netanyahu was installed as Israel's prime minister in March.

Netanyahu replaced Ehud Olmert, who held talks with Abbas before being forced out of office under a cloud of corruption allegations. On Monday, Israel's justice ministry said Olmert's corruption trial will begin on Sept. 29 in Jerusalem.

Olmert was indicted last month for illegally accepting funds from an American supporter and double-billing Jewish groups for trips abroad, among other charges. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Iran To Purge Universities Of Western Influences

A hard-line deputy of Iran's supreme leader announced steps Sunday to purge Iranian universities of Western influences even as the government faced accusations of "fascism and totalitarianism" leveled by the country's former president.

Hamid Reza Ayatollahi, head of a government body that oversees universities, announced a plan to revise humanities curricula to bring them more in line with Islamic principles.

"Many of the syllabuses taught to students majoring in humanities are not in line with Iranian and Islamic culture and therefore their revision is a must," Ayatollahi said in a statement published by Iranian news agencies.

A committee has been established to "eliminate certain curricula and replace them with Islamic materials," he said.

The effort stemmed from a speech last week by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who said that humanities courses result in "disbelief in Islamic and divine teachings" and are mostly based on "materialist philosophical concepts causing misgivings about religious principles."

Critics derided the purge as another in a 30-year series of ill-fated attempts to impose on Iranian society the puritanical values of hard-liners who dominate political life.

"Certain individuals reject liberalism, but their opposition is based on fascism and totalitarianism," former President Mohammad Khatami, a prominent reformist, said in comments published on his website Sunday. "Assailing an aspect of the Western experience by insisting on a more dangerous and worse view is doomed."

He was speaking to a group of reformist scholars.

It remains unclear whether the purge was in response to the unrest that followed Iran's disputed June 12 presidential election, which saw conservative President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared the winner, or was planned earlier. During a trial last month of reformists politicians, one defendant purportedly testified that social scientists such as German philosopher Juergen Habermas had corrupted Iranian intellectuals.

Purges of secular and moderate scholars were also carried out during Ahmadinejad's first term.

"It is not first time that human sciences are under attack in Iran," said Yousef Moalli, an Iranian analyst and lawyer. "In the past years, dozens of professors in political science and law were forced to take early retirement, immigrate abroad or take no-return sabbatical leaves."

The purge could backfire. In addition to lowering Iran's educational standards, purging curricula of Western literature and social theory could further alienate the mostly middle-class youth inclined to study humanities and further radicalize a previously apolitical segment of the population dragged into political life by this year's presidential election.

Iran analysts also describe the move as an attempt by Khamenei to show hard-liners he's trying to do something to stop cultural changes that have highlighted the chasm between a ruling class of Islamic fundamentalists and those in Iranian society longing for Western-style freedoms.

Authorities also worry about campuses turning into hotbeds of political activism and apparently have begun to weed out students suspected of political activity.

Bear parts, owls seized

KUALA LUMPUR (Malaysia) - MALAYSIA police say they have seized more than US$100,000 (S$142, 500) worth of dead owls, bear paws and live monitor lizards and arrested two men on suspicion of trying to smuggle them abroad.

Mohamad Hassan Hashim, a marine police official in eastern Terengganu state, says two Malaysian men were caught Sunday loading the protected wildlife into a boat.

He says police found 33 sun bear parts, 264 dead owls and 4,800 live monitor lizards, worth some RM350,000 in all.

The lizards will be released into the wild.

Mr Mohamad Hassan said on Monday the men could face up to three years in prison if charged with and found guilty of possessing protected wild animals.

Chechnya Gets Ready to Make Movies

Chechnya is teaming up with Moscow’s legendary Mosfilm Studio to set up its own film industry.

The Chechen studio — named Chechenfilm in accordance with Soviet tradition — will shoot its first film after the signing of an cooperation agreement with Mosfilm later this month, its head, Inal Sheripov, told reporters Friday, Interfax reported.

It was unclear what that film would be about. Sheripov said Chechenfilm was set up this summer with the support of Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov and endowed with 500,000 rubles ($16,300).

He said the studio would be noncommercial, “oriented not at Hollywood’s but at European traditions.”

Mosfilm director Karen Shakhnazarov told the same news conference that his studio would send specialists to aid and train their Chechen colleagues. He said it was important to support a native film industry in the North Caucasus. “They have never participated in the country’s cinema life and now they will have their own voice,” he said.

Chechnya Wins Right to Open Offices in Europe

By Nikolaus von Twickel

The Foreign Ministry confirmed Friday that Chechnya may set up representative offices abroad, but stressed that they should be called information centers and would operate strictly on a regional governmental level.

Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov raised questions about his foreign policy ambitions earlier in the week when he announced that his administration had received permission from Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to open representative offices in European countries.

The Chechen government later backtracked on the announcement, but Foreign Ministry spokesman Igor Lyakin-Frolov said Friday that Lavrov had indeed approved a Chechen request to open representative offices.

“Lavrov gave [Chechnya] permission to open such information centers, but they will have to work with the provincial governments of their host countries,” Lyakin-Frolov told The Moscow Times.

He explained that the centers would have to sign agreements with regional governments that correspond to Chechnya’s status as a subject of the Russian Federation. “They will have limited functions because they must not take on governmental functions,” he said.

Kadyrov said Thursday that Chechnya would open representative offices in six European countries — Germany, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, Poland and France — in an attempt to convince the sizable Chechen migrant communities living there to return to their homeland.

Human rights groups have voiced concern over these plans, saying many Chechens fled their homeland precisely because they fear persecution by Kadyrov.

Asked whether homecoming policies were also sanctioned as part of the centers’ work, Lyakin Frolov said “of course.”

Kadyrov said he also would consider setting up a satellite TV channel especially for Chechen refugees.

“Among them are some who live in difficult conditions. We hear that many cannot even buy TV sets or a satellite dish. We need to help those citizens. They must see the changes in our republic, and they must know that we are happy to assist them to return,” Kadyrov said in an interview published on Chechnyatoday.ru, a web site run by his Information Ministry.

Diplomats in the countries where Chechnya wants to open information centers have expressed confusion about the plans and asked the Foreign Ministry for clarification. One diplomat said Saturday that his embassy had still not received an official reply from the Foreign Ministry.

A French Embassy spokesman confirmed Sunday that early talks had been held with a Chechen official about the opening of a representative office in France.

Tatarstan, which negotiated wide-ranging autonomy from Moscow in the 1990s, has representative offices in 11 countries, while Bashkortostan has offices in Austria, Turkey and Kazakhstan.

Missile kills 4 in Pakistan; 18 die in stampede

By RASOOL DAWAR, Associated Press Writer

MIR ALI, Pakistan – A missile fired from a suspected unmanned U.S. drone slammed into a car in a Pakistani tribal region close to the Afghan border Monday, killing four people, intelligence officials and residents said.

Separately, at least 18 women and girls waiting to get free flour in Pakistan's southern city of Karachi died when the crowd around them swelled and a stampede occurred, officials said.

The apparent American missile strike was the latest of more than 50 in the northwest region since last year aimed at killing top al-Qaida and Taliban leaders. Last month, the head of the Pakistani Taliban was killed in one such strike.

Monday's attack took place about 1.5 miles (3 kilometers) from the town of Mir Ali in North Waziristan, killing four people, two officials and witnesses said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they need to remain unnamed to do their job effectively.

The identities of the victims were not known.

Witnesses Ikramullah Khan and Mohammad Salim said the missile hit a vehicle with blacked-out windows — a style associated with Taliban fighters in the region.

Pakistan protests the U.S. missile strikes as violations of its sovereignty and says they fan support for the insurgents, but Washington has shown no sign of abandoning a tactic that it says has killed several ranking militants and disrupted their operations.

Islamist militants with roots in the border region launch near-daily attacks on Pakistan's U.S.-backed government and security forces. The mountainous, lawless area is also used as a safe haven from which to stage attacks on foreign forces in Afghanistan.

Under pressure from the West, Pakistan in May launched an offensive in the northwestern Swat Valley, which had fallen largely under Taliban control. It claims to have cleared most of Swat of the militants and killed more than 1,800 of them, although sporadic militant attacks continue.

The army announced the capture last week of five top Swat Taliban commanders, and Interior Minister Rehman Malik said Sunday authorities were now closing in on Swat Taliban chief Maulana Fazlullah.

"Fazlullah is surrounded, and he cannot escape us," Malik told reporters in Islamabad.

Pakistan's army said Monday to have killed 16 suspected militants in its latest operations in Swat and neighboring Dir district. One soldier died and another was wounded, an army statement covering the previous 24-hour period added.

Military officials also said 159 alleged militants had surrendered to security forces Monday. They include six boys recruited by the Taliban to be suicide bombers, Col. Amir Khan told reporters in Piochar, a main insurgent base in Swat.

In recent weeks, the army has reported an increasing flow of insurgents voluntarily surrendering.

The information provided by the military could not be independently confirmed because of limited access to the region.

The deaths in the Karachi stampede came during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, a traditional time for charitable acts including giving away food. At times, however, the giveaways have turned rowdy and dangerous in this largely impoverished nation.

Monday's stampede occurred in a small building with narrow passages. As more women entered to get the flour, some began to panic and guards began using strong-arm tactics to clear the place, officials and witnesses said.

Karachi police chief Wasim Ahmad said at least 18 women and girls died in the ensuing rush. Mohammad Amin Khan of Karachi Civil Hospital said some of the women had suffocated and that there were at least 20 bodies.

"Hundreds of women were pushing to enter into the small hall, and guards started beating us to get the place cleared," said 30-year-old Kulsoom, who gave only one name and ended up among the many wounded. "I fell down and was being crushed. My heart was missing beats and I thought I was dying."

Panicked relatives streamed into the hospital, while others brought limp bodies in the backs of trucks or in their arms. Some women wailed while laying on stretchers.

The flour giveaway was organized by a private donor who Ahmad said was detained for not giving police prior notice of the event.

"Poverty is on the rise, there is a desperation among people," local government official Javed Hanif said. "Naturally, when people are frustrated, whenever they get such an opportunity, they try to grab the maximum."

Iraqi shoe thrower's release from jail delayed

BAGHDAD – The brother of the Iraqi reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former President George W. Bush says the man will not be released Monday as planned due to paperwork processing delays.

Muntadhar al-Zeidi's family had gathered at dawn outside an Iraqi army base in central Baghdad where he was expected to be released from prison.

After waiting more than five hours, his brother Dargham said he received a phone call from al-Zeidi telling him he would not be released until Tuesday because of the delays.

The family said it will stage a sit-in outside the base Tuesday until he is released, and called for other Iraqis to join them.

Al-Zeidi's act of protest last December made the little-known reporter an instant hero across the Arab world.

Helping Palestinian Children Confront their Trauma of the Occupation

Iqbal Tamimi

September 13, 2009

Romi Elnagar: Art therapy enables children to deal in nonverbal ways with traumatic events in their lives.

Many who work with children who have experienced traumatic events, such as child psychologists, believe it is crucial for children to express their feelings about those events if they are to recover from their suffering. Art is a way for children to communicate the full range of emotions, and one of the most important ways to express feelings of anger, pain and fear. Child psychologists have found that art therapy works to enable children to show in nonverbal ways what they have experienced and to deal with traumatic events in their lives.

For example, the organization Darkness to Light, which deals with child sexual abuse, uses art therapy in its work, and says, "Anyone who has experienced psychological trauma may have difficulty expressing their experience directly or effectively in words…Art is a non-threatening way to visually communicate anything that is too painful to put into words."

People working with child survivors of the horrendous civil war in Sierra Leone also used art as part of the healing process. Children can show in pictures events that are too traumatic to be even brought to the surface of consciousness. Often, it is only when a child begins to draw that he can even remember what he has suffered, as painful events are brought to consciousness in the pictures he makes. Elsewhere in Africa, children's drawings of torture, rape and murder have been so detailed and so powerful that they have been used to bring a case in the International Criminal Court against janjaweed groups in Darfur.

I am more concerned, however, with helping children to deal with and overcome their terrible experiences through their art, and in particular, those children who have suffered the devastating and brutal Israeli Occupation of Palestine.

There are some organizations and individuals working on the West Bank and Gaza to help children overcome the traumas caused by seeing the helplessness of parents and caretakers in the face of vicious genocidal oppression, the hopelessness of poverty, starvation and incarceration in Gaza, which has been called the largest open-air prison on the planet and the brutality of daily beatings, violence and murder. While art therapy cannot be expected to right these wrongs, it may help to make young victims able to achieve a humanity that their oppressors can only envy, if they were even able to comprehend it.

Giving these children in the Occupied Territories and Gaza the tools to show what they have witnessed furthermore enables adults in their lives to understand and to validate their experiences. Artistic expression can nurture dignity and self-respect when individuals feel powerless in the face of oppression and violence. Helping children to regain a lost sense of safety and peace is what art therapy is all about, for Palestinian children and for the young victims of war, genocide and oppression everywhere.

These are the goals of organizations like the Palestinian Child Arts Center in Hebron, and Hope and Play.org (a British organization that works with refugee children worldwide). Another organization, the Arab Resource Center for Popular Arts in Lebanon (al-Jana) says, "…the belief of Al-Jana [is] that the challenges that face these so called "marginalized communities" have enriched their existence and as such have contributed to a stronger sense of community building; creative problem solving; and communal initiative and resiliency. Their vibrant culture reflects this resourcefulness and deep human spirit."

In Jenin, a Freedom Theater provides a refuge for children from a world of Israeli raids and harassment. The director of the theater, Juliano Khamis, says, "Art cannot free you from your chains, but art can generate and mobilize discourse of freedom. Art can create debate. Art can expose."

Most of all, children's art can expose the ordeals they have suffered, and by doing so, pave the way for healing.

Enduring Freedom until 2050

By Pepe Escobar

September 13, 2009


And it's one, two, three
what are we fighting for?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn
next stop is Vietnam
- Country Joe and the Fish, 1969

After eight long years, now more than ever, the United States invasion and (partial) occupation of Afghanistan is on a roll, courtesy of US President Barack Obama's "new strategy".

This - which Pentagon supremo Robert Gates insists is "working" - includes US and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) staging mini-Guernicas, al la the bombing of Guernica, Spain, by German and Italian warplanes in 1937, as painted by Pablo Picasso.

It also includes General Stanley McChrystal - the former number one hit man for General David Petraeus in Iraq - assaulting Washington to demand (what else is new?) an extra 45,000 US boots on the ground.

Add 52,000 US troops and no less than a staggering 68,000 US contractors as of late March - don't even count NATO - and soon there will be more Americans wallowing in the Afghan mire than Soviets at their occupation peak during the 1980s. In only 450 days, Enduring Freedom plus NATO boots swelled up from 67,000 to 118,000.

Does it matter that, according to a McClatchy/Ipsos survey, almost eight years after the "war on terror" bombing of the Taliban, 54% of Americans think the US is "losing" the war while 56% are against sending more troops? Of course not.

We want our cut
The latest mini-Guernica is the air strike on two fuel trucks hijacked by the Taliban and stuck in a riverbed near a market in the Ali Abad district in Kunduz province. The strike was ordered by a helpless, intelligence-impaired German colonel under the NATO banner, and has now degenerated into a caustic war of words between Washington and Berlin.

NATO's "mission" in Afghanistan is extremely unpopular in Germany. According to Kunduz locals, the NATO air strike killed more than 100 villagers; NATO says no more than 25; all this while insisting it made sure no civilians were in the area before the hit. It's the same mini-Guernica scenario of Herat in August 2008 and Farah in May 2009.

None of this slows down the relentless Gates/Mullen/McChrystal gravy train - the Pentagon superstar trio obsessed with milking a Vietnam-style escalation of Obama's self-described "necessary war" whose final objective, according to super-envoy Richard Holbrooke, is of the "we'll-know-it-when-we-see-it" kind.

As for the United States Agency for International Development, it has just "discovered" that the Taliban - as a protection racket - take a cut from the international development aid pouring into Afghanistan. But the cut pales in comparison to what the Hamid Karzai government and his warlord compadres divert from the European Union coffers under United Nations supervision - via one "Afghan reconstruction" bash after another (Tokyo 2002, Berlin 2004, London 2006, Paris 2008).

Maybe not as much as Americans, European taxpayers are also being fleeced. In a devastating post at the Italian byebyeunclesam blog, Giancarlo Chetoni explains how Afghanistan is costing Italian taxpayers 1,000 euros (US$1,433) a minute, or 525.6 million euros a year, to "free the country from terrorism and drugs". Surrealism is the norm. Italy famously gave 52 million euros to "reform Afghanistan's judicial system" when, Chetoni notes, "3.5 million penal cases and 5.4 million civil lawsuits are currently pending" in Italy. During the next four years, Italy will practically double its contingent, from 3,250 troops to more than 6,000.

New NATO head, former president George W Bush-friendly Anders Rasmussen from Denmark, has been trying to explain the new "strategy" in pyrotechnic NATOese to skeptical Europeans. But the real plot of the non-stop tragicomedy is never spelled out. The US and its NATO allies will do - and spend - whatever it takes to implant military bases on the doorstep of both Russia and China and - Allah only knows - get their Trans-Afghan Pakistan gas pipeline on track.

From November 2001 to December 2008, the Bush administration burned $179 billion in Afghanistan, while NATO burned $102 billion. Former NATO head Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said the West would keep troops in Central Asia for 25 years. He was corrected by the British army's chief of general staff, General David Richards: it will be 40 years. Expect the "evil", fit Taliban - immune to global warming - to be fighting Enduring Freedom by 2050.

Remembering 9/11

Layla Anwar, An Arab Woman Blues

September 13, 2009

Yeah, another one. Never heard the end of it, did we now?

9/11. How come no one turned it into a song ? The 9/11 song, because it sure sounds like a broken record to me.

Eight years ago, two buildings fell to the grounds and the world changed in consequence. Mind you it was not so fantastic before but you got to admit it, it got much worse since...

For starters, I don't buy none of the 9/11 bullshit stories. Too many question marks that remain unsolved.

For starters, I would like to know where did the 3rd plane-- which allegedly fell in Pennsylvania, disappear ? And what about the plane that hit the Pentagon, what happened to it ? Dissolved like salt in water or what ?

But the biggest joke, and this I saw with my own two eyes, is when the CNN reporter straight after the twin towers attack, while people were screaming, rushing with bloodied faces covered with dust and tons of office paper and documents flying all over New York City, the CNN reporter, found Mohamed Atta's passport in the debris and rubbles.

Hahahahahahaha

I laughed my head off when I saw this. A brand new passport with not one scratch. He waved it in front of the camera.

And in the parking lot, they found in the cars allegedly used by the hijackers, copies of the Koran - this must have been some recommendation for the 9/11 script provided by Bernard Lewis -- and flying manuals in Arabic.

I know a few Arab pilots and I asked them about flying manuals in Arabic. They were all unanimous in their reply -- flying manuals don't exist in Arabic, full stop.

Leaving aside the question, as to why would anyone want to do this to America -- I mean surely the U.S deserves better. It has had, after all, a very clement foreign policy throughout its history...

So leaving aside the why of 9/11, I kind of reviewed in my head what happened since...

A hundred 9/11's took place, first in Afghanistan, then in Iraq and now in Pakistan...

Millions of innocent people were killed in these countries. Iraq alone beats the Guinness book of world records in 6 years. Thousands of homes and buildings were destroyed, millions lost their livelihoods, millions became refugees, millions are bereft...

Yet we still hear and read about the "terror" attack on New York. And all the others who were slaughtered by American terrorism do not get even one second of silence for their dead...

There is something very wrong with the world and with its perception of events...
There is something fundamentally wrong with the scales here. The scales of Justice that is...There are none.

In Iraq, there is daily a 9/11. Daily.

For the 2'000 something who died in the twin towers, we lost up 3'000 Iraqis in one day alone, at the height of the occupation. Today, 6 years on, if there are 10 dead a day, we say it's a good day. Yet no one remembers that.

After 13 years of barbarian sanctions when 1.5 million Iraqis perished, Madeleine Albright proudly said -- the price was well worth it.Imagine anyone of us saying 2'000 Americans dead was well worth it. Yet an official from the American government said it publicly, it went round the world...it was well worth it. No one seemed shocked by this. It was normal. Iraq is after all a "third world country".

Not long ago, an ex CIA man by the name of Charles Duelfer was interviewed on Al Sharqiya satellite Iraqi TV, he repeated Madeleine Albright's quote with a smile.
When the presenter asked him was 1.5 million Iraqis massacred since 2003 worth the price for regime change. Charles Duelfer smiled and said - Iraqis are a capable people, they will get over it.

There are no call in centers for victims of Terror to contact, no long term therapy for the families of the victims and no indemnities either. No courts of law, no judges, no tribunals, no juries to try the terrorists who murdered thousands of Iraqis and destroyed their homes, buildings, infrastructure, society...beyond recognition.

There is something very wrong with the world and its "values". It has none.

Take another example - Afghanistan. This very poor country with an increasingly very impoverished people, who has been through years of wars, first repelling the Russian invaders, and now the Americans and its allies...where thousands of innocent Afghans, entire families and villages decimated, turned into a mass of bones and ruins...it is truly a miracle that the Afghan are still resisting...it is a miracle indeed. A valiant, honorable people for sure.

Who remembers their daily 9/11 since 2001 ? No one.
Does anyone stand for a minute of silence to honor their dead ? no.
Does anyone ask for Justice insofar as the Afghans are concerned ? no.
Does any aid for the hundred 9/11's reach the Afghan victims ? no.

The American terrorists are still on the loose, there is no Guantanamo for them, no black shadow site prisons, no military tribunals, no forced feeding with tubes, no "enhanced interrogation techniques", no "stress positions", no Abu Ghraib, no Bagram...no justice. No justice for the victims of American Terror.

There is something very wrong with the world. Very wrong indeed.

Source: Uruknet.
Link: http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=57883&s2=13.

Hizbullah Employed To Protect Syrian Interests

WASHINGTON [MENL] -- The United States has determined that the Iranian-sponsored Hizbullah has been employed to protect Syrian interests in Lebanon.

Officials said the U.S. intelligence community has concluded that Hizbullah was recruited to help battle anti-Syrian elements in Lebanon. They said Hizbullah was recruiting operatives in the Sunni north to facilitate security along the Syrian border.

"For years, Hizbullah did not get directly involved in helping Syria in Lebanon," an official said. "In 2009, we saw a distinct shift toward direct assistance of Damascus."

Medvedev to meet with French, Spanish PMs in Yaroslavl

MOSCOW/PARIS, September 14 (RIA Novosti) - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev will meet with the French and Spanish prime ministers on Monday in the Russian city of Yaroslavl, his aide Sergei Prikhodko said.

Medvedev will meet with French Prime Minister Francois Fillon and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero on the sidelines of an international conference on global security to be held in Yaroslavl, 250 km northeast of Moscow.

Medvedev and Zapatero last met during the G8 summit in Italy's L'Aquila this July. Russia-EU relations, cooperation within the framework of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), a new Russian-EU strategic partnership treaty are traditionally on the agenda of top-level Russian-Spanish meetings.

The two leaders are also expected to discuss a new legally binding European security pact, proposed by Medvedev in Berlin last June. So far, the initiative has been met with caution by the West.

The Russian-French talks are expected to focus on a host of issues - from international conflicts to airspace cooperation. Among other things, Medvedev and Fillon will discuss Iran's nuclear program, France's initiative for organizing an international Middle East conference and the situation in the Caucasus.

According to the French prime minister's administration, he is seeking Russia's support for a French initiative concerning global financial management ahead of the forthcoming G20 summit.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin will also meet with his French counterpart later in the day.

The international conference in Yaroslavl, The Modern State and Global Security, is held under the aegis of the Russian president. Some 550 representatives from 18 countries are expected to attend. RIA Novosti is the forum's information sponsor.

The Halting of Reconstruction of Nahr el Bared Refugee Camp

This call comes after a court order decision taken on the 18th of August 2009 by Andre Sader, a judge in the Lebanese Legislative Council, ordering to freeze the backfilling process of the archeological site in Nahr el Bared reconstruction project, for 2 months. The halting of backfilling is in essence a stopping of the commencement of reconstruction in Nahr el bared.

This action comes after two years of delaying bureaucratic procedures, where every decision concerning the reconstruction project, including planning and design decisions of the master plan, required governmental, ministerial and political approvals. More significantly this is the first time that a decision which halts actual work on site is taken, hence prolonging the displacement period of more than 20,000 Palestinian refugees. This document aims at updating on these recent developments; it presents background information about the halting procedures, and explains the community’s perspective and reactions to the mentioned actions.

Cholera outbreaks in 10 Afghan provinces: govt

September 13, 2009

KABUL — Afghanistan has reported outbreaks of potentially lethal cholera in 10 provinces across the impoverished country, the health ministry said on Sunday.

The ministry "has so far recorded 673 cases countrywide" of the highly contagious disease in almost a third of the country's 34 provinces, including in the capital Kabul. No deaths have been reported.

"All outbreaks are under control and no active one is reported as of today, September 13," a ministry statement said.

It said staff had been deployed to outbreak areas and medication was being provided to try to prevent the spread of the disease, which thrives where sanitation is poor and can spread rapidly.

Afghanistan's health system has been battered by decades of civil war, and facilities remain poor across the fifth poorest country in the world.

Desperate, desperate: Gaza Ramadan day 23

Eva Bartlett, In Gaza

September 13, 2009

Yesterday Hamsa called me. It’s been a while since I’ve seen him, though I did visit his family two weeks ago –he was out, looking for work.

Hamsa has never directly asked for any help. It has been due to my suggestions and the financing of outside supporters, that Hamsa accepted the small donations offered. His initial reaction was evident disgust at the notion of being helped by someone. I made clear that the donations being offered were in solidarity, were not intended to be a permanent reality rendering Hamsa aid-dependent.

Rather, we acknowledged that his donkey had been killed in the Israeli war on Gaza, that his means of an income –however paltry –had been destroyed.

With reluctance, Hamsa accepted a few donations. With some money, he bought chickens, to produce eggs for his wife and he and possibly to sell them. With a larger donation we bought a horse to replace his donkey. He began scouring the streets again for recyclable plastics, creating work for himself. Periodically, he would be asked to move things with his horse and cart, for a fee.

His horse got ill. This was problematic as he could no longer work with it and he was spending precious money on vet fees and medicine for the horse.

Then Hamsa’s newborn son, Ali, got ill.

He didn’t even call me then to ask for help.

He sold the horse, spent much of the money on Ali’s hospital bills and Ali improved.

Now, his 3 month old is in good health, he swears. And his wife Iman’s health is also fine.

But Hamsa has no source of income yet again, and his legs are giving him trouble.

After his first donkey was killed, Hamsa collected the plastics using his bike to get around. He made many trips and earned a bare minimum, below the bare minimum for most of us.

But he’d say, "we’re living, we’re getting by," when I asked.

When I visited Hamsa first, I saw the hole they live in. I know that a great many Palestinian in Gaza are cramped in similar hovels. Yet when you get to know the individuals living in such conditions, the shock of their situation hits home.

Hamsa and Iman live in what must be 4m by 4m concrete brick room with asbestos tiling. Everything about it is wrong, bad for their health, difficult. In summer it boils, no breeze enters the single window, and the smell of the toilet adjacent (no door) belches into their living/dining/cooking/sleeping room.

In winter it will be frigid, freezing.

They cook over kerosene, or sometimes fire when they scavenge wood. Their diet is substandard, like the majority in Gaza, relying heavily on bread, cucumbers, tomatoes. Potatoes enrich it somewhat.

The chickens have gone, their income is gone, the days are still hot, Iman breastfeeds Ali but her own nutrition is poor.

Today Hamsa called me again, desperate.

"Where are you? Can you visit?"

On the sea at the time, I went to him some hours later, asking him to meet me in between the port and his home, in Saha market.

He continues to age quickly, the stress of worrying about existing adding lines to his face. He’d looked more youthful even 5 months ago.

"Walla the life is so hard now. So hard. I don’t know what to do. I don’t know how we’re going to survive this."

He had never complained before, not when his horse was ill, not when Iman was near delivery and they didn’t have money for the hospital and doctor fees.

He was almost complaining today, rightfully.

"I don’t have a Palestinian huwiyye," he said of the Palestinian ID card. His family is from Gaza originally, but he was born in Jordan and holds a Jordanian passport. His wife is from Gaza, his mother and siblings live here. But he’s not able to receive the UN dry food aid, without a huwiyye.

"I don’t get the food aid that others do. I don’t get any compensation, any aid."

He wasn’t actually complaining. He was just going over and over in his mind, and now out loud, how desperate his situation has become.

"I went back to apply for day labor." He had told me earlier that he’d put his name in at an office which lines people up with work, a cash for work program. But he’s never been called.

"I’ll do anything. I thought about working in the tunnels. But I’m terrified. You put your hand in the tunnel shaft and it’ll collapse on you or the Egyptians will send poisonous gas through. People die every week in the tunnels."

He’s right about this. The tunnels –much covered in the media for their role in smuggling anything, but mostly daily goods and foods banned by Israel, into Gaza –don’t get much coverage for their martyrs. Who are these young men (usually quite young, often from the same family) who risk their lives for a salary? What is their families’ situation? How desperate are they to take on such work.

As desperate as Hamsa, I’d wager.

"I don’t want to work in the tunnels. But I’ll do anything else."

I believe him. It’s fairly humbling work to pick through rubbish for recyclables.

But Hamsa, while taking on the work others disdain, is proud, stands proud, and refuses to beg.

"I don’t want to be a beggar. I would die before that," he said.

He talked of his expenses: "I spend at least 5 shekels a day on Ali. Milk costs 20 shekels every 3 days. Diapers cost 32 shekels a week."

He tried explaining something about giving away their sleeping mattress… I lost it with my poor Arabic, but I gather that he had lent it to someone and it got ruined somehow.

Later, on the way home I see two eleven or twelve year olds, loaded with armfuls of plastic containers and a large sack of plastic from the rubbish.

Tests find no infections in Xinjiang needle attack victims

Tests of victims' samples found no dangerous viruses or chemicals involved in a string of bizarre hypodermic syringe stabbings in Urumqi, capital of China's far western Xinjiang region, a military medical expert said Sunday.

Qian Jun, head of the disease control and biological security office with China's Academy of Military Medical Sciences, said the academy's Beijing lab found no needle injury samples were tainted with radioactive substances, toxic chemicals or HIV virus.

The samples were not contaminated with other dangerous viruses or substances either, such as anthrax bacillus, yersinia pestis, francisella tularensis, brucella and botulinum toxin, Qian told a press briefing.

Local and military medical experts have rechecked about 250 victims and found no clearly worsening wounds or serious illnesses, he noted.

By Sept. 4, local authorities had confirmed 531 victims of hypodermic syringe stabbings in Urumqi, 171 of whom showed obvious syringe marks. The majority of the victims were of the Han ethnic group.

Tens of thousands of angry and panic residents in Urumqi took to the streets last week, protesting against needle attacks and demanding security guarantees.

Qian suggested offering more psychological counseling to ease anxiety and depression of the victims as many are haunted with lingering fears of hidden infections.

The Urumqi General Hospital affiliated to the Lanzhou Military Area Command has arranged three psychological experts and opened four counseling hotlines to help ease victims' fears and panic.

Wang Wenxian, deputy director of the Urumqi municipal public security bureau, said the needle stabbings did not cause serious damages to the victims' health, but they caused public panic and disturbed social order.

The acts violated China's Criminal Law and should be harshly punished accordingly, Wang told reporters.

A court in Urumqi said three Uygurs were given jail terms ranging from seven to 15 years Saturday over syringe stabbings or threatening to use needle attacks for robbery.

Wang added that more police and armed police forces would patrol on the city's streets and those who offer tip-offs for needle attackers would receive rewards.

He also urged the attackers to surrender to the police, saying those who surrender or report others' crimes could receive lighter punishment.

AP IMPACT: Illiteracy undermines Afghan army

By FISNIK ABRASHI, Associated Press Writer

KABUL – Afghan army recruit Shahidullah Ahmadi can't read — and neither can nine out of 10 soldiers in the Afghan National Army.

The lack of education points to a basic challenge for the United States, as it tries to expand the Afghan army in the hopes that U.S. and allied forces can one day withdraw. Just as in Iraq — and perhaps even more so — the U.S. is finding it no small task to recruit, train and equip a force that is large and competent enough to operate successfully on its own.

"I face difficulties. If someone calls me and tells me to go somewhere, I can't read the street signs," Ahmadi, 27, a member of a logistics battalion, said while walking through downtown Kabul. "In our basic training, we learned a lot. Some of my colleagues who can read and write can take notes, but I've forgotten a lot of things, the types of things that might be able to save my life."

The Associated Press interviewed recruits and visited a training center to gain a better understanding of the obstacles toward eventually handing over responsibility of security to the Afghan army so that international troops can go home.

The speed with which NATO trains and equips more Afghan security forces has become an issue in the United States, Europe and Canada as governments decide whether to commit more deeply to a war that is losing public support.

Carl Levin, the leading Senate Democrat on military issues, said Friday that he wants heightened training of Afghan armed forces before sending more American combat troops. Levin urged the Obama administration to expand Afghan forces to 240,000 troops and Afghan police to 160,000 officers by 2013.

Current plans call for boosting the army from 92,000 soldiers to 134,000 by late 2011. U.S. officials say the combined army and police forces need to increase to about 400,000 by 2014.

"It's absolutely essential that over time Afghanistan assumes responsibility for its own security, and combat troops draw dawn," said Richard Holbrooke, the U.S. special envoy for the region. "The current force levels of police and army are clearly going to have to be increased."

Violence in Afghanistan has already soared to record levels, requiring more troops to secure wide stretches of countryside. U.S. and NATO troops can clear areas of Taliban fighters, but they need Afghan soldiers to make sure the militants don't return.

The rapid expansion of the army, however, has already raised questions about whether Afghanistan, one of the world's poorest countries, can sustain a force of that size, as well as maintain discipline and ethnic balance in the ranks. It is likely that the cost of training, equipping and sustaining Afghan forces at a level big enough to maintain security will primarily fall on U.S. taxpayers for years to come.

In Iraq, the U.S. disbanded Saddam Hussein's army in 2003, but six years later has still not managed to create a force capable of operating without American logistical, technical, intelligence and other support. And in Iraq, the U.S. was able to tap resources unavailable in Afghanistan, including a pool of retired military officers and one of the Arab world's most literate populations.

Polls show that the army is the most trusted Afghan institution, a testament to the relative success it has had, especially compared with the police, who are widely derided as corrupt. But about 90 percent of those deciding to join the army are illiterate, according to U.S. military officers involved in the training.

That's higher than the 75 percent national illiteracy rate, because military recruits come from lower classes where few know how to read.

The lack of basic reading skills slows down progress in an already short 10-week training course. It means soldiers cannot use maps properly or understand the army's code of conduct. It also increases the difficulty of building a solid core of noncommissioned officers — sergeants who are the backbone of every successful army, responsible for conveying a commander's written orders to the troops. U.S. Maj. Gen. Richard Formica, who is in charge of training both soldiers and police, says the high illiteracy rate is not a "show-stopper."

However, he added that illiteracy "particularly becomes a challenge for those recruits that we want to advance to become noncommissioned officers, because the higher you get in rank and responsibility, the more expectation there is that you can read and write at some basic level."

Most Taliban guerrillas also can't read and write, but they don't need to as much.

Understanding maps and signs is important for the Afghan army, which is supposed to deploy anywhere government control is challenged.

The Taliban, however, strike on their own timetable — usually wherever government and NATO forces are weakest. They move among friendly, generally ethnic Pashtun communities and rely on local guides. Many Taliban fighters operate in areas of the country where they grew up, making maps and compasses unnecessary.

The Taliban also generally operate in small units. They use hit-and-run insurgency tactics or lay bombs along roads, highly effective techniques that don't require the same level of sophistication and attention to detail as conventional military tactics, which often use helicopters, artillery, armored vehicles and large numbers of troops.

To overcome the problem for the Afghan army, a private company, Pulau Electronics of Orlando, Fla., has been hired to run a program that aims to make 50 percent of the troops "functionally literate."

"The target is for them to be able to write their name and their weapon's serial number," said Joe Meglan, 39, of Savannah, Ga., who works for Pulau.

The main training effort takes place at the Kabul Military Training Center. The road to the training camp is littered with the rusting hulks of tanks destroyed during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s, a reminder of the last superpower's failure to tame this war-torn land.

Afghan trainers lead the effort with coalition teams mentoring them. After 10 weeks of training, regular soldiers are put into units before being sent to the battlefield.

There are 5,000 coalition trainers who work with both army and police. Some 256 teams work with the army and 85 with the police, according to Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan.

President Barack Obama has ordered 4,000 additional U.S. military trainers as part of his surge of 21,000 new U.S. troops into the country. The training for recruits also has about half the number of mentors it needs from the coalition, said Lt. Col. Daniel Harmuth, 43, from Bakersfield, Ca., who runs the basic warrior training.

In the meantime, illiterate soldiers in the army are scraping by.

"Unfortunately all my friends and I cannot read," said soldier Rosey Khan, 19. "It is very bad, particularly during the fighting. They taught me a lot of things, but I've forgotten most of them. ... Even the officers cannot read."