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Condemnation Statement
PTM-USA
Manzoor Pashteen: The young tribesman rattling Pakistan's army
When the man with the red cap speaks, thousands of Pashtuns listen
The Miranshah Jalsa
Abdul Qayum Mohmand, PhD
“Afghanistan – As Only Love Could Hurt”
Notes From A Broken Land
The Costs of War Taking Afghanistan as a Case Study
Full Report (PDF)
The Wrong Enemy in Afghanistan
Pashtun elders seek world’s help to banish terror
IS Taking New Strategy in Afghanistan

The Great Game Reconstructed
By: Abdul-Qayum Mohmand, Ph.D.

Security and Peace In Afghanistan Before and After 2014
By: Abdul-Qayum Mohmand, Ph.D.

Some Thoughts on Islamic Economics
Professor M. Siddieq Noorzoy
Relocate United Nations To Jerusalam To Harmonize Civilizations
By: Dr. Rahmat Rabi Zirakyar
The Nature of Statistical Data About The Afghan Economy and Their Problems
The Great Dangerous Game Revisit Afghanistan
THE PROSPECTS FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN AFGHANISTAN
An Open Letter to President Donald Trump Attending UN Meetings in New York
Abdul Haq: the Afghan commander who could have led to peace.

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د
څو چې راغونډ پۀ يو مرکز يې نۀ کړم
هرې تپې ته د جرګو سره ځم

 
Sabawoon News Of the Day
STOP KABUL ECO DISASTER
Source:   By: Said Issaq Said  

“ More than 3,000 People May Die in Kabul Because of Air Pollution Every Year.” (( Ministry of Public Health Press Release January 15, 2009))

This highlights the fact that there is an environmental crisis in Kabul affecting everybody in town.

According to Afghanistan's National Environmental Protection Agency, the level of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) was 52 ppm (parts per million) on an average day in Kabul in 2008. The U.S. EPA national air quality standard is .053 ppm. Meaning Kabul nitrogen dioxide level is 981 times the USEPA standard!!!

The level of sulfur dioxide (SO2) was 37 ppm on an average day in Kabul in 2008. The U.S. EPA national air quality standard is .030 ppm.
Indicating Kabul sulfur dioxide level as 1233 time that of the USEPA!!!!

According to the U.S. EPA, exposure to NO2, SO2 and other particulate matter negatively affects the respiratory system, damages lung tissue, and can cause cancer and premature death. The elderly, children and people with chronic lung disease, influenza or asthma tend to be especially sensitive to the effects of particulate matter.

Additionally, the mining, transporting and processing activities of Aynak Copper Project will further worsen the situation.. It is anticipated that annually, 10,000,000 tons of copper ore will be excavated, transported ( 2,700 TRIPS PER DAY OF BIG HAULING TRUCKS), crushed and processed in Aynak less than 20 miles from Kabul. This will certainly put a great pressure on the ecosystem already at brink of a major disaster. In the EIS of this gigantic project the fact that the operation will be in the vicinity of Kabul was not taken into consideration.

In other words, the most critical question of : ((Will the ecosystem be able to handle the upcoming twin towers of air pollutants less than twenty miles apart? )) was not taken into consideration.

The best practice should have been to construct a model to study the entire Kabul city plus Logar as a single area.

The World Bank group tasked with this had overlooked this point at the beginning. Later when alerted of the consequences they accepted the fact that it should be studied as single system. But the Afghan Ministry of Mines is still not in recognition of the danger this project will impose to the ecosystem. And MCC has not produced its Environment Impact Assessment yet.

The pubic has the right to know the environmental impacts.
This right has been violated.
“Articles 15 and 31 of Afghanistan Constitution”

In January of 2009 President Karzai realizing the importance of the matter declared a state of emergency.
But due to some reasons not much have been done to justify the seriousness of responding to a state of emergency.
Situation hopeless but not serious!!!


Sad Day for Afghanistan Culture Parlement aproved Rahin

په هندوستان کې د افغان محصلينو سر خلاصى ليک



Afghan Journalists Under Fire

Source: Institute for War & Peace By: Habiburrahman Ibrahimi  

Government professes to respect freedom of expression, but journalists tell a different story.

(ARR No. 349, 12-Jan-10)
When Ahmadullah Mohammadyar, a freelance journalist in Kandahar, decided to attend a rally during the presidential election campaign last summer, he did not expect to run into trouble from the local authorities.

But as Mohammadyar was talking to the crowd about Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, one of the more prominent challengers to the incumbent, Hamed Karzai, he claims he was attacked by police.

“With government officials present as well as a dozen other journalists, [they] took me outside and started to beat me. They hit me with their weapons and kicked and punched me so much that I could not even stand up,” he said.

Kandahar, in Afghanistan’s southern Pashtun belt, is Karzai country. The head of the provincial council is Karzai’s half-brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai. Journalists in Kandahar have long complained that the authorities keep a firm grip on the media, stifling freedom of expression.

“Kandahar is a dictatorship,” Mohammadyar said. “Officials will only allow publication of things that are acceptable to them. If there are facts that cast officials in a bad light, they will not let us publish.”

Mohammadyar said that he has been threatened many times.

“The news on the radio in Kandahar is not what journalists report, it is what officials want the news to be,” he continued. “If a journalist does something that is not in favour of the government, even if it is in accordance with the principles of journalism, then he becomes an enemy, and has to be beaten, killed, or driven out of Kandahar.”

The Kandahar authorities deny Mohammadyar’s claims that news is heavily censored and journalists are targeted. However, they did admit that police beat Mohammadyar.

“There is no dictatorship in Kandahar,” Abdul Majid Babai, the head of Kandahar’s information and culture department, said. “At the time that Mohammadayar was attacked we were in the middle of our fall poetry festival, the Anaar Gul (Pomegranate Flower).

“The governor had declared that there should be no political campaigning during this time. We know Mohammadyar. He is a good poet. But he started campaigning for Ashraf Ghani. So yes, the police beat him. That was a mistake. Our police are not very well trained.”

Mohammadyar’s case is not an isolated one, according to journalists’ rights organisations.

“This year (the Afghan solar year begins in March) has been worse than previous years,” said Wahidullah Tawhidi, who heads Media Watch, a newsletter that documents cases of violations against journalists.

According to Tawhidi, the Media Watch office has recorded 71 cases since March, 2009. These include three murders, 37 arrests and/or beatings, and ten cases of threats received by phone.

Fahim Dashty, spokesperson for the National Union of Journalists and editor of Kabul Weekly, confirms that the current year has been a bad one.

“Without a doubt, this year has been worse for journalists than any other,” he said. “Security officials have failed to perform their duties. They try to hide reality by creating problems for journalists. Journalists have more problems with the government than with the insurgency.”

Dashty accused officials in the ministry of information and culture, which oversees the media, of failing to take action to protect journalists.

Hamid Naseri Wardag, a spokesman for the ministry, acknowledges that journalists are under threat. But he insists that his ministry has been active in trying to address the problem.

“We have held meetings with security officials in the capital and provinces about journalist safety,” he said. “We have sent many letters about journalists’ safety to security officials.”

His ministry, he said, was discharging its duties, and it was now up to security officials to take measures.

At the same time, journalists are facing threats from insurgents, who are often displeased by what they see as pro-government coverage. Several journalists are currently in hiding after their lives were threatened by persons claiming to represent the Taleban.

Nonetheless, journalists say, the main threat is from their own authorities.

Mahmood Fayez, a reporter from the Kabul-based Tamadon TV, was arrested and beaten in Kabul in October, while on his way to a news conference at the ministry of foreign affairs.

“Suddenly the police took my camera and started to beat me,” he said. “I told the commander not to let his men abuse me like that, but he attacked me as well. The police treat journalists like this because we expose their crimes. They do not want the public to know the reality.”

If nothing is done to stop such abuse, Fayez said, many journalists will abandon their profession. Some have already been forced to leave their places of work and residence and seek refuge in the capital.

Sher Ahmad Haidar was a journalist for the Pajhwok news agency in Ghazni. “I had to leave and move my family to Kabul,” he said. “My life was being threatened.”

Interior ministry spokesman Zmarai Bashari accepts that police do occasionally act inappropriately towards journalists, but he insisted that all such cases were investigated and the culprits punished.

Regarding the case of Fayez, Bashari conceded that the police were at fault.

“We went to this reporter from Tamadon and apologised,” he said. “We gave him a sheep in accordance with Afghan culture.”

Police officials implicated in the abuse of journalists in Kabul and Kandahar have either been imprisoned or transferred, he added.

But Bashari also asked that journalists cooperate with the police. “Police sacrifice themselves to protect journalists,” he said. “Journalists should also cooperate with the police.”

Political analyst and writer Ahmad Saeedi dismisses government talk about freedom of speech and the rights of journalists as so much propaganda.

“The government has made no arrests of anyone accused of killing journalists,” he pointed out. “They have not conducted proper investigations. They create problems and obstacles for journalists.”

Habiburrahman Ibrahimi is an IWPR trainee in Kabul.


 

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نو په مړو او معدومو به شميريږو
که دا يو چې په همدې شانې اوسيږو
ګورئ دا سيلاب چې راغی لاهو کيږو
 
راځئ هلئ چې لاسونه سره ورکړو

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