. Earth Science News .
Afghan Minister Surveys Security Situation

Afghan Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Photo courtesy of AFP.
by Katherine Gypson
Washington (UPI) Mar 22, 2006
Afghan Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah says the security situation in his country is improving but he does not want to "give the impression of mission accomplished."

Speaking at the conservative Heritage Foundation in Washington before meeting with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Abdullah Monday praised the Afghanistan Compact produced at the London Conference on Afghanistan this past February.

"There had been a worry in the backs of the minds of the Afghan people that the West would disengage once again and leave us," said Abdullah, referring to the time after the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in the late 1980s and the United States no longer provided aid for the shattered country. After the London Conference, he said, it was "evident that this was no longer the case." Representatives from 60 countries and the United Nations renewed their commitment to the rebuilding of Afghanistan at that meeting.

"A stable Afghanistan, an independent Afghanistan can contribute to the further betterment of the security situation," said Abdullah while discussing the threat of terrorism. "The dimensions, implications and repercussions go beyond Afghanistan or the region. It is an issue of global importance."

Abdullah called on Pakistan to honor the "good policy choice" it made after the Sept. 11 attacks, to switch support from the Taliban to the United States. He said that terrorist camps based in Pakistan are not only involved in local activities but are also involved in "sending foreign fighters into Afghanistan."

"We don't make a distinction between foreign al-Qaida and Taliban terrorist activity," Abdullah said.

The Foreign Minister said that there would be no "single solution" to the problem of illegal poppy growing in Afghanistan. "In some cases it will be rural development," he said. "In other cases, it will depend on new ideas such as growing saffron in some parts of the country."

Abdullah said that Afghanistan would be willing to work with Russia to cut down the flow of drug sales and that, "in the area of narcotic trafficking, regional cooperation is key."

Abdullah declined to comment in detail on the case of the Afghan man who faces the death penalty for converting from Islam to Christianity. He did note that the case is legal under the Afghan constitution.

The Middle East Times has recently quoted an anonymous Afghan official as saying that Abdullah may lose his position in an upcoming Cabinet shuffle planned by President Hamid Karzai.

Source: United Press International

Related Links
Heritage Foundation

Georgia Accuses Russian Army Of Selling Missiles To Separatist Abkhazia
Tbilisi, Georgia (AFP) Feb 13, 2006
Georgia on Monday accused the Russian army of selling several surface-to-air missiles to the separatist region of Abkhazia, a charge dismissed by Moscow.







  • Large Centrifuge Helps Researchers Mimic Effects Of Katrina On Levees
  • Louisiana Selects SGI For Storm Modeling And Visualization
  • Search For Katrina's Dead Stymied By Bureaucratic Wrangling
  • China Offers Bangladesh River Data For Flood Forecasts

  • Tiny 'Cages' That Trap Carbon Dioxide Could Help Stop Climate Change
  • Strong Storms Linked With Rising Sea Surface Temperatures
  • Snow Thickness Data Key To Understanding Polar Climate Wildlife Habitats
  • Greenhouse Theory Smashed By Biggest Stone

  • FluWrap: Deadly Strain Divides
  • Satellite Flood Mapping Service Strengthens Eastern France Civil Protection
  • Scientists Use Satellites To Detect Deep-Ocean Whirlpools
  • GeoEye Receives Additional Awards Totaling $13 Million From The NGA

  • NREL Highlights Leading Utility Green Power Programs
  • Journal Of Industrial Ecology Focuses On Eco-Efficiency
  • USC, Rice To Develop Bacteria-Powered Fuel Cells
  • Book Offers A Viable Alternative To Fossil Fuel

  • Ebola Test Urgent Amid Globalism
  • Minor Mutations In Avian Flu Virus Increase Chances Of Human Infection
  • Emerging Disease Risks Prompt Scientists To Call
  • Evolution In Action: Why Some Viruses Jump Species

  • Saving Vegetables Under Threat Of Extinction
  • Visualizing Viruses
  • Behavioral Studies Show UV Contributes To Marsupial Color Vision
  • How Flowers Changed The World

  • Hong Kong Pollution Leaves Tourists Choking
  • Reducing Soot Particles Is Associated With Longer Lives
  • Metabolites Of Pharmaceuticals Identified In Wastewater
  • Pollution Trackers Hit The Road To Pinpoint Airborne Culprits

  • Aggression-Related Gene Weakens Brain's Impulse Control Circuits
  • Aging Japan Building Robots To Look After Elderly
  • 'Wild' Play As A Child Breeds Respect For Environment In Adults
  • Most Human Chimp Differences Due To Gene Regulation Not Genes

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement