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Thursday,
November 29, 2001
N.
Alliance rejects idea of international security force
By
Tony Czuczka
Associated Press
KOENIGSWINTER,
Germany The northern alliance on Wednesday rejected
an international force to keep security in post-Taliban Afghanistan,
saying the alliances own troops were sufficient.
The
issue of security is one of two items to be decided at U.N.-sponsored
talks among four Afghan factions that will decide the war-torn
countrys political future. The other issue is an interim
administration.
We
dont feel a need for an outside force. There is security
in place, northern alliance delegation leader Younus
Qanooni told reporters at the talks, which began Tuesday outside
Bonn.
However,
Qanooni said, if a more extensive security force is needed,
it should be comprised of ethnic groups within Afghanistan.
The
United Nations has offered three proposals for a security
force to ensure peace in
Afghanistan once the Taliban are defeated: an Afghan force,
a U.N. peacekeeping force and an international security force.
Officials have indicated that an international force
would be the most realistic.
The
United States, which has sent a delegation to observe the
talks, has not taken a position on whether an eventual security
force should be multinational, U.S. envoy James F. Dobbins
said.
Our
understanding is not that theyre refusing to discuss
it but that theyre of the view that security is actually
pretty good at the moment, Dobbins said, referring to
the northern alliance.
Though
no decision has been made yet on a multinational force, Turkey,
Indonesia and New Zealand have offered to contribute troops.
U.S. officials have also cited Bangladesh and Jordan as possible
participants.
But
many Afghan fighters are hostile to the idea of any international
troops on their soil, recalling a long history of battling
foreign occupiers, from the British Empire in the 19th century
to the Soviets in the 20th.
Qanooni
also dampened expectations building at the talks that the
exiled former king would head an interim administration, saying
he would have a role only if elected by a traditional national
council, called a loya jirga.
We
dont believe in the role of a person and personalities.
We believe in a system, Qanooni said. If the people
agree through a loya jirga that the king has a role, of course,
no one can deny that.
Delegates
from other factions at the conference indicated earlier Wednesday
that consensus was growing around the ex-king as head of a
transitional administration.
The first goal of the talks is to decide on an interim administration
that will run Afghanistan until a loya jirga can convene,
possibly as early as March. Tribal leaders at the initial
loya jirga would approve a transitional government to be in
place for up to two years, leading to a second loya jirga,
which would approve a constitution and set the stage for elections.
Fatima
Gailani, an adviser to one of the four groups negotiating
at the talks, said Wednesday that the delegates appeared to
nearing agreement that former King Mohammad Zaher Shah, 87,
would run that first administration. Zaher Shah has been living
in exile in Rome since being overthrown in 1973.
The
majority, everyone agrees that whatever procedure, he will
be the head of it. How much power he will have, we have to
discuss this, said Gailani, who is advising the delegation
of exiles based in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Deputy
U.N. mediator envoy Francesc Vendrell and Dobbins, the U.S.
envoy, both said delegates from all four groups at the table
would like to see a role for the king.
No
faction favors a return of the monarchy, and northern alliance
leader Burhanuddin Rabbani strongly opposes the king as head
of state.
The
four delegations were to meet Wednesday afternoon in a working
session with the chief U.N. envoy to Afghanistan, Lakhdar
Brahimi, following a meeting earlier in the day between the
two largest factions, the northern alliance and that of the
exiled former Afghan king, U.N. spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said.
Secluded
in a luxury hotel near Bonn, Germany, the groups are under
strong international pressure, not only from the United Nations
but also from the United States and Afghanistans neighbors,
who have observers at the talks, to come up with a formula
for an interim administration to replace Taliban rule and
a security force.
Vendrell
indicated a measure of impatience with the pace of talks so
far. Despite plans, the four groups have not yet met together
since agreeing to the agenda on Tuesday.
We
have to decide whether we should not help them move along
and overcome obstacles, he said, adding that the U.N.
will probably encourage them, prod them.
After
heralding a unifying tone at the opening sessions, the United
Nations toned down expectations on the talks second
day.
These
talks are not going to be easy. One grain of sand can stop
the machine, Fawzi said.
Despite
the conflict over the security force, Qanooni called the meetings
positive and said he expected them to be wrapped
up in two or three days.
Western
nations hope to use the promise of billions in reconstruction
aid as leverage to prod the Afghans toward a historic agreement
on a broad-based government, a constitution with full civil
rights for women and eventual elections.
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