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PAS : KE ARAH PEMERINTAHAN ISLAM YANG ADIL
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Barangkali Amerika mahu Afghanistan menjadi huru-hara supaya
mereka akan ada alasan yang kukuh untuk memasukkan tentera
mereka lebih ramai, kononnya untuk menghapuskan perompak dan
pembunuh jalanan yang kian berleluasa.
Ketika Taliban memerintah dahulu, kumpulan perompak dan pembunuh
telah dihalau. Sekarang mereka kembali entah dari mana.
==================================
http://www.oureffort2001.com/RESEARCH/TALIBAN/anarchy1122.htm
Anarchy in warlord territory
Armed gangs looting cars and buses
Rory McCarthy in Kabul
Friday November 23, 2001
The Guardian
Armed warlords operating in the hills of eastern Afghanistan have
begun ambushing and looting cars and buses as large areas of the
country slide back into anarchy.
Gunmen operating from a deserted hotel in Tangi Abrashim, the
Silk Gorge, 60 miles east of Kabul, yesterday held up a van
carrying 18 Afghan passengers and stole money and watches.
Four journalists were murdered in the same area on Monday when six
armed men stopped a convoy of cars driving to Kabul. The journalists
were led into the surrounding hills, beaten and shot dead.
In the past week several other foreign reporters have been robbed
on the same unmade road between Jalalabad, which is held by Pashtun
commanders, and Kabul, which is held by the Northern Alliance.
One unconfirmed report yesterday by an Iranian news agency said
three more journalists had been killed in the area, although there
was no evidence to support the claim.
Stephen Evans, a British diplomat who arrived in Kabul this week,
said he had held talks about security with Northern Alliance
leaders. "Although the security situation is improving, they
recommend against travel along the road by expatriates and
foreigners for the time being," he said.
Several international aid agencies have this week called for
military assistance to ensure the security of their main
distribution routes.
Drivers at the Jalalabad bus stand in the capital described how
local commanders around the town of Sarobi were holding up cars
and robbing passengers. Waqif Khan Shinwari, a driver who reached
Kabul last night, said his van was held up by five men armed with
Kalashnikov assault rifles at Tangi Abrashim.
"Two stood on the roadside and three of them blocked the road,"
he said. "One of them came in the van and punched me and started
hitting the passengers. He was asking for the fare money."
The gunmen, their faces wrapped in scarves, ordered the passengers
out of the van and took their money and watches. The women in the
group were not touched.
Mr Shinwari said the gunmen were Afghans, spoke Pashtun and
Persian and were local commanders.
The area appears to be under the control of Commander Isatullah,
a former mojahedin fighter with the despised warlord Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar. Cdr Hekmatyar was backed by Pakistani intelligence
during the war against the Soviets but was reviled for his attacks
on Kabul in the early 1990s.
Ahmad Khan, another bus driver, said gunmen were stopping cars
to search for foreigners. "My uncle's coach was stopped near Tangi
and he was asked if he had any foreigners on board. One man in the
coach with red hair was dragged down and they were suspicious that
he was a foreigner. He was only released when he started talking in
Persian."
In the years of mojahedin fighting in the early 1990s the road
from Jalalabad to Kabul was frequently the scene of violent
robberies and kidnappings. Several commanders operated checkpoints
and demanded heavy bribes.
"Before the Taliban came we couldn't travel along this road when
it was dark," said Asif, another bus driver.
"Now it is the same people who are looting again. Under the Taliban
it was much safer. We could travel at night."
In Jalalabad, the newly appointed Pashtun commander, Haji Abdul
Qadir, said Taliban and Arab fighters were operating in the mountains
between the city and Kabul.
"Bombing will not work anymore," he said. "If the local people and
the local commanders help us, that would be good."
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