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THE STANS
Afghan army's future depends on govt reforms: NATO
by Staff Writers
Kabul, Kaboul (AFP) Aug 13, 2013


UN chief in Pakistan amid Kashmir tensions
Islamabad (AFP) Aug 13, 2013 - UN chief Ban Ki-moon arrived in Islamabad on Tuesday for a two-day visit as tensions remain high between nuclear-armed neighbours Pakistan and India over the disputed territory of Kashmir.

Ban will hold talks with President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, as well as meeting young people and getting a briefing on work to combat floods in Pakistan.

The trip comes as Pakistan and India trade accusations over several firing incidents across the Line of Control, the de facto border monitored by UN observers that divides the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir.

Islamabad on Monday summoned India's deputy ambassador to protest at what it called "unprovoked shelling" which killed one civilian.

India's army accused Pakistan on Tuesday of firing across the border in Kashmir overnight, but did not report any casualties.

Despite the Kashmir tensions, the UN said Ban's visit would focus on education efforts.

"In line with Malala Day last month he will meet with students in Islamabad to discuss efforts to promote and expand quality education for all," a UN statement said.

The day was declared in honour of Malala Yousafzai, a Pakistani teenager campaigning for girls' education who survived a gunshot to the head from Taliban extremists in October 2012.

The 16-year-old gave a moving speech at the United Nations in New York last month in which she vowed to continue to work for gender equality in education.

Nearly half of all children in Pakistan and almost three quarters of young girls are not enrolled in primary school, according to UN and government statistics.

Ban will also meet the Speaker of the National Assembly.

He will attend Pakistan's independence day celebrations on Wednesday and will highlight the country's role as one of the largest contributors of troops and police to UN peacekeeping missions.

During his visit officials of Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority will brief him about the floods in the country, where annual monsoon rains from July to September bring misery to thousands and inundate towns and villages.

Monsoon rains triggering floods have killed 84 people across Pakistan and affected more than 80,000 others this month, and officials have warned of further downpours.

Afghanistan's fledging security forces will not be sustainable as they take on the Taliban unless major reforms are pushed through the government in Kabul, a senior NATO commander warned Tuesday.

Lieutenant General John Lorimer, deputy commander of the NATO coalition in Afghanistan, said the national army and police were now at nearly full strength, but their long-term effectiveness remained uncertain.

"The Afghan security forces' full complement of 352,000 has almost been achieved. We now need to concentrate on quality because what we have today is not yet fully sustainable," the British general told reporters.

"We need to assist the Afghan ministry of defence and ministry of interior in adapting, restructuring and developing capacity.

"Currently neither of those institutions has the necessary end-to-end processes to generate enduring capability."

Lorimer said that NATO coalition leaders had to ensure that the Afghan government learned the necessary budgeting, planning and management skills to keep the country's security forces active on the battlefield.

"We are now very much focusing on this key area," said Lorimer, who took up his post last month.

All 87,000 NATO-led combat troops in Afghanistan will leave by the end of 2014, and the Afghan army and police have taken the lead in all operations to thwart the insurgents who have fought a fierce guerrilla war for 12 years.

NATO troop numbers currently drop by more than 2,000 a week, and many Afghans fear a return of nationwide violence and turmoil as the Taliban ramp up efforts to regain power after they were ousted in 2001.

"Can the ANSF (Afghan National Security Forces) effect a full security transition in December 2014? The answer would be a qualified yes," said Lorimer, as Afghan troops battle the insurgents during the often violent summer months.

"They will emerge out of the fighting season confident and capable, and we will try to get them being sustainable as well into the future," he added.

"There is absolutely no comparison at all between the capability of the ANSF in 2007 and what they are now."

Pressure is increasing on Afghan and international leaders to negotiate a peace deal with the Taliban to foster stability before the NATO troops depart, but efforts to start negotiations in Doha, Qatar failed badly in June.

The Taliban opened an office in the Gulf state that enraged Afghan President Hamid Karzai by styling itself as an unofficial embassy for a government-in-exile, triggering a major diplomatic bust-up.

Karzai broke off bilateral security talks with the Americans and threatened to boycott any peace process altogether.

US Lieutenant General Mark Milley described the Taliban as an "aggressive and ruthless" enemy and said that political efforts to bring the insurgents to the peace table had no impact on the military campaign to crush them.

"This thing that occurred in Doha, operationally it has no impact on us," he said. "We are not getting instructions either way, we are not doing negotiations, we are the military, we are out there conducting tactical operations."

Taliban leader Mullah Omar last week dismissed presidential elections due in April as "a waste of time" but insisted the militants had no desire to grab power after NATO troops leave.

The US is considering leaving a residual military force in Afghanistan to aid stability, target Al-Qaeda fighters and further train up the national security forces.

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THE STANS
India accuses Pakistan of latest firing in Kashmir
Srinagar, India (AFP) Aug 13, 2013
India's army accused Pakistan on Tuesday of firing across the de facto border that divides Kashmir, in the latest confrontation fuelling tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals. The army said Pakistani soldiers had violated the ceasefire overnight along the heavily militarised Line of Control (LoC) in the disputed Himalayan region. It said in a statement that Pakistani soldiers sta ... read more


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