• Web
  • Humsa
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • Q2A
rabia shakeel : meri dua hai K is bar imran khan app is mulk k hukmaran hun To: suman(sialkot) 11 years ago
maqsood : hi how r u. To: hamza(lahore) 11 years ago
alisyed : hi frinds 11 years ago
nasir : hi To: wajahat(karachi) 11 years ago
khadam hussain : aslamoalikum pakistan zinsabad To: facebook friends(all pakistan) 11 years ago
Asif Ali : Asalaam O Aliakum . To: Khurshed Ahmed(Kashmore) 11 years ago
khurshedahmed : are you fine To: afaque(kashmore) 11 years ago
mannan : i love all To: nain(arifwala) 11 years ago
Ubaid Raza : kya haal hai janab. To: Raza(Wah) 11 years ago
qaisa manzoor : jnab AoA to all 11 years ago
Atif : Pakistan Zinda bad To: Shehnaz(BAHAWALPUR) 11 years ago
khalid : kia website hai jahan per sab kuch To: sidra(wazraabad) 11 years ago
ALISHBA TAJ : ASSALAM O ELIKUM To: RUKIYA KHALA(JHUDO) 11 years ago
Waqas Hashmi : Hi Its Me Waqas Hashmi F4m Matli This Website Is Owsome And Kois Shak Nahi Humsa Jaise Koi Nahi To: Mansoor Baloch(Matli) 11 years ago
Gul faraz : this is very good web site where all those channels are avaiable which are not on other sites.Realy good. I want to do i..... 11 years ago
shahid bashir : Mein aap sab kay liye dua'go hon. 11 years ago
mansoor ahmad : very good streming 11 years ago
Dr.Hassan : WISH YOU HAPPY HEALTHY LIFE To: atif(karachi) 11 years ago
ishtiaque ahmed : best channel humsa live tv To: umair ahmed(k.g.muhammad) 11 years ago
Rizwan : Best Streaming Of Live Channels. Good Work Site Admin 11 years ago
US special forces told to leave key Afghan province
Source: The News | 26-02-2013

Afghanistan's president has ordered US special forces to leave a strategic province as he seeks tighter control over Afghan militia, exacerbating tensions before the 2014 withdrawal of NATO troops.


Hamid Karzai on Sunday gave American special forces two weeks to pull out of Wardak, a hotbed of Taliban activity on the doorstep of Kabul, accusing Afghans they work with of torture and murder that has incited local hatred.NATO and the US military has said it will discuss the issue with Afghan officials and takes all allegations of misconduct seriously."We're looking at those allegations, we didn't find any evidence and we will talk to our colleagues and Afghan partners to find a solution," Brigadier General Gunter Katz, spokesman for the US-led NATO mission, told a news conference.


In fact in recent months, a thorough review has confirmed that no coalition forces have been involved in the alleged misconduct in Wardak province," said Jamie Graybeal, another spokesman for the US-led forces in Afghanistan.A NATO spokesman said the coalition had agreed with Afghan officials to set up a commission to investigate the claims.Wardak is a deeply troubled flashpoint where a Chinook helicopter was shot down by the Taliban in August 2011, killing eight Afghans and 30 Americans, in the deadliest single incident for American troops in the entire war.


Analysts said the order underscored Kabul's growing distrust of international troops and their desire to control local militia, who are trained by the Americans but operate without government control in the war against the Taliban.Relations between Karzai and Washington have long been troubled, and with the bulk of NATO's 100,000 combat soldiers due to leave and the Afghan president to step down next year, there is huge uncertainty about the future.


It appears to be an on-the-spot, emotional decision, based on a long-standing frustration that there are forces... Afghan and international, that are uncontrollable," said Martine van Bijlert of the Afghanistan Analysts Network.The New York Times quoted Afghan officials as saying the order was taken as a last resort after they had tried and failed to get the coalition to cooperate with an investigation into claims of murder, abduction and torture.


The presidency accused armed individuals working with US special forces of "harassing, annoying, torturing and even murdering innocent people".It cited, for example, a student who was taken away at night from his home and two days later was found dead with torture wounds and his throat cut.Kabul did not specify which groups were responsible, but the United States is understood to have trained a variety of local militias, a number of which reportedly operate beyond the control of the Afghan government.


Karzai's order was issued amid sensitive discussions over the size and role of a residual force that could remain in Afghanistan after 2014 to focus on training and counter-terrorism operations.Kabul and Washington are still negotiating an agreement on the legal status that could allow an estimated 8,000 to 12,000 American troops to remain.On February 16, Karzai also restricted Afghan forces from calling in NATO air strikes -- an important weapon in the fight against insurgents -- amid concern over civilian casualties.



Some say the latest order exemplifies a conflict that many Afghans feel towards foreign troops -- that they are needed to counter the Taliban, but that civilian casualties and detentions can also make them part of the problem."On one hand there is a feeling that Afghanistan needs the continued presence of the international forces. But there's also a feeling that maybe they will be all right without them and that it's not going that well with them here anyway," said Bijlert.


A spokesman for Wardak's governor said local residents have complained for two and a half months about US special forces and "their illegal Afghan armed forces arresting, torturing and even killing villagers".We want our Afghan security forces to take control of this province and replace these US special forces," the spokesman, Ataullah Khogyani, told AFP.


In the neighbouring province of Ghazni, dozens of protesters shut down the Kabul-Kandahar highway for around three hours, accusing the US-trained Afghan Local Police (ALP) of harassment and beatings, officials and witnesses said.The ALP is often accused of thuggery and operating outside the law, and its reputation was further damaged on December 24 when an officer shot dead five of his colleagues.  


 

Related News
Source: Geo News | 09-12-2013
 Bombings kill 39 in and around Iraqi capital Nearly a dozen explosions tore through predominantly Shiite Muslim areas in and around the Iraqi capital on Sunday, killing at least 39 people at crowded market places, commercial districts and car repair shops, officials said. The attacks are part of a wave of violence that has washed across Iraq since a deadly security crackdown on a Sunni protest..... Read more
Source: Geo News | 15-06-2013
US vows military aid to Syria rebels as battles rage DAMASCUS: A US pledge to step up military aid to Syrian rebels because of alleged use of chemical arms by the regime drew criticism from Damascus ally Russia and from UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Friday. Syria itself dismissed the accusation as "lies." The UN secretary general said arming either side in the 27-month war, which has cost tens of..... Read more
Source: Geo News | 16-06-2013
N. Korea proposes high-level talks with US SEOUL: North Korea on Sunday proposed high-level talks with the US on denuclearisation and easing tensions on the Korean peninsula, just days after it abruptly cancelled a rare meeting with the South. Tension has been high on the peninsula since the North's third nuclear test in February that triggered new UN sanctions which ignited an angry response..... Read more
Latest News
Source: Dunya News | 06-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 06-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 05-05-2014
Source: Dunya News | 05-05-2014