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Can this government build a nation?

Ashraf Ghani-Abdullah Abdullah

More than 100 days after Ashraf Ghani was sworn in as Afghan president, he finally named his cabinet. There are four women among his 25 nominees for ministerial positions. The president says they have been named based on their merit without any bias or ethnic consideration.

Among the proposed ministers are Lieutenant General Sher Mohammad Karimi,Salahuddin Rabbani and Nur ul-Haq Ulumi, who based on the decision of Afghanistan’s Government of National Unity are to take the helm of the ministries of defense, foreign affairs and the interior respectively. The following is the translation of a full-page report Mardom-e Emrooz daily published on January 13. It featured the viewpoints of two Afghan political experts.

Afghanistan’s Government of National Unity was forged on September 29. Deepening disagreement between Ashraf Ghani and his rival Abdullah Abdullah who both claimed to have secured the largest number of votes in the presidential elections, prompted Western governments, America in particular, to intervene and set the stage for the formation of a national unity government.

Under a power-sharing deal struck between the two rivals, Ashraf Ghani was named Afghan president while his rival Abdullah Abdullah was appointed as CEO of the fledgling government.

At his swearing-in ceremony, Ashraf Ghani vowed to name his cabinet within 45 days, a pledge which was delivered 110 days later, though.

In the meantime, by the president’s order, many former ministers were dismissed and for key portfolios, acting ministers were appointed.

The overdue decision of the government to name the cabinet drew a barrage of criticism. Some analysts blame the delay on disagreements between onetime-rivals-turned-partners Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abduallah.

Ashraf Ghani is now on a political honeymoon, but major challenges lie ahead.

 

Ethnic Challenges

There are four ethnic groups in Afghanistan: Pashtuns (make up 40 percent of the population), Tajiks (32 percent), Hazaras (16 percent), and other ethnic groups including Uzbeks (12 percent). Taliban insurgents, who affiliate themselves with Pashtuns, view Afghanistan as a land of Pashtuns and thus want Tajiks and Uzbeks to emigrate to Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Time and again they have launched attacks against different ethnic groups, stoking a wave of insecurity throughout the country.

[…]

 

Economic Challenges

Ashraf Ghani must know that to launch an anti-corruption campaign, he needs to get prepared for confrontation with his enemies, those who raked in substantial fortunes in the previous government thanks to rampant corruption and rent and are now set to deal a blow to the government in case their interests are put at stake.

[…]

 

Religious Challenges

For years Taliban insurgents and their extremist affiliates have been trying to force the Afghans to commit to their radical interpretation of Islam. To counter such a move, the government should pave the way for fundamental social measures such as promotion of education, alleviation of poverty, creation of jobs and a crackdown on corruption.

[…]

 

The land of no consensus

By Fazel Rabi Wardak, an expert in Afghan affairs at The Asia Foundation

 

The Afghan government on Monday finally unveiled the full list of its Cabinet nominees. The announcement, after months of political uncertainty, is a promising piece of news. Over the past months, a lack of consensus among political leaders caused frustration among Afghan people. The history of Afghanistan remembers no political consensus among the country’s elite.

[…]

Time has come for Afghanistan, which has been in the grip of war for more than three decades, to honor the universally-accepted principles of democracy and take steps toward the rule of law. To do so, Afghanistan needs the contribution of all countries and it cannot wait for the establishment of peace to take action.

As a neighbor of Afghanistan, the Islamic Republic of Iran can be a leading player. Historically, Iran has always influenced Afghan issues. The fact that Iran has amicable ties with Abdullah Abdullah, the new government’s chief executive officer, makes it more likely that the two sides have had consultations on the cabinet lineup.

For years, Afghanistan has been ruled by governments in which ranking officials were appointed, but now the stage has been set for people in Afghanistan to get involved in politics.

Walking down the path of democracy, Afghanistan is facing multiple challenges. The formation of a new government will not solve all Afghan problems. The appointment of governors, managing local affairs and naming the heads of state institutions will be a time-consuming process.

Another challenge is the ethnic-sectarian mentality of the country’s leaders. It should be noted that the democratic principles should not be ignored only because such differences exist. The Afghan nation has no other choice but move in line with democratic principles under the banner of a law-abiding government. That’s why it cannot move backward.

Despite all barriers standing in the way, Afghanistan has taken a step forward by holding presidential elections, and more importantly revealing the cabinet composition. The solution to Afghanistan’s main challenge – tribal conflicts – lies not in giving each ethnic group their fair share of power, but in consensus among Afghan leaders.

The Afghan history shows that the Afghan people, made up of various tribes, have lived together peacefully and faced no problem whatsoever. Unfortunately those in power and tribal chiefs have fuelled sectarian differences and pitted ethnic groups against each other.

Afghanistan will relish in the prospect of a guaranteed future only when patriotic experts – irrespective of their tribal background – take charge. To pull through, the Afghans need to pin their hopes on the current government although it has staged a poor, inefficient performance over the past 100 days. The Afghans have to keep their hope alive, although there is just a glimmer.

 

This government is not a national unity government 

By Vahid Mojdeh, an Afghan affairs expert

 

The cabinet lineup was announced with delay because the government had to take into account some variables, including tribal issues and the share of different political groups. The tribal composition of the cabinet is one main reason behind the delay in revealing the Afghan cabinet.

Intragroup fighting was a factor too. It doesn’t mean that Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah were at odds; rather they each had disputes within their own political ranks. The pressures from other powerful political groups should be taken into consideration as well.

A legal advisor to the Afghan president has said that certain powerful people were jockeying to have their own choices included in the list of cabinet nominees.

In all fairness, the president was grappling with challenges before picking his cabinet choices. Prior to the announcement he had underlined meritocracy, but one should not forget that turning a promise into a reality is difficult. This, however, does not mean that seasoned ministers are absent on the published list.

I think Mr. Ghani has put forward his list based on some expediency to appease different political groups which were campaigning alongside him during the election. A number of those on the list have spent many years overseas with no experience in public office; that’s why there are doubts about their future performance in the government.

The standout feature of the government lineup is the presence of four women, as promised by the president. Mr. Ghani’s list also shows that he’s taken into account the political participation of all groups […].

The government is unlikely to face opposition in the Afghan parliament when it puts its proposed ministers to a vote of confidence because the absence of a cabinet three months after the formation of the unity government would create a political vacuum.

Furthermore, the Afghan MPs are preparing for a winter recess. So I think they will confirm the proposed ministers to break the current deadlock.

The unity government is more fragile than its predecessors. This government is beset by many problems among them war, insecurity and rampant corruption.

President Ghani has to overlook some issues to maintain his government on the one hand, and to meet the conditions set by the West on the other. As you know, the EU and the US have conditioned their financial assistance to Afghanistan on structural reforms and elimination of corruption.

War is yet another challenge the government is facing. The Afghan president cannot easily make insecurity a thing of the past in a country dogged by war for almost 36 years.

Terrorist attacks aimed at hindering Islamic states’ economic progress: Iranian official

Shamkhani-Iraq

Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) Ali Shamkhani in a meeting with Iraqi Oil Minister Adil Abdul Mahdi warned that attacks by terrorist groups are aimed at hampering economic progress of Islamic countries.

“Destruction of the regional countries’ economic infrastructure, including Iraq and Syria, by the terrorists and the ineffective attacks by the coalition fighter jets are interrelated actions to prevent Islamic countries’ economic growth,” Shamkhani said during the meeting in Tehran on Tuesday.

Elsewhere, he referred to the falling oil prices, and said it can provide an opportunity for the oil producing countries to decrease their dependence on crude sales and reform their economic mechanisms.

Shamkhani underlined Iran’s determination to increase its economic power based on cooperation with the neighboring states and weaken the influence of oil on political attitudes.

He also pointed to Iran and Iraq’s cooperation in extracting oil from joint oil and gas fields, and said such cooperation can be a role model for other countries.

Abdul Mahdi, for his part, stressed Baghdad’s interest in deepening ties and cooperation with Tehran, and said, “We are trying to use Iran’s valuable experience to reconstruct Iraq, especially its oil, gas and petrochemical industries.”

Iran and Iraq had agreed in July 2013 to pursue development of their joint oilfields through setting up joint companies under a single management. The two countries have also held comprehensive expert talks on the same issue.

Azadegan Oilfield is the biggest oilfield which is owned jointly by Iran and Iraq.

Other joint Iran-Iraq oilfields are Yaran, Naftshahr, Azar and Karkheh.

Under the agreement signed in July 2013, the two countries will establish joint ventures to carry out the exploration and development of joint oil and gas fields.

The two sides also agreed to work together to settle territorial and ownership differences.

Iran, which sits on the world’s second largest natural gas reserves after Russia, is making efforts to raise its gas production by increasing foreign and domestic investments, especially in South Pars gas field.

On Monday, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh and his Iraqi Counterpart discussed new ways to boost Tehran-Baghdad relations, particularly crude production in joint fields.

Zanganeh and al-Mahdi said that time is ripe for development of Tehran-Baghdad relations.

Iran obtains queen bee artificial insemination expertise as world’s 3rd country

queen bee

An Iranian researcher has managed to acquire knowhow for artificial insemination of queen bees, making Iran the world’s third country which has got access to the technology.

The Iranian scientist at the Science and Technology Park in Hamedan city, central Iran, has designed a tool for artificial insemination of queen bees, and developed a method for genetic improvement of bees and boosting their resistance against diseases.

Ali Ataiyan, the director of the project and German Kassel university graduate in bee breeding and artificial insemination, said the study is designed to build an artificial insemination system of bees to modify breeding and transfer positive genetic factors to the next generation of bees.

Using the device, the sperm of modified male bees is received and is injected into the queen bee. The queen bee falls unconscious by CO2 and then the artificial insemination is conducted under the microscope.

The method boosts honey production by 60 percent, keeps the hives clean and creates fewer baby bees. It also promotes resistance of the bees against the diseases.

He further added that Germany and Denmark are the only two countries which possess the artificial insemination expertise.

Iran Condemns Charlie Hebdo’s Insulting Cartoon as “Provocative”

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham
Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham

Iran’s Foreign Ministry on Wednesday lashed out at the satirical French weekly Charlie Hebdo for printing a cartoon of the prophet of Islam on the cover, describing it as a repeated provocative move.

“We condemn the French weekly’s provocative move, because it hurts the sentiments of Muslims,” Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham said in her weekly press conference on Wednesday.

“The abuse of freedom of expression in the West is unacceptable,” she underlined.

Her comments came in response to a Wednesday’s edition of the French magazine showing a cartoon on the cover that depicts Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) holding a “Je suis Charlie” sign.

The slogan in French “Je suis Charlie” (“I am Charlie”) was widely used following the January 7 attack on the magazine.

Three million copies of Wednesday’s edition have been printed.

The French magazine has repeatedly provoked Muslim ire by publishing cartoons mocking holy Prophet Muhammad.

Over one ton of narcotics seized in Saravan

Drugs-1

Some 1,460 kilograms of opium was confiscated in Saravan, the commander of Sistan and Baluchestan Border Guards said on Tuesday.

Acting on a tip-off about imminent shipment of narcotics across the border into Iran, border guards took up positions along the border where they assumed the traffickers might want to smuggle drugs into the country.

Staging targeted ambushes, they identified an automobile attempting to enter the country illegally, the commander said.

The forces immediately stopped the vehicle, but the traffickers fled a border village after minutes of armed clashes with police, he said.

Habibi further said that inspecting the village, guards found the hideout of the traffickers who abandoned the haul of narcotics and fled. The package contained over one ton of opium, he said.

Iran seeks good ties with all neighbors: President Rouhani

Rouhani

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani highlighted the country’s resolve to forge good relations with neighboring states.

“We want good and friendly relations with all our neighbors,” the president said Tuesday during a visit to the southern Iranian province of Bushehr which has a long coast on the Persian Gulf.

“Development of good neighborly relations with Persian Gulf states is among the (Iranian) administration’s main policies,” he also stressed, adding, “In our relations (with any country) we think of the two sides’ interests.”

He underlined that Iran neither interferes in any country’s (affairs) nor accepts others’ meddling in its own affairs, adding that clashes and meddling are in no one’s interest.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Iranian chief executive referred to the production of 1000 megawatts of electricity in the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant as one of the city’s main assets and said there are plans for building two more power plants near the existing one in the port city.

Last month, Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Ali Akbar Salehi announced that the country is planning to construct four new nuclear power plants as part of its broader effort to meet the country’s energy needs.

Salehi said Iran has drawn up plans to construct the new nuclear facilities with the help of Russia.

Germans rally to oppose terrorism and Islamophobia

merkel-rally

Thousands of German Muslims, joined by the country’s political figures, staged a tolerance rally on Tuesday (January 13) to protest acts of terrorism as well as xenophobia and Islamophobia.

The Islamic Republic News Agency reported that the rally which was held at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin was attended by the German chancellor, president and MPs as well as a host of party leaders, foreign ambassadors and religious leaders. The following is the translation of the report the official news agency filed:

After observing a minute’s silence in memory of the victims who lost their lives last week in Paris terror attacks, President Joachim Gauck told the rally that terrorists are seeking to create divisions in Western communities, but that these terror incidents would backfire and create more convergence among people.

He went on to say that freedom and human rights do not exclusively belong to the West or Europe; rather they belong to all humanity.

“Germany has become more diverse through immigration – religiously, culturally and mentally,” he added.

The German president then praised the Muslim community for its open opposition to terrorism and recent extremist acts in France.

The president further said that Germany-based Muslims view themselves as part of German society, adding that the Western governments are mainly concerned about the spillover of the crisis in the Middle East into Europe, growing extremism and xenophobia as well as the return of Syrian and Iraqi terrorists to Europe, calling for serious measures to fight extremism and violent acts.

Addressing the same rally, Aiman Mazyek, the head of the Central Council of Muslims, said that German Muslims have gathered here in solidarity with the French people in defiance of violent acts and extremism.

He emphasized, “The terrorists did not win and terrorist won’t win in the future.”

He then lashed out at attempts to fuel Islamophobia in the West and Europe in the wake of the recent terror attacks and pointed to a courageous act by a French Muslim who rescued some hostages during the Paris Kosher Market siege and said that Islam is bitterly opposed to acts of terror and violence.

Mazyek then addressed the terrorists and extremists and said that Muslims do not allow their religion to be taken hostage by acts of terror, adding Muslims won’t let terrorists stir hatred and divisions in communities.

Iran FM heads to Geneva to meet Kerry ahead of fresh nuclear talks

Iran-USA

The Wednesday meeting between Zarif and Kerry is aimed at bridging the existing differences between the two sides ahead of the official start of the next round of discussions over Tehran’s nuclear energy program on January 18.

Deputy foreign ministers from the Iranian and American delegations will then launch bilateral nuclear talks on Thursday.

Iranian Deputy Foreign Ministers Abbas Araghchi and Majid Takht Ravanchi accompany Zarif during this round of talks, while Kerry is joined by US undersecretaries of state William Burns and Wendy Sherman.

Nuclear negotiators from Iran and P5+1 – Russia, China, France, Britain, the US and Germany – wrapped up their latest round of talks on Tehran’s nuclear issue in Geneva on December 17, 2014.

The Geneva discussions were held almost three weeks after Tehran and the six countries failed to reach a final agreement by a November 24 deadline despite making some progress.

The two sides agreed to extend their discussions for seven more months until July 1, 2015. They also agreed that the interim deal they had signed in Geneva in November 2013 should remain in place during the negotiations.

Major thorny issues in the nuclear discussions include the future extent of Tehran’s uranium enrichment as well as a timetable for the removal of anti-Iran sanctions.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Jan. 14

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

President Rouhani’s speech on a visit to the southern province of Bushehr in which he talked, among other things about the domestic and foreign policy of his government – the fight against corruption and nuclear talks – dominated the front pages of the Iranian newspapers on Wednesday. Also in the headlines, mostly in reformist papers, was the statement parliament deputy Ali Motahari issued detailing what happened during and after his speech in parliament which remained unfinished after fellow MPs attacked him.

 

Abrar: “Iran is among the world’s top 10 countries when it comes to possession of military equipment,” said a senior commander with the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps.

 

Abrar newspaper 1- 14


Abrar-e Eghtesadi: Iran has opened talks with three Japanese and Korean oil giants.

 

Abrare eghtesadi newspaper 1- 14


Aftab-e Yazd: “As soon as we move to eliminate corruption on a certain front, some start to accuse the government,” the president said.

 

Aftabe yazd newspaper 1- 14


Arman-e Emrooz: In a speech in the southern city of Bushehr, President Hassan Rouhani has warned P5+1 to act logically at the negotiating table.

Arman-e Emrooz: The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance has complained about cancellation of concerts in the provinces. “We stand by the permits we have issued for concerts,” the ministry said.

 

Armane emruz newspaper 1- 14


Ebtekar: The secretary of the Supreme National Security Council has said that oil has lost its efficacy in political rivalries.

Ebtekar: “I won’t take part in the convergence meetings of principlists,” said Secretary of the Expediency Council Mohsen Rezaei [a former commander of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps who has unsuccessfully run for president as a principlist in the past].

 

Ebtekar newspaper 1- 14


Etemad: In a statement Ali Motahari [a principlist MP whose speech was interrupted by fellow deputies in parliament on Sunday] has made public his version of events in the noisy session of the chamber. “My hope is that the next parliament is different from this one.”

 

Etemad newspaper 1- 14


Ettela’at: “We will continue our constructive interaction with the rest of the world. Those who plotted the drop-in-oil-prices scheme will regret their decision,” said President Rouhani at a large gathering of townspeople in Bushehr.

Ettela’at: A trade and industry free zone is to be set up in Tehran.

 

Ettelaat newspaper 1- 14


Javan: President Obama has talked with Netanyahu to secure his permission ahead of a fresh round of nuclear talks with Iran.

 

Javan newspaper 1- 14


Jomhouri Islami: Thirty American, European and Asian firms have applied to make investment in Iran’s natural gas industry.

Jomhouri Islami: An Egyptian court has overturned Mubarak’s conviction.

 

Jomhorie eslami newspaper 1- 14


Kar va Kargar: “Times of threats and sanctions are gone,” said President Rouhani as he urged P5+1 to opt for a speedy, logical approach in nuclear talks with Iran.

 

Karo kargar newspaper 1- 14


Kayhan: More than 100,000 Germans have staged a rally in support of Islam.

 

Kayhan newspaper 1- 14


Qods: Foreign Minister Zarif and his American counterpart Secretary Kerry will meet in Geneva today.

 

Ghods newspaper 1- 14


Sharq: “My government won’t back down in the fight against corruption,” vowed President Rouhani.

 

Shargh newspaper 1- 14


Tafahom: President Rouhani has said the loss Saudi Arabia suffers as a result of a recent drop in oil prices will be bigger than Iran’s.

 

Tafahom newspaper 1- 14

House arrest is in line with the law: Official

Hojjatol eslam Montazeri

The controversial speech of Ali Motahari, a Tehran MP, which was interrupted on parliament floor and sparked a commotion in the Islamic Consultative Assembly is still pretty much in the news, drawing reactions from different officials. On January 13 Arman-e Emrooz reported the comments of the Head of Iran’s Administrative Justice Court Mohammad Jafar Montazeri on the heated dispute in the chamber. The following is a partial translation of the report:

“It is not right to ignore national interests, and turn down the logical decisions of senior state officials and use them to provoke disagreement,” said Montazeri at an Administrative Justice Court meeting on January 12.

Denouncing the recent shoving match in parliament as shameful, he underscored the need for unity between different factions of the Islamic Revolution.

“That there is disagreement between individuals and MPs is good and acceptable, because a difference in ideas could help the country grow. However, jumping down each other’s throats does not represent a clash of ideas,” he stated.

He went on to say, “We need to be a role model and start fostering unity among ourselves; we should avoid eliminating others [who are opposed to us]. We need to follow Supreme Leader’s guidelines on unity.”

“Using the decision of the establishment to put under house arrest those behind unrest in the aftermath of the 2009 presidential elections as a pretext to spark division runs counter to the country’s expedience. Such a decision is legally defensible, because it has been made by the Supreme National Security Council and unfortunately, those who either have not read the law or do not understand it make wrong comments about it,” he further said.

“Article 176 of the Constitution says ‘In order to safeguarding the national interests and preserving the Islamic Revolution, the territorial integrity and national sovereignty, a Supreme Council for National Security presided over by the President shall be constituted to fulfill the following responsibilities: 1. Determining the defense and national security policies within the framework of general policies determined by the Leader. […]. The article also says that the decisions of the Supreme National Security Council shall be effective after the confirmation by the Leader.’

“On security grounds, the Supreme National Council has made a decision that some individuals should be under house arrest for a while. In other words, the council decided that it would not be in the country’s interest to bring them to court. The decision has been taken by a body with a legal position [which has the right] to make security polices for the country,” Montazeri reiterated.

“Anyway, it’s a legally sound decision by the Supreme National Council which cannot be questioned. We all need to join hands to cherish the current secure atmosphere and use this blessing in order to address the issues that the country is faced with,” he stressed.