Afghan Hindu, Muslim, Sikh demonstration in Schaarbeek, Brussel, Belgium

095.t.Gaucheretstraat92-94.Schaarbeek.08032013

Four UK Afghan Sikh men and one Belgian Afghan Sikh couple

Schaarbeek, 8 March 2013. The Afghan community in Belgium staged a protest outside Gaucheretstraat 92 – 94 in Schaarbeek (near Brussel Noord station), the offices of the ‘Raad voor Vreemdelingenbetwistingen’ (council for contested decisions regarding ‘foreigners’).

The Belgian authorities, for reasons that are difficult to understand, keep refusing refugee status to Afghans who have not exactly followed the straight path to Belgium.

If you only look at the legal aspect you can understand why some Afghans do not get permanent residence in Belgium, but as soon as you look at the situation in Afghanistan it should be clear that all members of ethnic and/or religious minorities like Hazara Shias, Hindus en Sikhs should be given refugee status.

The security situation in Afghanistan is now so bad and getting worse, even in Kabul, that nobody should be sent back to that country. And we have not even discussed the position of women of all backgrounds.

There was a good turnout of both Afghans and their supporters in Schaarbeek, the press was there, some UK Afghan Sikhs had come over and the ‘man in blue’ was there too.

Harjinder Singh

Link to the ‘Dutch Sikh’ YouTube

http://youtu.be/7J9zkrBtpKQ

095.q.Gaucheretstraat92-94.Schaarbeek.08032013

Afghan Hindus, Musulman and Sikhs refugees demanded asylum in Belgium 

Also read :

26.The Man in Blue – Afghan Sikhs in Belgium

BBC News – Suicide bomber hits Afghan defence ministry in Kabul

Saturday 9 March 2013. A suicide bomb attack on the Afghan defence ministry in Kabul has killed at least nine people, as the new US Pentagon chief visited the city.

A further 20 people were wounded by the bomber, who was on a bicycle, security officials told BBC News.

Taliban insurgents said they were behind the attack.

Reports are coming in of a separate suicide bomb attack, near the city of Khost, in which eight children and a policeman are said to have been killed.

At the time of the Kabul blast, US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel was in a briefing at a US-led military facility elsewhere in Kabul.

Kabul police chief Mohammad Zahir told the BBC ambulances had taken the injured to several hospitals and that the situation was under control.

Two of the wounded were Afghan army soldiers while all of the dead and other injured were civilians, an Afghan defence official told BBC News.

One woman was among those killed.

The attacker struck just before 09:00 (04:30 GMT), about 30m (yds) from the main gate of the ministry.

A man at the scene, Abdul Ghafoor, said the blast had rocked the entire area.

“I saw [dead] bodies and wounded victims lying everywhere,” he told the Associated Press news agency.

“Then random shooting started and we escaped from the area.”

In an email, the Taliban said it had carried out the attack and had targeted one of the entrances used by soldiers and officers.

“The attack happened during the trip of the US defence secretary, and the attack had a message for him,” the statement added.

Earlier, Mr Hagel, who became defence secretary last week, told reporters travelling with him he wanted to see for himself “where we are in Afghanistan”.

“I need to better understand what’s going on,” he said.

There are currently about 66,000 US military personal in the country and early next year that figure will drop to 34,000.

The question of how many international troops will remain after 2014 is still unknown.

‘Boys killed’

Saturday’s other reported attack occurred outside Khost, a city 150km (93 miles) south-east of Kabul.

A policeman spotted the suicide bomber, who was on foot, as he prepared to attack a joint patrol close to the US military’s Camp Salerno base, a police spokesman told BBC News.

The policeman hugged the attacker to himself in an attempt to save lives, Khost deputy police chief Mohammad Yaqub Mandozay said.

However, boys aged 12 to 14 who were working in nearby fields were caught in the explosion, The region around Khost has been a stronghold of the Haqqani militant network, which has launched deadly attacks on Afghan and international forces, the BBC’s Bilal Sarwary reports.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21724059

Dawn – Manmohan Singh says Pakistan not doing enough against terrorists

From our correspondent

New Delhi, 7 March 2013. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Wednesday that India was continuing to talk to Pakistan to normalise ties, but the latter was faltering on its part of the bargain with regard to terrorism.

Addressing the Lok Sabha where he berated the Bharatiya Janata Party for using foul language against him and his party, Dr Singh drew a rosy picture of his domestic and foreign policy measures.

“Our dialogue with Pakistan continues in order to normalise our relations: promote bilateral cooperation and people-to-people contacts; and resolve outstanding issues,” Dr Singh said towards the end of his speech before winning a key vote on government’s policies. He described the recent flare-up on the Line of Control as a negative influence on the dialogue process.

“Progress has been possible in some areas like trade and people-to-people contacts. But incidents such as the barbaric manner in which two Indian soldiers were killed on the Line of Control in January vitiate the atmosphere and cast a shadow on the bilateral dialogue process.

“Further, we are yet to see tangible progress in dismantling the terrorism infrastructure in Pakistan and in bringing to justice the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attack of November 2008. Normal, good-neighbourly relations between India and Pakistan — free from the threat of violence, and enhanced bilateral economic cooperation — would be in our mutual interest. We also expect Pakistan to take steps to create a conducive environment to take the process of normalisation forward,” Dr Singh said.

India has an abiding interest in a stable, strong, united, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan, which is no longer a safe haven for terrorism.

“As Afghanistan undergoes political, economic and security transitions in 2014 and beyond, we will continue to help build Afghan capabilities to evolve peacefully and fight terrorism and extremism,” the prime minister said.

The Indian government is under pressure from its Tamil deputies to support a US-led resolution against Sri Lanka’s human rights record against Jaffna Tamils. The prime minister hedged his bets on how India would vote.

“As regards the issue of a draft resolution expected to be tabled by the United States at the forthcoming session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, our decision will depend on the substance of the final text tabled in the council. We will, however, be guided by our consistent position that we support proposals that seek to advance the achievement of a future for the Tamil community in Sri Lanka that is marked by equality, dignity, justice and self respect.”

Responding to concerns raised by the deputies on the alleged threat India faces from China, Dr Singh played down the issue.

“In my view, there is enough space in the world today for both countries to achieve their developmental aspirations.

While we do have differences over the border issue, since 1988 we have evolved mechanisms to address the issue and to maintain peace and tranquillity on the border.”

http://dawn.com/2013/03/07/singh-says-pakistan-not-doing-enough-against-terrorists/

BBC News – Soviet war veteran found in Afghanistan after 33 years

Tuesday, 5 March 2013. A Soviet soldier who went missing in Afghanistan nearly 33 years ago has been found living with Afghans in the western province of Herat.

The soldier is semi-nomadic, has the adopted Afghan name Sheikh Abdullah and practises herbal medicine, Russia’s RIA news agency reports.

An ethnic Uzbek, he was found by ex-Soviet veterans of the war.

He was wounded in battle in 1980, only months after the Soviet invasion, and was rescued by local Afghans.

The head of the official veterans’ committee, Ruslan Aushev, said Sheikh Abdullah – real name Bakhretdin Khakimov – was tracked down in Shindand district after a year-long search. He had served with a motorised rifle unit.

The committee lists 264 Soviet soldiers as still missing in Afghanistan, half of them Russians. In the first decade after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989 the committee found 29 missing soldiers – and 22 of them decided to return home, while seven opted to stay in Afghanistan, RIA reports.

The committee says it is determined to track all of the missing men down.

Sheikh Abdullah was married but his wife died and he has no children.

The committee’s deputy chairman, Alexander Lavrentyev, said Sheikh Abdullah bore the scars of his war wounds – a shaking hand and shoulder and nervous tic. The ex-soldier, from the city of Samarkand, was able to name his former place of residence in Uzbekistan and the names of his relatives, Mr Lavrentyev said.

He understood Russian but spoke it very poorly.

In 2009 the BBC’s Lyse Doucet interviewed two ex-soldiers from Ukraine, now Muslims and living with Afghans in northern Afghanistan.

Some 15,000 Red Army soldiers and more than a million Afghans were killed in a decade of fighting between a Soviet-backed government in Kabul and mujahideen fighters armed by the West and Islamic neighbours.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21668541

Dawn – World Health Organisation (WHO) Islamic leaders summit to stop polio worker attacks

Canberra, 1 March 2013. Top World Health Organisation officials and Islamic leaders will meet in Egypt next week in an effort to stop attacks on polio workers, which are hampering the eradication of the virus in some countries with large Muslim populations.

“Shooting health workers who are protecting kids from this crippling disease is against the Koran and everything Islam stands for,” WHO’s Assistant Director-General Bruce Aylward told Reuters in Canberra said on Friday.

Gunmen in Pakistan and Nigeria have killed more than 20 health workers in the past three months in a series of attacks linked to a backlash against the immunisation programme against the crippling virus.

“Muslim leaders have been great advocates of immunisation and generally the support has always been there. In Cairo, we are meeting senior Islamic leaders to get a sense of what we can do, and ask them how can you help us,” said Aylward.

The WHO has successfully eliminated polio from most nations after a 25-year campaign, but the crippling condition remains endemic in three nations, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria, where some influential Muslim leaders have opposed the programme as a conspiracy of western medicine.

WHO remains on target to eradicate polio globally by 2018, Aylward said, despite a violent backlash from militant groups in Pakistan and Nigeria. But there are also worrying signs of persistence, with the polio virus found in sewers in Cairo in January, with the type linked to the indigenous strain in Pakistan. Egypt has not had a case of polio since 2004.

Aylward said while the violence has forced the WHO to revise is approach to immunisations in both Pakistan and Nigeria. “The goal is to put tools in the hands of the communities to immunise their own kids,” Aylward said.

“The overall risks (of contracting polio) are getting smaller, because we are finally getting into some of these difficult places,” he said.

Since 1988, the WHO has cut the number of global polio cases from 350,000 to just 225 in 2012, with India declared polio free in January 2012.

http://dawn.com/2013/03/01/who-islamic-leaders-summit-to-stop-polio-worker-attacks/

The Asian Age – Obama’s pick Hagel trains fire on India

Washington, 27 February 2013. US President Barack Obama’s defence secretary nominee Chuck Hagel has alleged India has over the years “financed problems” for Pakistan in Afghanistan.

A video with these remarks from an unreleased speech by Mr Hagel at Oklahoma’s Cameron University in 2011 has been uploaded by Washington Free Beacon, sparking a strong reaction from India which said it was “contrary to reality”.

Mr Hagel said: “India for some time has always used Afghanistan as a second front, and India has over the years financed problems for Pakistan on that side of the border”.

The Indian embassy here said: “Such comments (by) Senator Hagel, a long-standing friend of India, are contrary to the reality of India’s unbounded dedication to the welfare of the Afghan people”.

A deeply-divided Senate is now in the midst of a vote to confirm Mr Hagel as defence secretary. (PTI)

http://www.asianage.com/india/obama-s-pick-hagel-trains-fire-india-496

526.The Man in Blue – Afghan Sikhs in Belgium

Last year we had a scare both in the Netherlands and Belgium when Afghan Sikh refugees were ordered to return to their country. There is now no more talk about returning to Afghanistan, but that does not mean that there are no more problems.

We have a growing Afghan Sikh community in Belgium and many of them live in the Antwerpen area. In the ‘ethnic minority’ neighbourhoods of Antwerpen you find more and more shops run by Afghan Sikhs.

But there are Afghan Sikhs who’s application for asylum have been rejected, who get no or little government support, and whose future is uncertain. I have studied a few of the files, and although I am not a lawyer I think that I understand what is ‘wrong’ with these families from the legal point of view.

Many Afghan refugees do not travel directly from Afghanistan to Europe, but often go via Pakistan, India or Russia. In India there is little risk of being sent back to Afghanistan, but the Afghan Sikhs usually do not get any kind of resident status.

Thus frustrated by the lack of progress in their case and their lack of opportunity to start a business or to get a real job, they decide to go to Europe, North America or even to Australia or New Zealand.

Many European countries use any excuse to reject refugee status applications, the refugees know that their case has been weakened by a stay in Pakistan, India or Russia and think to improve their chances by making up stories.

The authorities in charge of refugees do not have detailed knowledge of the situation in Afghanistan. The position of religious minorities (Christians, Hindus, Shia Muslims, Sikhs) and of women in that country is not improving.

The security situation is not good either, not even in the Kabul area. It is far from easy for Afghan Sikhs to go back to their traditional shops in the bazárs of Afghan cities like Kabul, Jalalabad, Gardez, Ghazni or Kandahar.

Many of the Sikhs in Kabul and in other Afghan cities live on the Gurdwara premises due to lack of housing, many rely on irregular handouts from various sources.

This is the situation: I think I understand why European governments refuse refugee status to some of the Afghan Sikhs. But I also understand that sending members of religious minorities back to Afghanistan is not an option.

Sending people to Pakistan, India or even Russia is not a valid option either. The Russians usually send the refugees straight back to where they came from, and in Pakistan and India most Afghan refugees will not get any secure status, and therefore will not be able to build a future for themselves and their children.

Please Belgian and other European governments, show compassion !

The Dutch Sikh – Short film – Mission Afghanistan Exhibition

Exhibition Poster

Link to the short film :

http://youtu.be/LypJ9UveEWI

Throughout many Afghan Sikhs living all over the world there is always one question in their head, and that is “How are Sikhs still living in Afghanistan coping with the ever changing system of Afghanistan?”Pritpal Singh was a man on a Mission when he decided to make the move of travelling back to his homeland to find the answer for himself. He made a very informative documentary called Mission Afghanistan on Sikhs in Afghanistan focusing on the living conditions of Sikhs and Hindus and also on the conditions of places of worship for Hindus and Sikhs.

It seems like the decades of war has damaged the people of Afghanistan deep down as peace is still in no sight for Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus. Having trouble finding equal grounds between the government and the minority religions is nowhere to be seen at the moment. Sikhs and Hindus cannot survive for long within the current situation unless there are plans put in place to nurture the talents of people. The Afghan Sikh & Hindu diaspora can play a massive part in rejuvenating the Minority population on Afghanistan Sikhs and Hindus and that’s what Pritpal Singh’s “Mission Afghanistan” documentary has highlighted.

Having captured more than 1500 pictures during his trip to Afghanistan, Pritpal decided to hold an Exhibition at Gurudvara Guru Nanak Darbar Southall, London. The main focal point of this exhibition was on the Sikh religious shrines of Afghanistan. This exhibition was aimed at mainly 2 audiences, one for the elderly generation of Afghan Sikhs in London and second the young generation of Afghan Sikhs who have never seen their parent’s homeland before.

The exhibition generated a huge interest by the community and after recent launch of the documentary it was very well received, it has also generated discussions on how the Sikh diaspora can provide support to Sikhs still living in Afghanistan.

Ajmeet Singh Graphic Designer
ajmeet.singh@hotmail.co.uk

Link to the photo exhibition album

Dawn – Pakistan has role in Afghan solution: retired US general

Anwar Iqbal

Washington, 11 February 2012. Pakistan would have a role in any lasting solution in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, the former commander of US and Nato forces in Kabul, wrote in his book, “My Share of the Task”.

While discussing his role in the Afghan war, the general also explained why he believed it was important to have close working relations with the Pakistani army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

General McChrystal had to retire in 2010 after his aides made disparaging remarks about US President Barack Obama.

“Although my mandate as a Nato commander was limited to inside Afghanistan, it was clear to me that Pakistan would have a role in any lasting solution,” he wrote.

“At the minimum Isaf needed access to Pakistani lines of communications for the flow of logistics to our forces.

Optimally, for our counter-insurgency campaign inside Afghanistan, the Afghan Taliban could not enjoy support and sanctuaries across the border in Pakistan.”

Ideally, joint Isaf and Pakistani efforts would convince Afghan Taliban leaders that their sanctuaries in Pakistan were no longer secure and thus their insurgency could not succeed, he added.

He noted that effective Pakistani army operations in Fata along with increased levels of coordination with Isaf forces were necessary in order to produce this kind of rethink inside Mullah Omar’s organisation.

But the Pakistani army had its limitations as Fata was a region where the Pakistani military had traditionally struggled, he wrote.

In the book, General McChrystal also emphasised the need to reduce “the oft-discussed deficit of trust” between the US and Pakistan but warned that it could only be reduced “over time and personal relationships would be essential to that process”.

By building as much trust as possible between General Kayani and him, General McChrystal hoped that confidence between the two armies would “cascade to some extent” down through to their subordinates.

“I believed slow but steady progress was possible. It might not work but there was no rational alternative,” he wrote.

Tracing the root of trust deficit between the two countries, the former Nato commander, noted that after the Soviet withdrawal the United States no longer needed Pakistan to help arm the rebels.

Frustrated with Islamabad’s persistent nuclear ambitions, the United States refused to vouch that Pakistan was not seeking to gain nuclear weapons, although it had given Pakistan a pass when the United States needed its assistance in its proxy war, the general wrote.

Two decades after the US imposed nuclear-related sanctions on Pakistan, the Pakistani army had again become important for the United States, and General Kayani, in his new role as head of the army, “wielded tremendous power”, he added.

As a member of the US Joint Staff, General McChrystal had watched his boss, Admiral Mike Mullen make a significant
effort to build rapport with General Kayani.

The US general also described in his book how the November 2008 Mumbai attacks affected America’s attitude towards Pakistan. “Clear evidence that (the) … attacks conducted by Pakistani terrorists of Lashkar were orchestrated from inside Pakistan caused Americans deep frustration.

And ongoing accusations that Pakistan’s military and intelligence service supported the Afghan Taliban complicated Admiral Mullen’s and my efforts,” he wrote.

“Pakistanis were quick to respond with concerns over American violations of their sovereignty, primarily through drone strikes, ever perceived US tilt toward India, and lack of appreciation for the significant Pakistani sacrifices in the war on terror,” he added.

On July 3, 2009, when a Pakistan Mi-17 helicopter went down in the Orakzai agency, killing at least 26 Pakistani soldiers, he called General Kayani to express his condolences and followed with a hand-written letter.

“It was a reminder of continuing Pakistani sacrifices in the fight — by early 2010; some 2,000 Pakistani soldiers had died fighting in the border regions,” General McChrystal wrote. “I know what it meant to lose soldiers and wanted him to know I shared his sense of loss.”

General McChrystal recalled how over the coming months, he spent significant time with General Kayani and grew to like and respect him. “His perspectives and priorities were, of course, those of a Pakistani army officer but I found our discussions on the war and our respective strategies to be helpful,” he wrote.

“Much of our time together was spent alone, simply drinking tea and talking. The talk was substantive but never combative.”

http://dawn.com/2013/02/11/pakistan-has-role-in-afghan-solution-retired-us-general/

The Tribune – 4-nation gas pipeline plan gets fresh push

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Cabinet nod to special purpose vehicle to speed up
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India project

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, February 7. Aiming to speed up implementation of the ambitious Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) natural gas pipeline, the Union Cabinet today approved the setting up of a special purpose vehicle to build the 1,680-km pipeline that terminates at Fazilka in Punjab.

Tapi Ltd, the Dubai-based SPV, would undertake the feasibility study and design work for the pipeline, hunt for a consortium leader to build the $ 9 billion project, operate it, arrange for finances and work to ensure safe delivery of gas.

At the Cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the SPV was given the go-ahead and permitted Gas Authority of India Limited (GAIL) to join it as India’s representative.T

It was announced officially that TAPI Ltd initially requires $ 20 million contribution, with each of the four participating countries funding $ 5 million. GAIL being a Navratna Company, is empowered to make an investment of this level for India.

TAPI Ltd is being formed for the project as multinational corporations are unwilling to participate in the project without a share in Turkmenistan’s rich gas fields. The project had got stuck since India was not agreeable to the suggestion by the other three that each country build the pipeline on its own and operate it.

At a meeting of the steering committee last September, Turkmenistan suggested formation of an SPV to put the project after all parties reaffirmed their commitment and intention to fast track it since it also a symbol of regional cooperation.

India joined the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan (TAP) Project in April, 2008, two years after the Union Cabinet gave its ‘in principle’ approval. Thereafter, the name of the project stood amended to Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) Gas Pipeline Project.

The pipeline originates and runs 144 km in Turkmenistan, passes 735 km through Afghanistan and travels 800 km in Pakistan en route India.

Last May, the four countries signed the gas sale and purchase agreement. The 1,680 km pipeline will carry 90 million cubic metres a day (mmcmd) of gas and is scheduled to become operational in 2018 and supply gas over a 30-year period. India and Pakistan will get 38 mmcmd each, while the remaining 14 mmcmd will be supplied to Afghanistan.

TAPI will carry gas from Turkmenistan’s Galkynysh field, known earlier as South Yoiotan Osman that is known to hold gas reserves of 16 trillion cubic feet.

Turkmenistan, which holds more than 4 per cent of the world’s natural gas reserves, signed pacts last May to sell gas last to India and Pakistan through the 1,680-km pipeline at the Caspian Sea resort of Avaza in Turkmenistan.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130208/main1.htm

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