Afghan leader: NATO reconstruction bases to go

Hamid Karzai has repeatedly criticized provincial reconstruction teams for undermining the Afghan government by offering alternative sources of funding and public works. He has called for the closure of the bases previously, but Tuesday’s statement appeared to set forth a timetable for their dissolution.

February 08, 2011 06:01 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:58 pm IST - KABUL

Afghan President Hamid Karzai. File photo: AP.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai. File photo: AP.

Afghanistan’s president said on Tuesday that international military bases that run provincial infrastructure and development programmes will have to close as his government takes over responsibility for the country’s security - a process starting this year.

Hamid Karzai has repeatedly criticized provincial reconstruction teams for undermining the Afghan government by offering alternative sources of funding and public works. He has called for the closure of the bases previously, but Tuesday’s statement appeared to set forth a timetable for their dissolution.

The Afghan government has pledged to take over security gradually, on a province by province basis, starting this year with the goal of overseeing the entire country by 2014. Mr. Karzai said he plans to announce the first provinces that will shift to Afghan oversight in March.

Mr. Karzai said he is not calling for the immediate closure of the reconstruction bases, known as PRTs, but that they should close as part of the transitions in order to eliminate “parallel” government structures.

“The transition means giving the whole thing to Afghan ownership and leadership. Naturally then the PRTs will have no place,” Mr. Karzai told reporters in the capital.

“It’s not a competition between us and the international community. They’re not here to compete with us, we hope,” he added.

Afghanistan’s international allies have said that they will continue development programmes well past these transitions. It was not clear if provincial reconstruction teams were included in this plan.

Maj. Sunset Belinsky, a NATO spokeswoman, said she could not immediately comment on Mr. Karzai’s statement.

There are currently 27 provincial reconstruction teams operating in Afghanistan, spread across 34 provinces, according to NATO.

Taliban leaders idetained in southern Kandahar province

Meanwhile, NATO said international and Afghan forces detained two suspected Taliban leaders in southern Kandahar province, as a pair of homemade bombs killed a coalition service member and injured two civilians.

The multinational force said one of the Taliban leaders arrested in the raid in Kandahar’s Panjwai district coordinated attacks on Afghan and coalition forces in the nearby Zhari district. The other is believed to have served as a district Taliban chief for the past three months, NATO said.

NATO separately said one of its service members was killed when a homemade bomb exploded in the country’s south. It didn’t say where exactly the early morning blast occurred. The service member’s nationality was not released.

Seven service members with the international coalition have been killed so far this month, and 38 since the start of the year.

Last year was the deadliest of the nearly decade—long war for international troops, with more than 700 killed, compared to just more than 500 in 2009, which was previously the worst year of the war.

Another bomb in the eastern province of Nangarhar wounded two civilians when it exploded around 9-50 a.m., the Interior Ministry said. The ministry condemned the blast as “un—Islamic and inhuman” and said it was investigating.

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