Nato troops arrest Afghan police chief / World / Home - Morning Star
World

Nato troops arrest Afghan police chief

Sunday 07 February 2010
Printable page Printable
Email Email
An Afghan police officer walks past the remains of a vehicle that was hit by a roadside bomb in Kandahar

An Afghan police officer walks past the remains of a vehicle that was hit by a roadside bomb in Kandahar

Nato occupation troops have detained a deputy police chief who they accuse of helping place roadside bombs north of Kabul.

But Afghan provincial officials have insisted that the man was not involved in the resistance and angry officials at the Interior Ministry, which oversees the police, charged that Western officials had kept them in the dark about the arrest.

Attaullah Wahab, the deputy police chief and security director in Kapisa province, was detained along with a bodyguard in a raid backed by helicopters while he was at home in the provincial capital of Mahmud-i-Raqi.

Nato did not identify the suspect, but it said that "joint Afghan-coalition forces" had arrested an Afghan national police commander on Friday for illegal activity and corruption in Kapisa and the Bagram district in neighbouring Parwan province.

Bagram is the site of the main US military base in the country.

The Western military alliance accused Mr Wahab of involvement in "the storage, distribution and installation of bombs" on roads surrounding Mahmud-i-Raqi as well as corruption related to road reconstruction.

Nato said in a statement that Mr Wahab "has been clearly linked to criminal activities, including a murder during the summer of 2009."

A policeman's starting salary is £80 a month and the Afghan national police force is believed to be riddled with corruption at every level.

On Friday, a police unit reportedly mistook a group of villagers gathering wood near the Pakistan border for guerillas and opened fire, killing seven civilians.

The commander of the border police of southern Afghanistan said that the shooting in Shorabak district was under investigation.

Elsewhere in the south, tens of thousands of civilians have begun to evacuate the town of Marjah, near Lashkar Gah, ahead of a much-hyped Nato offensive.

Operation Moshtarak will see Nato troops - backed by special forces, war planes, attack helicopters, tanks and drones - attack suspected guerilla bases.

Western military chiefs say that once the area around Marjah is "cleared," Afghan security forces will move in to bring security and stability.

US Second Marine Expeditionary Force commander Larry Nicholson said that the evacuation of most civilians would give commanders leeway to use air-to-ground missiles, declaring that he was "not looking for a fair fight."

If you have enjoyed this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep publishing your paper.

Donate to the Fighting Fund here

Bookmark and Share

Editorial

Delay rather than resistance

Party political manoeuvring between the Greek social-democratic, conservative and fascist parties has delayed acceptance of the blackmail demands presented by the troika of European Union, International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.

Features

An imperial adventure set to continue

by George Galloway

The growing intervention in Syrian internal affairs demonstrates the West's blatant attempt to rally reactionary Arab forces in support of its continued domination of the region, says George Galloway

All prawn and no brains...

Solomon Hughes

Jacqui Smith's bizarre call to get schmoozing with the City