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| Saturday, 20 July, 2002, 01:18 GMT 02:18 UK Call for Afghan peacekeepers rejected ![]() The mandate limits the Isaf force to Kabul The United Nations special envoy to Afghanistan has appealed for the remit of the international peacekeeping force, Isaf, to be expanded beyond Kabul to other parts of the country.
He told the UN Security Council that the country needed a force to help provide security pending the creation of an Afghan national army, currently being trained by American and French troops. "A real security void exists in the country, leaving many Afghans feeling vulnerable and uncertain about their own and their country's future," he said. "The expansion of Isaf would have an enormous impact on security and could be achieved with relatively few troops, at relatively little cost and with little danger." However his words failed to convince those they needed to. The French ambassador to the UN, Jean-David Levitte, said that expansion of the international force was academic, and that no country was ready to dispatch the thousands of troops necessary for such a move. The US ambassador, John Negroponte, meanwhile said Washington remained committed to training the national army to provide the country with security. Al-Qaeda hunt The 4,500-strong Isaf force is limited by its UN mandate to Kabul, but problems of security exist across Afghanistan.
Recent incidents include armed attacks on aid agencies, robberies and the gang rape of a female international aid worker. But Mr Negroponte emphasised that the top priority for the US was the hunt for the remnants of the al-Qaeda terror network in Afghanistan. "The US focus in Afghanistan has continued to be centred on the conduct of the war on terrorism," he said. "The backbone of Afghanistan's security apparatus must ultimately be the Afghan national army." Nine months since the US launched its first strikes against Afghanistan, American planes continue to bomb the country as part of the mission to root out al-Qaeda. Earlier this month, more than 40 civilians were killed by US bombs in Uruzgan province. |
See also: 20 Jun 02 | South Asia 15 Jun 02 | South Asia 14 Jun 02 | South Asia 15 May 02 | South Asia 10 May 02 | South Asia 07 May 02 | South Asia 15 Nov 01 | South Asia 01 May 02 | South Asia Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top South Asia stories now: Links to more South Asia stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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