Tuesday, January 25, 2011

UN, US Welcome Afghan Parliament Deal

Latest Afghanistan News Update About UN, US Welcome Afghan Parliament Deal: The United Nations and the Government of the United States Tuesday welcomed the agreement between the President of Afghanistan and the election of delegates, which allows lawmakers to convene, without further delay.
They were the first sentence of an international solution to the fetus during the last three days between the president, who apparently intends to dismiss an elected parliament and angry lawmakers, who have threatened to start passing laws without his consent.
President Hamid Karzai has already promised to give Parliament on Wednesday – three days later than originally planned, but before the date 23 February, he announced last week.
“This opens the way for parliament to convene in the presence of the President, and its important functions in democratic governance in Afghanistan,” the UN statement. USA said that the process showed a “healthy and constructive discussion.” The European Union has also issued a statement welcomed the opening of Parliament.
Karzai rejected the request of the legislators the contested election fraud lawsuit, but said the members are just happy to get started.
Judge who has threatened to change election results long after the widespread probe of fraud investigators, the official finish, were largely condemned by the international community as unconstitutional. United said the court would be beyond its authority when it tries to reverse the results rather than just the thing to follow.
Tuesday statement reiterated that position, he said: “The United Nations also entitled to only the individual criminal prosecution confirmed.”
Political crisis threatens to destabilize the government as it attempts to reform and strengthen institutions to be more security responsibilities from NATO to take. The fighting was particularly heavy this winter, with American soldiers, to push Taliban leaders still playing in their stronghold in the hope that it will soon be able to withdraw troops.
But as the fighting escalates, mounting losses.
Tuesday NATO service member slain in bomb attack in the south, NATO said, without nationality or other details. More than 25 international coalition troops slain in Afghanistan so far this year. Coalition casualties topped 700 last year, making 2010 the deadliest for international troops in Afghanistan in nearly a decade long conflict.
Also on Tuesday, the Afghan intelligence service said nine rebels in recent weeks arrested in connection with a major attack in Kabul last year, the northern province of Takhar province and Herat in the west.

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