KABUL (AP) - Security forces increased patrols on some streets in the Afghan
capital and blocked others entirely Wednesday, bracing for possible
militant attacks during the inauguration ceremony that will cement
President Hamid Karzai's tumultuous re-election victory.
Karzai will be sworn in Thursday for his second five-year term,
with many in the international community hoping he will introduce
solid reforms and pave the way for a Cabinet house-cleaning to rid
the administration of corrupt officials.
The inauguration comes amid repeated calls and threats from the
international community that he reform his government following an
election so spoiled by fraud that it took two and half months to
resolve.
Both the U.S. and other NATO countries have also said they are
weighing the rampant government corruption and mismanagement in
decisions on committing more troops.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton — who
arrived in Kabul on Wednesday to attend the inauguration —
has said the U.S. will not provide civilian aid to Afghanistan
unless it can be sure the government can be accountable for the
funds. For his part, Karzai complains that millions of dollars in
foreign aid is being wasted before it ever gets to the Afghan
people.
Even the ceremony itself is fraught with potential danger.
Representatives from 42 countries are scheduled to attend, and the
event could be a target for militants eager to attack the president
and his allies.
There will be no large public ceremony. Instead, the
inauguration will be held inside the presidential palace with tight
restrictions on who is allowed in. Since an assassination attempt
on Karzai at a public parade in 2008, he has stayed away from large
public appearances.
The government has declared Thursday a national holiday and has
asked the public to stay home to minimize traffic on the capital's
clogged roads, while regular flights to and from Kabul airport will
be canceled for the day. A number of neighborhoods in Kabul have
been closed completely to traffic, with exceptions made only for
ambulances. Helicopters circled the city, providing
surveillance.
Col. Sanam Gul, commander of the 4th Battalion of the Afghan
National Army, the key Afghan combat unit in Logar province south
of the capital, said his troops along with U.S. forces were
increasing patrols and checkpoints leading into Kabul and stopping
suspicious vehicles headed in that direction.
"The enemy is now trying to penetrate into Kabul to disrupt the
inauguration," Gul said.
Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi said
patrols have been stepped up throughout Kabul, and that roads
leading to embassies have been blocked.
"We have very tight security inside Kabul, around Kabul, outside
Kabul," he said.
The inauguration comes as the reputation of the Karzai
government has sunk to new lows. Though dogged by corruption for
years, the government was seen as particularly tainted by the
August presidential vote and the rampant ballot-box stuffing that
took place.
Western diplomats leaned on the Afghan president for weeks
before he accepted results that didn't give him the 50 percent
needed to win outright. Karzai was eventually declared the winner
after his only remaining opponent dropped out because he said there
was no way a runoff vote could be fair.
Even before the election, Afghans tended to worry more about the
lack of help from their government than attacks from Taliban
militants, according to a survey released Wednesday by aid agency
Oxfam International.
About 70 percent of the Afghans surveyed between January and
April blamed poverty and unemployment for the fighting in their
country. Survey respondents were not limited to one choice, and 48
percent of those polled also picked corruption and government
ineffectiveness as a major cause of violence. But only 36 percent
said that the Taliban were a significant cause of fighting.
The survey of about 700 Afghans across fewer than half of the
country's provinces is not a scientific representation, but gives a
taste of people's concerns as they prepare for another five years
with Karzai.
"This survey shows they're incredibly concerned about the
ability of the government to deliver services and the transparency
of the government," said Ashley Jackson, a researcher with the
British-based charity.
Afghan flags hung from lampposts on major boulevards to welcome
the dozens of international leaders in town for the inauguration,
including Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.
Karzai was to meet with Zardari on Wednesday. Traditionally
rocky relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have improved
steadily since Pakistan's elected government led by Zardari
replaced the military dictatorship of Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
The two leaders, who have established a personal relationship,
last met in Turkey in April. Islamist extremism and border security
have topped previous discussions. Afghanistan routinely accuses
Pakistan of harboring Taliban's top leadership, while Pakistan
complains bitterly about the increased influence wielded by its
hostile neighbor India in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, security and Taliban forces continue to clash in the
volatile regions. In the latest violence, a U.S. service member was
killed when his vehicle hit a bomb in the south of the country,
NATO forces said.
____
Associated Press writers Denis Gray in Logar province and Kathy
Gannon in Kabul contributed to this report.