|
|
|
|
|
Afghanistan Timeline July 2003Afghanistan timeline - The European Union announced that it would donate €79.5 million to support reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan. The money is meant to support de-mining, the building of a health system, and other public infrastructure projects.
- The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization predicted that the 2003 wheat harvest in Afghanistan would be the largest in 20 years, due to increased rainfall, increased international aid, and continued success in dealing with locusts. Malnutrition remains a serious problem in the country, however.
- In Kabul, Afghanistan, three Afghan National Army officers were wounded when U.S. forces fired on their taxi. http://asia.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=3197426
- U.S. forces in Afghanistan killed at least three suspected insurgents in a firefight near the U.S. base in Asadabad, in Kunar province.
- The Pakistani army moved into parts of its northwest tribal areas to flush out Taliban remnants. This marked the first time Pakistan had taken such action.
- Floods in the Panjshir Valley of Afghanistan triggered a landslide which killed 30 people and swept away 400 cattle.
- United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan urged the United Nations Security Council to expand the mandate of the International Security Assistance Force to other key Afghan cities in order to create a better environment for the elections slated in the summer of 2004.
- After a gun battle south of Kandahar, Afghanistan, Afghan security forces killed one suspected Taliban member and arrested five others.
- The UNHCR announced that, with its support, more than 300,000 Afghan refugees had returned home in 2003.
- Human Rights Watch released a report that, in Afghanistan, U.S.-led coalition support for warlords was destabilizing the nation and could threaten the elections of 2004. Abuses carried out by the Afghan National Army and local police were also highlighted, including kidnappings, burglaries, rapes, intimidation, harassment of journalists, and extortions.
- During a United Nations Security Council debate, Indian Ambassador Vijay K. Nambiar expressed concern that, through charities and drug trade, al Qaeda still had the ability to finance its own activities. He also voiced concerns that al Qaeda continued to procure weapons through the border with Pakistan. Nambiar demanded an inquiry.
- In Naish, 40 miles (60 km) north of Kandahar, Afghanistan, about two dozen rebels ambushed government troops in southern Afghanistan, killing at least two soldiers and torching two NGO vehicles before fleeing.
- To sort out their border dispute along the tribal region dividing them, Pakistan and Afghanistan agreed to use, with the assistance of the U.S., GPS to work out the coordinates of the border.
- British authorities deported to Afghanistan a group of forty-seven Afghans who failed to obtain political asylum in the U.K..
- Under a pilot telekiosk project funded by the French government, the telekiosk.moc.gov.af website was launched in Afghanistan. In both Dari and English language, the site provided links to government and health information, job listings and business information. The site also provided community forums, information on local hotels and restaurants, and a Dari-English phrasebook.
- Mullah Mohammed Omar approved Mullah Abdul Samad as the new deputy military commander for southern Afghanistan and ordered him to intensify guerrilla attacks on U.S. and coalition forces.
- North of Orgun, Afghanistan, two soldiers from the U.S.-led coalition forces were wounded when their patrol was ambushed by automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.
- One man was killed and another wounded when they set off a land mine while digging a well near a police station in Chilstoon in Kabul, Afghanistan. The mine was likely left over from factional fighting in the 1990s.
- Sixteen Afghans who arrived in Kabul, Afghanistan from Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on July 17 were freed and handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross.
- Afghan authorities confiscated hundreds of copies of the weekly newspaper Payam-e-Mujahid, owned by the Northern Alliance, after it published an article accusing President Hamid Karzai of making the apology under pressure from a U.S. ambassador and described it as a dishonor for Afghans. The article demanded that Karzai resign. The confiscation was ordered by Defense Minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim.
- U.S.-led coalition forces killed up to two dozen rebels in a clash near Spin Boldak, Afghanistan.
- Several Afghan troops were killed as dozens of heavily armed rebel fighters attacked a border post near Spin Boldak, Afghanistan. After the five-hour battle, the rebels escaped across the border into Pakistan.
- A blast damaged a building operated by a non-governmental organization (NGO) for the U.N..
- An improvised explosive device left a large whole in the wall of a warehouse run by the German Technical Cooperation, an NGO, in the northern section of Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
- In a raid near the Pakistan border, Afghan forces seized about 300 rocket-propelled grenades, dozens of anti-tank mines and 20 AK-47 rifles.
- In a second day of demonstrations against reported Pakistani military incursions into Afghan territory, a group of nearly 500 people attacked Pakistan's embassy in Kabul. The windows of eight embassy cars were smashed while televisions, computers and windows were also smashed, including those in the ambassador's upstairs office.
- In Mazar-i-Sharif around 500 people held a protest outside the United Nations offices and burned a Pakistani flag and an effigy of Musharraf.
- In reaction to attack on Pakistan's embassy in Kabul early in the day, Pakistan lodged a formal protest with the Afghan Government. The protest prompted Afghan President Hamid Karzai to telephone Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf directly.
- Amnesty International secretary general Irene Khan met with Afghan president Hamid Karzai in Kabul to press for widespread prison reform and improved security. A new Amnesty International report found that warlords were still operating private prisons, with many civilians held in shackles and detained for months without facing trial.
|
 |
|
| Copyright 2005-2009 OnPedia.com. All Rights Reserved |
|
|