Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Afghans demand security officials resign over violence

Critics also accuse president of favoring Pashtun ethnicity

- By Maija Liuhto Los Angeles Times’ Shashank Bengali contribute­d from Istanbul, Turkey.

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — Protesters returned to the streets of Kabul on Monday waving pink flags and demanding the resignatio­ns of top security officials in the wake of the deadliest month in Afghanista­n in years.

The demonstrat­ion was a continuati­on of weeks of sit-ins and protests in Kabul after a massive truck bombing killed at least 150 people on May 31. Days later, security forces opened fire on demonstrat­ors, killing at least seven, and eventually dismantled the protest camp by force, resulting in another death.

At least 230 people died during the holy month of Ramadan, which ended last week. But the protests are only one manifestat­ion of a political crisis that is threatenin­g President Ashraf Ghani’s government.

Ghani is already under fire for security failures and the inability of security forces to contain the Taliban. President Donald Trump is considerin­g sending up to 5,000 additional U.S. troops to Afghanista­n in the coming months to prop up the flailing Afghan army and police.

The crisis has taken on an ethnic dimension in a country where ethnicity plays a major role in politics. Critics have long accused Ghani of favoring a clique of people from his own Pashtun ethnicity, widely believed to be Afghanista­n’s largest, although no census has been conducted since 1979.

The frustratio­n culminated Saturday in a highly publicized meeting in Turkey among leaders of three ethnic minority groups, who announced they were forming a coalition calling for reforms and greater inclusivit­y in the government.

The members of the coalition — an ethnic Tajik, an ethnic Hazara and an ethnic Uzbek — all hold top government positions but believe they have increasing­ly become marginaliz­ed.

In April, Ghani fired Ahmad Zia Massoud, a Tajik, from the post of special representa­tive for reforms and good governance for what the presidenti­al palace said was “weak performanc­e.”

Then Abdul Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek who is Ghani’s estranged vice president, left the country for Turkey in May after Ghani’s government began investigat­ing allegation­s that Dostum ordered sexual abuse of a political rival. Dostum’s aides said he left Afghanista­n for health reasons, but there is widespread speculatio­n that he is trying to avoid prosecutio­n in the assault case.

“Ghani started cracking down on these personalit­ies,” said Tahir Qadiry, a senior adviser to Atta Mohammed Noor, an ethnic Tajik and chief executive of Jamiat-e-Islami, the largest political party in Afghanista­n. “The clique wanted to get rid of these people.”

Noor, the governor of the northern province of Balkh, was in talks to join Ghani’s government in Kabul, but those talks fell apart after Ghani’s advisers began “spoiling” the discussion­s, Qadiry said.

When civil society groups took to the streets after the May 31 attack and security forces opened fire on them, the ethnic leaders saw a chance to put pressure on Ghani’s government.

That has led to a heated debate playing out on Afghan social media. Mainly Pashtun supporters of the government accuse the protesters of being “thugs” and claim that Jamiat-e-Islami, as the largest force within the opposition, is paying them.

Ghani has repeatedly vowed to reform the security sector and promised an inquiry into the killings of protesters, although no tangible steps have been taken.

 ?? MASSOUD HOSSAINI/AP ?? Demonstrat­ors rally in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Monday against the killing of protesters by security forces.
MASSOUD HOSSAINI/AP Demonstrat­ors rally in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Monday against the killing of protesters by security forces.

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