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ASIA: IRIN-ASIA Weekly Round-up 109, 29 January – 04 February 2007
05 Feb 2007 07:56:22 GMT
Source: IRIN
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DUBAI, 5 February (IRIN) - CONTENTS

AFGHANISTAN: Rebuilding 'not on track' AFGHANISTAN: Grave concern over impunity plans for war lords AFGHANISTAN: More than 1,000 civilians killed in 2006, rights group says AFGHANISTAN: School burning condemned NEPAL: Violence stops access to hospitals in south NEPAL: Medicine and food shortages in Terai

NEPAL: Journalists, aid workers and rights activists under threat PAKISTAN: Quake survivors learn to walk again PAKISTAN: Blood disorder thrives amid ignorance PAKISTAN: Commercial sex workers face HIV threat PAKISTAN: 2 million Afghans registered as refugees

AFGHANISTAN: Rebuilding 'not on track'

The international community pledged US $10.5 billion for the recovery of Afghanistan in 2006, and in return, the Afghan government promised to introduce policy reforms to improve its people's lives over five years. Out of this was born the Afghanistan Compact, which established targets and benchmarks to be met by the Afghan authorities by the end of 2010.

One year on, analysts say Kabul is behind in meeting even the most basic targets. In a report released in New York on 30 January, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says the Afghan government is failing to meet the basic security and human rights needs of its citizens.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57274 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Afghanistan

AFGHANISTAN: Grave concern over impunity plans for war lords

The United Nations and a leading human rights group in Afghanistan expressed concern over a draft law that seeks to grant impunity to Afghans accused of committing war crimes during 25 years of conflict in the country. Some analysts say the bill was passed by the lower house of parliament because war lords and ex-communist officials are the majority in it.

Rights groups say, if accepted, it will excuse war criminals involved in nearly 30 years of conflict which have cost the lives of more than 1 million Afghans and forced millions of others to leave the country.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57297 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Afghanistan

AFGHANISTAN: More than 1,000 civilians killed in 2006, rights group says

On 30 January, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said more than 1,000 civilians were killed in Afghanistan in 2006. HRW said that the majority were killed by the Taliban or other anti-government forces. The rights watchdog added that, with fighters included, more than 4,400 Afghans died in "conflict-related violence" last year, twice as many as in 2005 and more than any year since the Taliban were ousted in 2001.

AFGHANISTAN: School burning condemned

Afghan education officials have condemned the torching by insurgents of a school in the eastern Logar province. Apa Khan boys primary school in Kharwar district, which had 650 students and eight teachers, was set alight at night on 2 February. No pupils were present as the school was closed for the winter vacation.

According to education officials, 183 schools were burned in 2006 by insurgents who oppose government-run schools and back traditional Islamic teaching.

While huge efforts have been made to get children back to school since the ouster of the Taliban in 2001, recent years have seen increasing violence targeted at educational institutions. Zahoor Afghan, advisor to the education ministry, said that currently more than 200,000 students were missing out on an education due to the closure of some 300 schools across the country, mainly in the insurgency hit south.

NEPAL: Violence stops access to hospitals in south

Aid agencies in Nepal have called on those involved in the communal violence in the south to allow humanitarian access. People in the Tarai region have been subjected to two weeks of clashes after political protests led by the Madhesi People's Rights Forum (MPRF).

The MPRF has been staging protests demanding more political rights for the Madhesi, who live predominantly in the Tarai. They say they feel discriminated against and excluded from Nepal's development and political process.

The Madhesi are a mixture of Hindus, Muslims and Buddhists. They make up 33-45 percent of Nepal's population of 27 million and have strong cultural links to neighbouring India.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57234 and SelectRegion=Asia,%20 and SelectCountry=Nepal

NEPAL: Medicine and food shortages in Terai

Violence and curfews have crippled Nepal's southern region bordering India, creating shortages of food and medical supplies, aid workers say. Some aid workers told IRIN on 1 February that the failure of talks between the government and Madhesi leaders to stop the protests had limited access to medical services.

The 12-hour curfews from 9 a.m., imposed by the government on key towns and cities in the region, have continued. Aid workers warned that clinics and hospitals could soon run short of blood supplies, oxygen cylinders and medicine. The curfew is preventing medical staff from getting to work and personnel carrying medical supplies are coming under attack from demonstrators.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57272 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Nepal

NEPAL: Journalists, aid workers and rights activists under threat

Journalists have been attacked and aid workers and human rights activists threatened in the continued unrest in Nepal's south-eastern Terai region. The Madhesi People's Rights Forum (MPRF), a major political party in the region, has been spearheading demonstrations in the region for the past 20 days against the Nepalese government with demands for more political rights and greater autonomy for the Madhesi people - the predominant ethnic community of the Terai.

http://newsite.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=69916

PAKISTAN: Quake survivors learn to walk again

More than 2,000 child survivors of the October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan are reportedly waiting for prosthetics, with finances and funding scarce and private charities providing most donations to help in changing their lives. The 7.6 magnitude earthquake devastated much of Pakistani-administered Kashmir and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), with its epicentre only 145km from Islamabad, the capital.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57266 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Pakistan

PAKISTAN: Blood disorder thrives amid ignorance

Fuelled by ignorance and a lack of compulsory medical testing, thalassaemia - an inherited blood disorder – continues to affect thousands of children in Pakistan. Thalassaemia sufferers do not produce adequate amounts of haemoglobin, which carries oxygen through the blood, and need regular blood transfusions to keep levels near normal.

In Pakistan, 12 million (5-7 percent of the population) have the disorder. Up to 9,000 children are born with it every year. High illiteracy rates of 50 percent and the absence of a health infrastructure in remote areas compound the problem.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57267 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Pakistan

PAKISTAN: Commercial sex workers face HIV threat

Despite low HIV/AIDS prevalence, Pakistan could have up to 80,000 unreported HIV cases – making up 0.1 percent of the adult population, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). There are some 3,000 reported cases of the infection so far. Lack of awareness among sex workers and their inability to negotiate safe sex makes them vulnerable, the World Bank noted in its 2006 update on the AIDS epidemic in the country.

Experts say that unsafe sex practices threaten a spillover of HIV/AIDS from vulnerable groups, such as sex workers, to the general population. There are an estimated 25,000 sex workers in Lahore alone, Pakistan's second most populous city.

http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57290 and SelectRegion=Asia and SelectCountry=Pakistan

PAKISTAN: 2 million Afghans registered as refugees

More than 2 million Afghans have been registered by the government of Pakistan with support from the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) this week. Since October 2006, when the registration exercise began, 80 percent of the target population of 2.4 million Afghans in Pakistan has been registered.

Nearly 65 percent of those registered are in North West Frontier Province (NWFP); 20 percent in Balochistan; 10 percent in Punjab/Islamabad; 5 percent in Sindh and the rest in Pakistan-administered Kashmir (AJK).

Registration is conducted by Pakistan's National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) with help from the Commissionerate for Afghan Refugees (CAR) and UNHCR.

More than 2.8 million Afghans have returned from Pakistan since the programme was first launched by UNHCR in 2002, following the ousting of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
IRIN news

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Security personnel train at a counter-terrorism and jungle warfare school in Kanker village, about 140 km (87 miles) south of the central Indian city of Raipur March 19, 2007. Thousands of tribal people in this central state of Chhattisgarh have seen ancestral lands turned into a war zone of landmines, ambushes and refugee camps as a 40-year-old Maoist insurgency in India gathers momentum. The region is now a stronghold of up to 4,000 well-armed Maoists, police say, who freely roam the forests of southern Chhattisgarh in what locals call the "red zone". Picture taken March 19, 2007. To match feature INDIA-MAOISTS/TRIBALS