Hamid Karzai

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Hamid Karzai
حامد کرزي
Hamid Karzai

Incumbent
Assumed office 
December 22, 2001
Preceded by Burhanuddin Rabbani
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born December 24, 1957
Afghanistan Kandahar, Afghanistan
Political party None
Spouse Zinat Karzai

Hamid Karzai (Pashto: حامد کرزي, Persian: حامد کرزی) (b. December 24, 1957) is President of Afghanistan (since December 7, 2004). He became the first post-Taliban head figure. From December 2001, Hamid Karzai had been the Chairman of the Transitional Administration and then the Interim President from 2002 until he won the 2004 Presidential election.

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[edit] Biography

Hamid Karzai was born in Kandahar, Afghanistan, as an ethnic Pashtun of the influential Popalzai clan. He comes from a family that were among the strongest supporters of King Zahir Shah.

He took a postgraduate course in political science at Himachal University in Shimla, Himachal Pradesh, India from 1979 to 1983, then returned to work as a fund-raiser supporting anti-Soviet uprisings in Pakistan during the Soviet intervention for the rest of the 1980s. After the fall of Najibullah's government in 1992, he served as a deputy foreign minister in the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani.

He is married to Zinat Karzai, an obstetrician by profession. They were married in 1998 and have no children.

[edit] Relations with the Taliban

When the Taliban emerged onto the political scene in the 1990s, Karzai was initially among their supporters. However, as with many other early Taliban supporters, he broke with the Taliban, citing distrust of their links to Pakistan. After the Taliban drove Rabbani out of Kabul in 1996, Karzai refused to serve as their U.N. ambassador. Karzai lived in exile in Quetta, Pakistan where he worked to reinstate Zahir Shah. His father was assassinated, presumably by Taliban agents, on July 14, 1999, and Karzai swore revenge against the Taliban by working to help overthrow them.

[edit] Afghan Leader

In the months following the September 11, 2001 attacks, forces loyal to Karzai together with Mujahideen loyal to the Afghan Northern Alliance worked with the United States to overthrow the Taliban in Afghanistan and muster support for a new government. In December 2001, Afghan political leaders gathered in Bonn, Germany, to agree new leadership structures. Under the December 5 Bonn Agreement they formed an interim Transitional Administration and named Karzai Chairman of a 29-member governing committee. He was sworn-in as leader on December 22. The Loya Jirga of June 19, 2002 appointed Karzai Interim holder of the new position as President of the Afghan Transitional Administration.

Karzai's actual authority outside the capital city of Kabul was said to be so limited that he was often derided as the "Mayor of Kabul".

[edit] 2004 Afghan Presidential election

Karzai was a candidate in the October 9, 2004 presidential elections. He won 21 of the 34 provinces, defeating his 22 opponents and became the first democratically elected leader of Afghanistan.

Hamid Karzai casting his vote at the 2004 elections in which he later won.
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Hamid Karzai casting his vote at the 2004 elections in which he later won.

As incumbent president Karzai held high name recognition among voters, and was admired by his supporters for his steady leadership during an uncertain post-war period. Other contributing factors to his win may have included his endorsement by US President George W. Bush's administration, the use of US Army transport during his election campaign, the brief one-month campaign season as well as the paucity of news coverage in the country about his opponents. Although his campaigning was limited due to fears of violence, elections passed without significant incident. Following investigation by the UN of alleged voting irregularities, the national election commission on November 3 declared Karzai winner, without runoff, with 55.4% of the vote. This represented 4.3 million of the total 8.1 million votes cast.

Karzai was officially sworn in as President of Afghanistan on December 7, 2004 at a formal ceremony in Kabul. Many interpreted the ceremony as a symbolically important "new start" for the war-torn nation. Notable guests at the inauguration included the country's former King, Zahir Shah, Afghanistan's three living former presidents, and U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney.

[edit] President of Afghanistan

Secretary Rice meets with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in Kabul, Afghanistan.
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Secretary Rice meets with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in Kabul, Afghanistan.

After winning a democratic mandate in the election and removing many of the former Northern Alliance warlords from his cabinet, many thought that Karzai would pursue a more aggressively reformist path in 2005. However Karzai has proved to be more cautious than was expected, even going as far as to fire his Finance Minister, who was the most visible reformer.

At least 28 Battalions of the Afghan Army are now capable of combat operations, with more in training. The Afghan Economy has been growing rapidly for the first time in years and government revenue is increasing, although it still relies completely on foreign aid.

On September 5, 2002, an assassination attempt was made on Hamid Karzai in Kandahar. A gunman wearing the uniform of the new Afghan National Army opened fire, wounding the Governor of Kandahar and an American Special Operations officer. The gunman, one of the President's bodyguards, and a bystander who knocked down the gunman were killed when Karzai's bodyguards returned fire. A second attempt on Karzai's life took place on September 16, 2004 when a rocket missed the helicopter he was riding to Gardez, where Karzai planned to open a school.

In 2004 he rejected a US proposal to end poppy production in Afghanistan through aerial spraying of chemical herbicides, possibly fearing that he may alienate some warlords who are less hostile to his administration or who support him conditionally. Moreover, it is rumored that Karzai's younger brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, who helped finance Karzai's presidential campaign, is involved in the drug trade. [1] The situation is particularly delicate since Karzai and his administration have not been equipped either financially or politically to influence reforms outside of the region around the capital city of Kabul. Other areas, particularly the more remote ones, are currently and have historically been under the influence of various warlords. Karzai has been, to varying degrees of success, attempting to negotiate and form amicable alliances with them for the benefit of Afghanistan as a whole, instead of aggressively fighting them and putting the entire nation at jeopardy of a full blown civil war.

President Karzai reviews the first soldiers of the Afghan National Army.
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President Karzai reviews the first soldiers of the Afghan National Army.

On September 20, 2006 he told the United Nations General Assembly that Afghanistan has become the "worst victim" of terrorism. [2] Karzai said terrorism is "rebounding" in his country, with militants infiltrating the borders to wage attacks on civilians. This does not have its seeds alone in Afghanistan. Military action in the country will, therefore, not deliver the shared goal of eliminating terrorism. He demanded assistance from the international community to destroy terrorist sanctuaries inside and outside Afghanistan. You have to "look beyond Afghanistan to the sources of terrorism," he told and "destroy terrorist sanctuaries beyond" the country, dismantle the elaborate networks in the region that recruit, indoctrinate, train, finance, arm, and deploy terrorists. These activities are also robbing thousands of Afghan children of their right to education, and prevent health workers from doing their jobs in Afghanistan. In addition he promised to eliminate opium-poppy cultivation in the country, which helps fuel the ongoing insurgency. He has repeatedly demanded that NATO and U.S.-led coalition forces take more care when conducting military operations in residential areas to avoid civilian casualties, which undermine his government's already weak standing in parts of the country.[1]

In a video broadcast on September 24 Karzai said that if the money spent on the Iraq War went to Afghanistan, his country would "be in heaven in less than one year".[2]

[edit] Criticism

Hamid Karzai has received harsh criticism from the Afghan human rights group Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan who charge that the current government has no support in most areas of Afghanistan, and that fundamentalists are enforcing anti-women laws as they were under the Taliban.[3]

These claims are supported by media reports about the Herat government of Ismail Khan, who has created a religious police that forces women to obey strict dress and behavior codes, and many reports by Human Rights Watch.[4]

[edit] Other information

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Civilians reported killed by airstrikes as NATO hunts Taliban" October 19, 2006 accessed 19 October 2006.
  2. ^ MSNBC...Link
  3. ^ RAWA...Link
  4. ^ Human Rights Watch...Link 1Link 2

[edit] External links

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Preceded by
Mohammed Omar
Head of the Transitional State of Afghanistan
December 2001 – December 2004
President of Afghanistan
December 2004 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent