Mohammad Omar Daudzai
Mohammad Omar Daudzai | |
---|---|
Afghanistan chief of Staff | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 2007 | |
President | Hamid Karzai |
Preceded by | Jawed Ludin |
Afghanistan Ambassador to Iran | |
In office 2005–2005 | |
Preceded by | Mohammad Najibullah |
Succeeded by | Yahya Maroofi |
Afghanistan chief of Staff | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 2003 | |
Preceded by | Said Tayeb Jawad |
Succeeded by | Jawed Ludin |
Personal details | |
Born | October 12, 1957 |
Nationality | Afghan |
Occupation | Diplomat, chief of staff |
Mohammad Omar Daudzai (Pashto: محمد عمر داودزی - born October 12, 1957) is a Politician in Afghanistan who started work as the Chief of Staff of Afghan President Hamid Karzai from 2003 to 2005 and then from 2007 to around 2010. He is a former member of the Hezbi Islami and was from 2005 until 2007 Afghan Ambassador in Iran. He then served as Afghan Ambassador to Pakistan[1] and is now serving as Afghan Minister of the Interior in Kabul.
Early life and Education
Mohammad Omar Daudzai was born on October 12, 1957 in the Qarabagh District of the Kabul Province in Afghanistan. He grew up and completed his primary education in his home district of Qarabagh. In order to continue his higher education, Omar moved to the capital city Kabul.[2]
80s and 90s: Hezbi Islami
During the 1980s Daudzai became active in the resistance against the Sovjet-occupation and joined the Mujahideen group of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar: Hezbi Islami.[3]
1996-2003: UN Employee
During the Taliban era Daudzai decided to settle in Peshawar, Pakistan, and began working for the organization Save the Children. While working there through a scholarship program, he was able to go to the Oxford University in the United Kingdom for his Masters in Science. After completing his Masters he came back to work for the Swedish Committee in Jalalabad, Afghanistan. In 1996 he moved to Islamabad, Pakistan, where he started working for the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). In 2001 he moved to Geneva, Switzerland, where he assumed the role of "Area Development Specialist" in UNDP Geneva.
2003-2005: Afghan Chief of Staff
In November 2003 Daudzai was approached by the Afghan Transitional Administration to assume the office of the Chief of Staff of the President and took the position.
In 2004, just before the first presidential election, then interim-President Hamid Karzai accepted the support of powerful warlords. After dismay from Afghans who were hoping that the nation's first democratic elections would herald an end to the power of the warlords, Daudzai said: "'These are the two distinguished leaders of jihad [holy war against the Soviet occupation in the 1980s] whom we always respect, and the president of course was also a leader of jihad, and therefore there is no reason that the president would not accept their offer."
A month later, commenting only few militias have disarmed, he said: "Any force not part of the Afghan National Army is a challenge, but this is reality, so we ought to deal with it diplomatically and peacefully. I hope we will succeed."[4]
Daudzai served as Hamid Karzai's Chief of Staff until 2005[5] when he moved to Tehran as the Afghan Ambassador to Iran.[6]
2005-2007 Ambassador in Iran
While serving as Afghan Ambassador in Iran, Daudzai established close relations with the Government of Iran, by becoming acquainted with Iranian intelligence officials and got to the inncer circle of Mahmud Ahmadinejad.[7]
2007-Present: Return as Chief of Staff
In 2007, he replaced Jawed Ludin and resumed the position of the Chief of Staff for Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Together with Minister of Education Farooq Wardak and former Information and Culture Minister Abdul Karim Khoram he is named as one of the persons with 'maximum influence' over President Karzai's decisions.[2] The New York Times even called him Karzais most trusted confidant.[7] Some say he pushed Karzai to a more aggresvie tone towards the US. He also has been critical of president Karzai towards US diplomates, wikileaks cables showed.
Taliban imposer
In the summer of 2010, Karzai sat down with a man believed to be former Taliban Cabinet minister Akhtar Muhammad Mansour to discuss peace between the Taliban and the Afghan Government. According to Daudzai, it later turned out the man wasn't Mansour at all, but an imposter who was just a shopkeeper in Quetta. Daudzai blamed the British for this debacle, because he said that they brought the man in front of Karzai. "International partners should not get excited so quickly with those kinds of things," Daudzai said, adding that the incident shows that the Afghan peace talks should be "Afghan-led and fully Afghanized."[8] According to Wikileaks Cables Daudzai also believed that the Norwegians might have been fooled into meeting self-proclaimed members of the Taliban who may in fact not have been Taliban members at all. Daudzai claimed that he had never heard anything about contact between the Taliban and Norwegian authorities.[9]
Criticising the US
On August 28, 2010 Daudzai had a big interview with The Washington Post criticizing the strategy of the United States in Afghanistan. Daudzai called on the international forces to stop invasive night raids on residents' homes and to distance their soldiers from "the daily life of the people." Traffic checks and road blocks, "that's not their job...that's the Afghan police job," said Daudzai.[10]
In the same interview he said that the coalition policies have undermined Karzai's authority and Afghan sovereignty, Daudzai said. In the interview Daudzai rebuffed recent media reports that many of Karzai's aides have long been secretly paid by the CIA: "The whole government is paid, one way or the other, by the United States. That's different. I'm saying none of the 500 are paid by CIA. None." Such allegations directly imperil U.S. and Afghan forces in the field, Daudzai added, because the Taliban use the media reports to suggest that the Karzai is a puppet of the United States, and everybody around him is paid by the CIA. 'So there is no government; it's an occupied country, and let's go and fight them' Taliban is preaching, according to Daudzai.[10] That's why it is "important for the Afghan people to believe that Afghanistan is a sovereign state, where final decisions are made by President Hamid Karzai," Daudzai said.[11]
Receiving cash bags from Iran
In 2010, there were rumors that Daudzai has been receiving plastic bags filled with cash from Iranian officials. Daudzai and Karzai both refused to respond to written questions about their relationship with Iran, and Daudzai's aide dismissed the allegations as "rubbish." Iranian ambassador in Kabul, Feda Hussein Maliki, also refused to answer questions, and his spokesman called the allegation "devilish gossip by the West and foreign media." The next day, Karzai acknowledged and accepted the fact that the Government of Iran has been providing millions of dollars directly to his office. Karzai told reporters Monday that he had instructed Daudzai to accept the money from Tehran. "It is official and by my order," Karzai said.[12] Iranians also stated that the report was indeed true. Two weeks after the controversy about the Iranian money Daudzai came out to the Afghan Media for an open interview. In the interview Daudzai showed piles of files that proved that every cent of the money coming from Iran were spent on government expenses only and that he had record for all the money that came from Iran. He also claimed that Iranian money had been coming to Afghanistan since 2002 but the issue was brought out only now in order to pressure the Karzai government for political reasons[13][14][15] and that since 2002 also the US, the UK and Japan had provided the presidential office with cash assistance.[16] According to Newsweek, nearly every encounter between Afghan and Iranian officials ends up with the Iranians proffering a sack of cash.[17]
According to wikileaks cables Daudzai told deputy US ambassador Francis Ricciardone already in February 2010 that almost all Afghan officials were on Tehran's payroll, including some people nominated for cabinet positions. Daudzai claimed that some of these officials had been relieved of their duties because 'you can't be an honest Afghan if you receive a package from Iran.'[18] That Daudzai himself received hundreds of thousands of euro's from Iran (for the government), was told the Americans in 2009. The money was to support Karzai's office, Daudzai had told Ricciardone, and he said that his government preferred the US' sustained cash support to the 'occasional and unpredictable' payments from Iran, adding that Afghans were trained to fight with the Taliban inside Iran and Iran was also paying Afghan thousands of Afghan religious scholars.[18] Daudzai said that on occasion, Afghan men are crossing into Iran where they are recruited and trained to return and fight. Anyhow, Daudzai did come out clean from the accusations and proved that he is not corrupt, and that any money taken from Iran was for the government and not for himself.[19]
References
- ↑ "Omer Daudzai emerges as strong candidate to replace Karzai".
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Afghan Bio's: Daudzai, Mohammad Omar
- ↑ Filkins, Dexter (October 23, 2010). "Iran Is Said to Give Top Karzai Aide Cash by the Bagful (Page 2 of 2)". United States: The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-10-24.
- ↑ Al-Ahram Weekly: Waiting for Godot
- ↑ http://archives.tcm.ie/irishexaminer/2004/06/21/story23336867.asp
- ↑ http://www.tehrantimes.com/PDF/10371/10371-16.pdf
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Dexter Filkins, Iran Is Said to Give Top Karzai Aide Cash by the Bagful New York Times, 23-10-10
- ↑ CBS: Afghans Blame British for Taliban Imposter
- ↑ Aftenposten: WikiLeaks: Norway talked to Taliban
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Washington Post: Taliban fighters, some disguised as American soldiers, attack two U.S. bases
- ↑ The CIA, Afghanistan and groundless propaganda Ria Novosti 31-08-2010
- ↑ Riechman, D. Karzai says his office gets cash from Iran, US Omaha, 10-3-2010
- ↑ Karzai says his office gets cash from Iran, US
- ↑ Karzai's acknowledgement of bags of Iranian cash: Why now?
- ↑ Karzai Rails Against America in Diatribe
- ↑ West intensifies pressure on Afghan president through media - official National Afghanistan TV, 5-11-2010
- ↑ Yousafzai, S. & Moreau, R.Sacks of Cash Newsweek, 30-10-2010
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Iran funding Afghan religious-political leaders, Taliban militants: WikiLeaks One India, 3-12-2010
- ↑ WikiLeaks: Bribery, graft rampant in Afghanistan AP, 3-12-2010
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