Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

India signs MoU with World Food Programme for sending wheat to Afghanistan – The Hindu

India on Thursday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the World Food Programme (WFP) paving the way for sending 10,000 metric tonnes of wheat for the people of Afghanistan. The signing ceremony between officials of the Ministry of External Affairs and the United Nations WFP was held in Mumbai where the WFP assured that it had the required infrastructure on the ground to ensure speedy delivery of wheat to the most vulnerable sections of the Afghan population.

The fifth tranche [to be shipped through the Chahbahar port of Iran], builds upon assistance already delivered to those who need it most by the WFP in Afghanistan. India has delivered on its commitment, standing by the historical relations between the people of the two countries and the pressing needs on the ground, said Joint Secretary of PAI division, Ministry of External Affairs, J.P. Singh.

In a press note, the WFP said it had a massive supply chain and logistics infrastructure in Afghanistan that could help in ensuring that the food supply reached those who need it the most and no one is excluded. Thursdays MoU follows from the Indian declaration made last month at the India Central Asia Joint Working Group on Afghanistan saying that 20,000 MT of wheat would be sent through the Iranian port of Chahbahar. The decision indicated that India would not send humanitarian assistance such as food and medicines to Afghanistan through the transit route over Pakistan.

Sincere gratitude to the Indian government for food assistance to the people of Afghanistan. Indias support has been a lifeline for families in need and is an important part of WFPs assistance to millions of people across Afghanistan, said Elisabeth Faure, Representative and Country Director, WFP in India on Thursday. The WFP painted a picture of serious crisis in Afghanistan saying that nine out of 10 Afghan families could not afford enough food at present and at least 20 million Afghans were facing threat of starvation. Six million of them are one step away from famine, it said.

India has not recognised the Taliban government in Kabul which took charge in August 2021 through a quick military campaign that unfolded alongside the withdrawal of the American forces in Afghanistan. But India has maintained that it requires unimpeded access to the people of Afghanistan to ensure that the humanitarian goods that are being sent reaches them without getting diverted to the tribal warlords and local Taliban leaders. The WFP appreciated Indias initiative saying Afghanistans crisis is unprecedented as it is a combination of decades-long conflict, drought, economic crisis and the 6.5 magnitude earthquake that hit northeast Afghanistan last month.

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India signs MoU with World Food Programme for sending wheat to Afghanistan - The Hindu

Statewide Iraq and Afghanistan veterans memorial will be built in … – TCPalm

PORT ST. LUCIE The city has been selected from among more than 50 locations across the state for a new war memorial honoring Floridians who served in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the Iraq and Afghanistan War Memorial Foundation announced.

The monument will be built in Veterans Memorial Park, and could be completed by early 2024, according to Steve Udovich, founder of the Iraq and Afghanistan War Memorial Foundation, a nonprofit in Dunedin.

The 6-foot-tall, 15-foot-wide memorial will be made from India black granite, and join other war memorials in the park such as the Vietnam Veterans Wall, World War II Memorial, Korean War Memorial, Purple Heart Memorial and Gold Star Families Memorial.

"This is unique. There's no other monument like it in the state," Udovich said.

Veterans Memorial Park is at 2100 SE Veterans Memorial Parkway.

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The front of the memorial will feature outlines of Iraq and Afghanistan and service emblems. The back will list names of the 355 Floridians killed in each war.

PG Memorials will build the monument. The company has constructed veterans monuments across the nation such as the Fallen Warriors memorial in Philadelphia and the Key West Living Vietnam Memorial Wall.

The idea for an Afghanistan and Iraq war memorial came to Udovich, a retired Army infantry officer, when he moved to Florida from Delaware four years ago, he said.

"It was one of those things where it's sitting in a file, and you're looking at it week after week and eventually you just say, 'We got to get this done," Udovich said.

Cities such as Fort Pierce, Stuart, Freeport and Sebring were considered for the memorial, said Udovich, who has worked on the project with partners Kim Allison, a Gold Star mother; and Phil Wyllie, a retired Army Special Forces officer.

However, Port St. Lucie, unlike others, already had a central location that was home to multiple war memorials, making the new Iraq and Afghanistan memorial the perfect addition.

"Stuart and Fort Pierce, for example, both have beautiful veterans memorial parks with a few nice memorials, but if you go put in our monument in there, you're going to disturb their current presentation," Udovich said.

Support from the Port St. Lucie City Council and local veterans organizations, such as American Legion Post 318 and Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 566, also played a factor in Port St. Lucie's selection, he added.

"This memorial is very important to us, because we want to pass on the legacy to younger veterans," said Steven Cameron, membership director of the Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 566. "They will now be honored here, too, and we can look to them to take care of the memorials after we (Vietnam veterans) go on."

The local Vietnam Veterans of America chapter, which has about 100 members, has donated at least $500 to the Afghanistan and Iraq memorial, Cameron said.

Udovich hopes the project acts as a catalyst for similar memorials to be built in other states, he said.

The foundation has raised about $52,000 for the memorial, as of Monday, Udovich said; $40,000 is still needed.

To donate, go to http://www.IAWMF.org.

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Statewide Iraq and Afghanistan veterans memorial will be built in ... - TCPalm

Biden blamed Trump for Afghanistan withdrawal – The Wahkiakum County Eagle

To The Eagle:

For seven years the Biden regime kept accusing Trump with false allegations they could never prove. The latest is unspeakable; an allegedly one time sex with Stormy Daniels that supposedly happened 17 years ago. How in hells bells did they come up with 37 counts for an allegedly one time sex as a felony? If it did happen, so what? Nothing to brag about. Lets face it, many of our past presidents had mistresses to frolic with; only a handful of presidents were ever faithful to their wives.

What has the media not reported? The CCP paid millions of dollars to the Biden family for helping them get into various industries here in America. As I mentioned before, CCP Police Stations exist in LA and NYC. What about the CCP balloon episode floating across our country?

Ashley Biden at 40 years old entered a rehab center for drugs and sex addiction. In her diary she wrote I remember having sex with friends @ a young age; showers w/my dad, probably not appropriate. Hunter is no angel either.

Finally, video footage of the Jan 6 rally has been released but there are still more the FBI and the Biden regime stole that have not been released. We saw in the video millions of American people just stood outside the Capitol with flags and cell phones, no weapons. The Capitol Police took the first shot. The Jan 6 Committee and the Biden regime purposely edited the video to make us look violent. The violent were BLM and Antifa. They all ought to be put in solitary confinement in the same cells they put the innocents in for the same amount of time or longer. The innocents have not been released yet.

In other breaking news, Biden blamed Trump for the Afghanistan withdrawal in 2021. Who was President then?

This is real news. Stay tuned for part 2.

Toni Below

Cathlamet

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Biden blamed Trump for Afghanistan withdrawal - The Wahkiakum County Eagle

Taliban share rare, months-old audio from reclusive leader – The Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) The Taliban have shared a rare, months-old audio message from their reclusive supreme leader in which he purportedly says that Afghanistan would be ruined without justice handed out by the countrys new rulers.

The Taliban leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, an Islamic scholar, almost never appears in public and hardly ever leaves the Taliban heartland in southern Kandahar province. He surrounds himself with other religious scholars and allies who oppose education and work for women. Only one known photo of him, years old, exists.

He was named the Taliban leader in 2016, after a U.S. airstrike in Pakistan killed his predecessor, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour.

Since the Taliban takeover of the country in August 2021, Akhundzada has traveled to Kabul only once, to give a speech to a gathering of clerics. However, he was not shown in the media at the time and appeared with his back to the audience.

The audio recording was shared on Twitter by the main Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, on Wednesday. In it, a voice that Mujahid says belongs to Akhundzada declares that justice is an instrument for the survival of the Taliban government.

The Associated Press has not been able to independently verify that the voice on the audio message is Akhundzadas.

But if there is no justice, and there is oppression, selfishness, murders and revenge, as well as killings without courts, this country will be ruined, says the voice, then adds that this can be prevented through the right decision of religious scholars and its proper implementation by the government.

According to the spokesman, the recording was from a speech given five or six months ago to Taliban officials at an unspecified location. There was no word on why the recording was released at this time.

Pakistan-based journalist Ahmed Rashid, who has written several books about the Taliban, said the clip addressed none of the issues facing the Taliban, such as womens rights and the countrys deepening humanitarian crisis.

There doesnt seem to be a political purpose to this clip. Its very unusual to hear from him, Rashid said, adding that its irrelevant to the population.

In January, Mujahid tweeted that Akhundzada met religious scholars from different provinces. He also tweeted about the leaders February meeting with commanders and other high-ranking security officials.

Akhundzada appears to have taken a stronger hand in directing domestic policy. He ordered women and girls barred from universities and schools after the sixth grade. He has also issued the edicts barring Afghan women from working for non-governmental organizations and the United Nations.

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Taliban share rare, months-old audio from reclusive leader - The Associated Press

The Queen wanted Harry AND William to fight in Afghanistan – Daily Mail

The Queen wanted both William and Harry to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan when war broke out in 2001, before deciding it was too risky to send the future heir to the throne, an ex-Army chief has revealed.

The decision over whether the princesshould take part in the conflict was discussed at a meeting between the late Elizabeth II andGeneral Sir Mike Jackson, then head of the British Army.

In an upcoming ITVX documentary called The Real Crown, Sir Mike breaches protocol by revealingdetails of his private audience with the Queen. He said: 'What goes on in those audiences and who says what to whom remains for the two people involved, and I will break the rule about not divulging what goes on on this one occasion.

'She was very clear. She said, "My grandsons have taken my shilling, therefore they must do their duty". And that was that.But it was decided that William as heir to the heir, the risk is too great. But for his younger brother, the risk was acceptable.'

The Real Crown reveals that the Queen had put a lot of thought into the decision as she had detailed information about the risks faced by UK armed personnel in Afghanistan.

Sir John Scarlett, at the time head of MI6, said: 'Of course she has complete clearance to everything. She has complete access to an exceptional amount of info and insight for longer than anyone else. William was very keen to go.'

He added: 'She's very, very discreet, completely reliable and completely on top of the detail.

'I remember thinking at the time, "Wow, Her Majesty knows more about this than we do".'

William completed a training course at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst spanning 44 weeks after graduating from university. He was commissioned as an Army officer in December 2006.

He joined the Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) until 2008 and was later attached to the Royal Air Force and Navy.

Harry served in the Army for ten years, rising to the rank of Captain and undertaking two operational tours of duty in Afghanistan, in 2007-8 and 2012-13.

The documentary shows that William was stopped from joining the war, despite wanting to, due to his position as future King.

Mark Cann, director of the British Forces Foundation, said in the series: 'William was very keen to go. Unequivocally.

'But it was complex, and some very great minds and experienced people took a view on it.

'I think it was really tricky. Anybody who's in the military who hasn't actually been on operation feels a sense of disappointment.

'And I think especially that was the one (war) at the time, you've got everyone around you at the time who's been involved in it. So there is a sense of disappointment.'

The series, which airs on April 20, also examines storylines from Netflix drama The Crown.

ITV notes that the documentary includes rare archive footage and new interviews with key figures, some of whom have never previously spoken on camera, while also offering insight into the Queen's perspective during key moments.

Prince Harry revealed in his memoir Spare that he killed 25 Taliban fighters during his second tour of duty in Afghanistan.

The Duke of Sussex, who was known as 'Captain Wales' in the military, wrote that he did not think of those killed 'as people' but instead 'chess pieces' he had taken off the board.

It was the first time he had specified the number of insurgents he personally killed during his time in Afghanistan, where he spent four months as an Apache helicopter pilot during his second tour.

Prince Harry said his military career 'saved him' after the tragic death of his mother, Princess Diana, by helping him 'turn his pain into purpose'.

During an explosive tell-all interview with 60 Minutes, which premiered on January 8, he told host Anderson Cooper: 'My military career saved me in many regards. It got me out of the spotlight from the UK press.

'I was able to focus on a purpose larger than myself - to be wearing the same uniform as everybody else, to feel normal for the first time in my life, and accomplish some of the biggest challenges that I ever had.'

The Queen denied her 'favourite uncle' - the Duke of Windsor - his dying wish just ten days before his death, a new documentary has revealed.

Aged 46, Elizabeth II famously visited Edward VIII at his and Wallis Simpson's house in Paris, France, during the former King's last days, and apparently rejected his request to grant his wife an HRH title.

The late royal, who died in 1972, had abdicated the throne in 1936 out of love for Wallis, who was American and divorced.

Speaking onThe Real Crown, the duke's nurse Julie Alexander said the rejection 'broke his heart'.

'He was terribly sick,' she said. 'He couldn't have weighed - maybe 80 lbs, if that... he wasn't eating at all.

'The duke was very, very concerned about his appearance but he insisted that he'd be sitting up in a chair, not in bed, and wearing clothes to hide any tubes.'

The visit, although melancholy in nature, also marked the first time Wallis hosted the late monarch.

'The Queen said no,' Julie continued. 'She said no, even on that sad day. It was, you know, breaking his heart, I think. That's what he wanted... that title for her. Not having that title for his wife was a slap in his face.'

The visit which took place in May, 51 years ago, was also depicted in Netflix'sThe Crown.

Elizabethspoke to 'uncle David' - as he was known to close family - alone before appearing with just the duchess for a photograph. The duke died on May 28, less than a month before his 78th birthday.

Edward's relationship with Wallis, who had been twice married before her union with him, was a scandal when news first emerged of it.

His proposition to marry her whilst divorce proceedings with her second husband were still ongoing - sparked a constitutional crisis which culminated in Edward's decision to abdicate.

After his abdication, Edward was made the Duke of Windsor by his brother the new King George VI - and granted the style of His Royal Highness.

However, after their 1937 marriage and decision to settle in France, Edward was upset by the King's decision to issue Letters Patent which denied Wallis the style of Her Royal Highness.

Edward received a tax-free allowance from his brother which went some way to maintaining his and Wallis's lavish lifestyle.

It comes as last summer, a historian claimed that Edward opted to abdicate because his father's treatment of him had made him a 'rebel' who did not have the 'self-discipline' to be king.

Speaking at the Chalke Valley History Festival, which is sponsored by the Daily Mail, historian Professor Jane Ridley said the royal's shocking decision to step back from duties stemmed from the fact his father had made 'no attempt' to prepare him for being king.

She said she showed him no affection or praise and made no effort to 'build a relationship', which in the long run had 'quite bad effects' and was one of the 'key factors leading up to the abdication'.

As a result, whilst Elizabeth and her father King George VI are 'famous' for diligently reading official government papers, Edward's would 'come back with wine stains and cigarette burns on them', Professor Ridley said.

She added Edward thought his role was a 'waste of time' and to a 'large extent' this was a 'reaction against his dad who bullied him'.

Edward spoke of his childhood and his father in his 1951 autobiography, A King's Story, in which he claimed the concept of duty was 'drilled' into him.

However, Professor Ridley said Edward and his brothers, who included the future King George VI, were 'terrified' of their father.

'He would shout at them for things like being five minutes late for dinner. They would be sent back to their bedrooms', she said.

'It is bad enough being shouted at by your father, but it is even harder if your father is the king. These four princes were brought up to be frightened of their father.'

She added: 'George made no attempt to prepare his son for being king. Being king in a conventional fashion. So his son rebels against him and rebels against his idea of kingship.

'George V and the present queen are famous for turning around their red boxes full of documents within hours of getting them back and being punctual and conscientious and diligent.

'I think there is quite a lot of quite sort of not always fascinating work they have to do.

'With Edward VIII, the documents would come back from his place at Windsor they would come back with wine stains on them and cigarette burns.

'It was quite clear that he wasn't respecting all the rules about being discreet, and he just thought the whole thing was a waste of time.

'I think that to a large extent began as a reaction against his dad who bullied him. He thought his dad was a silly old thing, and he became what he was, a rebel, Edward VIII.'

'When he became king he realised he didn't want to do it. Couldn't do it. Didn't have the self-discipline to do it,' she added.

Following his abdication, Edward was made the Duke of Windsor by his brother and granted the style of His Royal Highness.

After being slammed for meeting Adolf Hitler in Germany in 1937, Edward and Wallis spent much of their time holding lavish parties and travelling between Paris and New York.

Princess Margaret's fractured marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones lasted 18 years before they finally divorced - yet one of Lord Snowdon's male lovers has shared his surprise that the pair's relationship even made it that far.

British society interior designerNicky Haslam, 83, claimed in his memoirRedeeming Features (2010) that he had 'a very brief romance' with the late Earl a year before his 1960 wedding to Queen Elizabeth II's younger sister.

Nicky appears in ITV's new five-part royal docuseries The Real Crown: Inside the House of Windsor, which airson Thursday 20 April on ITVX, to discuss society photographer Lord Snowdon and PrincessMargaret's relationship.

In the first episode, titledLove and Duty, Nicky explains: 'Tony was a terrific seducer, he could seduce that table leg. He was terrific fun, Tony, a devil incarnate but a charmer at everything.

'He was naughty but wonderful, I mean naughty in the nicest sense,' says the socialite, before admitting: 'I was quite surprised that it went that far, as far as marriage [betweenAntony andMargaret].'

Lady Anne Glenconner, the late Princess Margaret'slady-in-waiting, also features on the episode - but has less than positive words to say about the royal's husband.

She says: 'Once the marriage started to go wrong, I was there for her when she was having a difficult time. I did see the way Tony treated her which I didn't like at all.

'The thing about Tony was, that he was so spiteful - and did these horrible things. he used to leave little notes,' claims LadyGlenconner.

The socialite,90, who was a maid of honour at Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, tells the programme how one message to his wife apparentlyread 'I hate you'.

'I don't know why he behaved like that really, I just felt very sorry for her,' confesses Lady Glenconner.

She adds that 'Tony was quite clever... he kept in with The Queen and The Queen Mother. Absolutely. I mean they thought he was wonderful.'

Elsewhere in the programme,Nicky recalls a not-so blissful moment between the Earl and Princess.

'We were at a party and Tony had one of those matches that would light anywhere, you'd strike them on, old fashion matches, and he was sort of lighting them and throwing them at PrincessMargaret,' explains thesocialite.

'And she said: "Oh Tony, don't do that. You could've set my dress on fire, and he said "Good thing too, I've always hated that material."''

Margaret,who died in 2002 aged 71, met Antony in 1958 at a dinner party organised by mutual friends, and wed at Westminster Abbey in May 1960, the first royal wedding to be televised.

However, the union was reportedly not a good one, and the pair soon drifted apart, with both royals entering into extra-marital affairs.

Margaret famously invited Roddy Llewellyn, a lover who was 17 years her junior, to the island of Mustique in 1974, where they were photographed by paparazzi, precipitating the end of her marriage.

Margaret and Antony, who passed away in 2017, made their divorce official in 1978, after 18 years of marriage.

The romance between Anthony Armstrong-Jones and the royal has been romanticised more than once, most recently in the second and third season of Netflix royal drama The Crown.

The full series is available on Thursday 20 April on ITVX

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The Queen wanted Harry AND William to fight in Afghanistan - Daily Mail