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maddezmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-18-09 03:59 AM
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Afghan minister accused of taking bribe ($30 Million Payment Alleged)
Afghan minister accused of taking bribe
$30 MILLION PAYMENT ALLEGED
Massive mining project awarded to Chinese firm



By Joshua Partlow
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, November 18, 2009

KABUL -- The Afghan minister of mines accepted a roughly $30 million bribe to award the country's largest development project to a Chinese mining firm, according to a U.S. official who is familiar with military intelligence reports.

The allegation, if proved true, would mark one of the most brazen examples of corruption yet disclosed in a country where the problem has become so pervasive that it is now at the heart of Obama administration doubts over Afghan President Hamid Karzai's reliability as a partner. The question of whether Karzai can address his government's graft and cronyism looms large as he prepares for his inauguration Thursday for a new term, and as President Obama completes a months-long strategy review that will define the future of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan after eight years of war.

Karzai is coming under intense international pressure to clear his cabinet of ministers who have reaped huge profits through bribery and kickback schemes. Although he announced a new anti-corruption unit this week, the president has been reluctant to fire scandal-tainted ministers in the past, and it is unclear whether he is ready to do so now. Meanwhile, Afghans' perceptions that they are ruled by a thieving class have weakened support for the government and bolstered sympathy for the Taliban insurgency.

In the case of the minister of mines, there is a "high degree of certainty," the U.S. official said, that the alleged payment to Mohammad Ibrahim Adel was made in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, within a month of December 2007, when the state-run China Metallurgical Group Corp. received the contract for a $2.9 billion project to extract copper from the Aynak deposit in Logar province. Aynak is considered one of the largest unexploited copper deposits in the world.

more:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/17/AR2009111704198.html
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TexasObserver Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-18-09 09:43 AM
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1. Recommend. It's like Vietnam all over again.
Puppet local leaders who are corrupt? Check.

Allegedly stopping the drug trade? Check.

Allegedly protecting America from evildoers? Check.

Making mercenaries and defense contractors rich on fat contracts? Check.

Wasting US troops for weak political motives? Check.

Just keeps getting worse? Check.

Democratic president afraid to stand up to the military industrial complex? Check.


I'm so sick of this damned war in Afghanistan. Eight years, and we can beat a stone age country the size and population of Texas, a country that doesn't even have an army, a navy, or an air force. We can't beat a bunch of goat herders with old, beat up AK-47s, and Vietnam era RPGs.

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