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Showing posts with label expand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expand. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Afghan Troops Will Expand Security Control

Unlike the first stage of transition, when places that were already peaceful and for the most part already under government control, this one includes many areas where Taliban insurgents remain active.

The Sarobi district, in the rugged mountains in eastern Kabul Province, is an example. Although the district center remains firmly in government hands and has been quiet for the past two years, the highway through here continues to experience Taliban ambushes, and insurgents remain active in many remote villages, according to the district governor, Mohammad Haqbeen.

“We want that responsibility and we are ready for that responsibility,” Mr. Haqbeen said. “There are still some problems in some areas but we can handle them.”

French troops are believed on the verge of pulling out of the area, which after they first arrived three years ago was particularly troubled. Ten French soldiers were killed in an ambush in Sarobi, their military’s worst loss of life since Lebanon in the 1980s. Mr. Haqbeen said he was not allowed to say how soon French forces would leave, and the transition process allows for a gradual handover rather than an abrupt one.

“We are ready for the second phase, and we’re not alone, we also have the Afghan National Army,” said the district police chief, Col. Ahmadullah Oria. “We may still need our international partnhers alongside us for training, for mentoring and for support when necessary.”

Five more provinces are being handed over to Afghan control under the transition plan, along with 13 other districts or cities around the country, said Aimal Faizi, the spokesman for President Hamid Karzai. He said approval for the specific areas to be handed over was finalized Sunday in a meeting of the President’s National Security Council.

In Helmand Province, the districts of Marja, Nad Ali and Nawa will be taken over by Afghan authorities, who had earlier assumed control in the capital of Lashkar Gah. That puts all of central Helmand under Afghan government control, which has symbolic significance since the present surge of new American forces began with a 2010 offensive in Marja, a Taliban stronghold, which took months longer to subdue than the American Marines had initially expected.

Helmand Province has seen higher numbers of coalition casualties overall than any other province in the course of the ten-year-long conflict.

While those Helmand districts are firmly under coalition control now, they remain troubled with roadside bombs, and arrests of Taliban suspects and discoveries of hidden arms caches are a regular occurrence.

Another troubled area to make the transition will be several districts in Wardak Province, including Maidan Shah, Jalrez, and at least part of Besud district, Mr. Faizi said.

Mr. Faizi said the full provinces to be handed over include Samangan, Balkh, Daikundi, Takhar and Nimrooz, all of which have some areas where insurgents remain active.

In the first stage of transition, only two full provinces were included in the handover, Bamian and Panshir in central and north Afghanistan, both of which have had virtually no insurgent activity.

Adding Sarobi District brings all of Kabul Province under government control for the first time.

The transition process is intended to gradually transfer primary responsibility for security from the NATO-led coalition to Afghan authorities completely by 2014, when American combat troops plan to be completely gone, and most other NATO forces are expected to join them.

The capital of this district, with bazaars lining the main highway that goes from Kabul to the Pakistan border, was teeming with policemen Sunday.

As recently as three weeks ago, insurgents ambushed a NATO fuel convoy on the highway, setting one tanker ablaze, Gov. Haqbeen said. Colonel Oria said with the steep mountain terrain it is impossible to completely eliminate such attacks, but that the insurgents no longer had the capacity to cut the highway or attack population centers.

“There are insecure districts all around us, but in my assessment security has improved eight percent since last year,” Colonel Oria said.

Mr. Faizi said that President Karzai decided against including Kandahar City in this stage of transition, despite requests from community leaders to do so. NATO officials were reluctant to see the city, the traditional base of the Taliban, turned over just now. In recent months, the president’s brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, as well as the mayor, Fareed Hamidi, were assassinated there.

Taimoor Shah contributed reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan.


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Friday, November 25, 2011

"Mousetrap" play enters 60th yr with plan to expand

By Mike Collett-White

LONDON | Fri Nov 25, 2011 6:33am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - The big mystery may be why it hasn't happened before, but Agatha Christie's "The Mousetrap" -- the longest-running show in the world -- will finally tour Britain in 2012 to mark its 60th birthday.

The play's diamond jubilee falls on November 25, 2012, and on Friday as it enters its 60th year, organisers announced a series of events to celebrate the landmark.

Friday's performance will be the 24,587th, yet for all its popularity, the show's producer said he wanted more.

"I'm very conscious that although we've had good houses for 60 years, the amount of people who've seen the show in London is about the same as a single show of 'Downton Abbey'," said Stephen Waley-Cohen, referring to the hit British drama on ITV which attracts up to 10 million viewers per episode.

He added that other plays had enjoyed a new lease of life when they toured outside London.

"I've been aware that tours of many shows have enhanced their performance in London if they have been done to very high standards, most recently 'Yes, Prime Minister' and 'Mamma Mia!'," Waley-Cohen told Reuters.

"I believe a high quality tour done as a major event will be good for London as well as for the 60 cities it visits."

The murder mystery began life as a radio play broadcast in 1947 which was then turned by its author into a short story and later into a full play.

"KEEP THE SECRET"

Richard Attenborough and his wife Sheila Sim starred in the original 1952 production at The Ambassadors Theatre, and actors ever since have repeated his curtain speech urging audiences to keep the identity of the murderer to themselves.

Asked to explain the secret of The Mousetrap's success, Waley-Cohen replied:

"No one really knows, but I think it's two main things. One is the play is really good storytelling -- it grabs your attention and holds your attention.

"It's (also) got contemporary resonances in child abuse and a young woman who may or may not be what she seems to be, a young man who may or may not be what he seems to be, the sinister foreigner.

"They may sound like caricatures, but Agatha Christie was much cleverer as a writer than that."

As part of the 60th celebrations, The Mousetrap will tour Britain for the first time starting in September, 2012 at the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury.

It is expected to visit most of the country's main regional theatres during its run of up to 60 weeks and each star actor will perform for 12 weeks.

Mousetrap Productions has licensed 60 productions of the play worldwide, and several countries will be seeing it for the first time.

Mousetrap Theatre Projects, a leading theatre education charity, will also run a new writing project at 60 primary schools across London at which pupils will write their own short mysteries.

A charity fee of 60 pence per ticket will also be introduced to benefit charities working with young people and the arts.

Waley-Cohen said The Mousetrap, like many other top West End productions, has survived the financial crisis relatively well.

West End box office receipts hit a record high of 512 million pounds in 2010, and he expected "somewhere close" to that figure in 2011.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)


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