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10/1/2003
Disarmament Process In Northern Afghanistan Yields 39 Weapons
The
joint security team supervising disarmament efforts in northern
Afghanistan has collected some 39 predominantly light weapons from
six villages in that part of the country, the United Nations mission
reported this week.
According to a spokesman for the UN Assistance Mission
in Afghanistan (UNAMA), the weapons were collected in the villages
of Khawja, Buchaqlik, Haidari Khana, Abduli and Yuzta in Maymana
district, Faryab province. "As has become the practice, the
disarmament was supervised by a delegation of the Mazar Multi-Party
Security Commission, a delegation integrated with representatives
of two key factions - Jamiat and Jumbesh," Manoel de Almeida
e Silva said. The weapons were registered and then returned to district
military units of Jamiat and Jumbesh.
Meanwhile, following reports of tension and possible
weapons in two other northern villages, another delegation was dispatched
to Charkhab and Qushomov in the Sholgara district of Balk province,
the spokesman said. After the Security Commission met with commanders
and elders, it was revealed that that the two locations had not
been entirely disarmed during weapons collection in November.
"Some 35 weapons were said to be still in the
possession of commanders of various factions," Mr. de Almeida
e Silva said, noting that on 7 January, five weapons out of 20 promised
were collected. At a meeting held yesterday the Commission decided
to invite the commanders still holding weapons to attend its future
meetings and to ensure that they hand over their guns.
©EuropaWorld 2002
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