Associated Press.

Dec 17, 2003 9:20 AM Eastern Time

Afghan constitutional council embroiled in controversy, marred by

angry sparring

By PAUL HAVEN

A woman delegate to Afghanistan's landmark constitutional council

issued a stinging rebuke of powerful armed faction leaders at the

gathering Wednesday, calling them "criminals" and sparking arguments

and an attempt to throw her out.

The incident came at the start of stormy day at the Kabul session.

Supporters of former President Burhanuddin Rabbani, meanwhile,

accused the government of trying to force them to accept a

presidential system, which they say would put too much power in the

hands of U.S.-backed Afghan leader Hamid Karzai.

Many in the assembly are calling for the creation of a powerful prime

minister's post to blunt the president's influence. Karzai has

rejected any move to curb his power.

In the morning session, Malalai Joya - one of abut 100 female

delegates to the 500-member council, launched a verbal attack on

faction leaders such as Rabbani.

"Why have you again selected as committee chairmen those criminals

who have brought these disasters for the Afghan people? In my opinion

they should be taken to the world court," said Joya.

Many of the commanders who fought the Soviet Union in the 1980s still

control provincial fiefdoms and have been accused of human rights

abuses and corruption. After ousting the Soviets, the militias turned

on each other in a brutal civil war that destroyed most of the

capital, Kabul.

Some faction leaders, like former president Rabbani and Abdul Rasul

Sayyaf, a deeply conservative Islamist, have been elected to the

jirga, and others - like northern strongman Abdul Rashid Dostum were

appointed by Karzai.

Human rights groups and others have warned that Karzai will bargain

away too much to the men in return for their support for a

presidential system.

Joya's comments, which stopped only after her microphone was turned

off, sparked outrage among the hard-liners and their supporters, who

denounced her as a communist and demanded she be removed from the

session amid shouts of "God is Great!"

Council chairman Sibghatullah Mujaddedi, a Karzai ally, ordered Joya

thrown out of the session, saying she had "disturbed this jirga and

been very rude."

As Joya resisted security guards that had come to take her away,

Rabbani called for tolerance, and she was allowed to remain.

In the debate over the powers of a prime minister, several delegates

have threatened a walk-out. Others signed a petition Wednesday saying

the issue of divvying up power should be decided before the council

takes up other hot-button issues like women's rights and the role of

Islam in a future state.

"A large group of delegates stood and shouted that they would walk

out if the jirga continues in this manner (without a decision on the

prime minister)," delegate Mohammed Daoud told The Associated Press.

The session was closed to reporters.

About 200 of the 500 loya jirga delegates signed a petition calling

for a quick decision on whether to create a prime minister, said

delegate Hafiz Mansour, a Rabbani supporter and editor of a Northern

Alliance weekly newspaper.

The alliance was the key U.S. ally in ousting the Taliban regime in

Afghanistan which was playing host to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida

organization.

Karzai played down the controversy, saying a walkout was unlikely.

"I don't think they'll walk out of the jirga," he said on the steps

of his palace office. "The jirga will go on and it depends on the

delegates of the jirga what they decide."

He called Rabbani a "very sensible man" and added: "I don't think

that he would let his people do something like that."

The first three days of the jirga have been marked by endless

squabbling over the method of voting for leadership positions, a

parade of self-indulgent monologues and a one-day stall to allow

about 60 delegates to attend the opening of the Kabul-Kandahar

highway.

The jirga broke into 10 different groups Wednesday afternoon to

debate different parts of the 160-article draft constitution. It was

not clear how many days they would meet for before returning to the

plenary session.

The committees will be debating such issues as the role of women in

society, the place of Islam in a future state and the balance of

power in a nation accustomed to fighting over it.

Delegates also predicted testy debate over which of Afghanistan's

main languages - Dari or Pahsto - should be used for the national

anthem, and whether higher education should be free.

The council is meeting under intense security amid warnings by the

U.S. military that Taliban rebels might try to target the gathering.

Early Tuesday, three rockets slammed into Kabul, but none landed near

the site of the council.

That same night, one German peacekeeping soldier was shot by gunmen

as he approached them on a darkened street., said peacekeeping

spokesman. Lt. Col. Joerg Langer. His bulletproof vest stopped the

bullets, and he was not injured. The gunmen escaped.





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