Afghanistan’s New President: ‘Hold Me Accountable’
"Hold me accountable" is the message from Afghanistan's new president, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, who took the oath of office, succeeding Hamid Karzai, who many accused of lacking accountability.
Ahmadzai's accession to leadership in Afghanistan follows a protracted dispute with his rival in the presidential vote, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah, who accused his opponent of vote fraud but later agreed to a power-sharing arrangement.
"I am your leader, but I am not better than you. If I make mistakes, hold me accountable," Ahmadzai told hundreds of dignitaries gathered to witness the inauguration.
As The Washington Post notes: "The new unity government is inheriting an Afghanistan rife with immense challenges. Most foreign troops are scheduled to withdraw by year's end and the Taliban Islamist movement is mounting a resurgence in many areas of the country."
Underscoring those concerns were reports that a Taliban suicide squad attacked a local government headquarters in the country's eastern Paktia province, killing 12 people, Al-Jazeera reports.
Also on Monday, White House senior adviser John Podesta said Washington and Kabul are expected to sign a long-awaited security agreement tomorrow allowing 10,000 U.S. troops to remain in Afghanistan past the troop-withdrawal date at the end of this year.
Links
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- Obama Plans To Leave Residual Force Of 9,800 In Afghanistan
- On Memorial Day Eve, President Obama Visits Troops In Afghanistan
- White House Mistakenly Blows Cover Of CIA Officer In Afghanistan