Afghan lawmakers approve 1 woman for Cabinet post but reject 2 others
By APSaturday, January 16, 2010
1 woman approved for Afghan Cabinet, 2 rejected
KABUL — The Afghan parliament has approved one of three women nominated by President Hamid Karzai as part of his second slate of Cabinet choices after the initial list was rejected.
Voting is still under way, but six of 17 new nominees have been approved and four rejected.
Lawmakers approved Amina Afzali as work and social affairs minister on Saturday but rejected the women put forward for the women’s affairs and public health portfolios.
The parliament’s earlier rejection of the only woman on Karzai’s current team — Minister of Women’s Affairs Husn Bano Ghazanfar — was an awkward blow to the president, who has pledged to place more women in high government posts in the traditionally male-dominated society.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
KABUL (AP) — The Afghan parliament approved President Hamid Karzai’s picks for three ministries but rejected the nominee for higher education as voting began Saturday on a second slate of Cabinet choices after lawmakers rejected most of his first list.
The process was expected to take much of the afternoon as votes were being tallied one-by-one for 17 new nominees, including three women.
The 224 lawmakers present approved Karzai’s longtime national security adviser, Zalmay Rasoul, as foreign minister; Habibullah Ghaleb as justice minister; and Mohammad Yasouf Neyazi as head of religious affairs. But they rejected his choice for higher education, Mohammad Hashim Esmatullahi, according to the first results announced.
Afghan lawmakers earlier this month rejected 70 percent of Karzai’s picks for his second-term Cabinet — a major setback for the president’s effort to assemble a team that can focus on badly needed reforms in his country, in its ninth year of war.
The president offered a new list that omitted the earlier candidates, but lawmakers still complained that some of those named lacked the credentials to serve in the 25-member Cabinet. Others claimed that some nominees are too closely aligned with warlords, or were picked to pay back political supporters who helped get the president re-elected.
The U.S. and other countries contributing troops and aid have pushed Karzai to get his second-term administration in place ahead of a Jan. 28 international conference on Afghanistan to be held in London.
Parliament did approve his retention of U.S.-backed incumbents in the key portfolios of defense, interior, finance and agriculture in the initial Jan. 2 vote.
Second Vice President Karim Khalili announced 16 ministerial candidates a week ago. The administration subsequently nominated Abdul Qadus to the telecommunications portfolio.
Karzai has not yet submitted a name to replace Ismail Khan, an infamous warlord who currently is the minister of water and energy and was rejected in the first vote.
Three women have been nominated to head the ministries of public health, women’s affairs and work and social affairs. The parliament’s earlier rejection of the only woman on Karzai’s current team — Minister of Women’s Affairs Husn Bano Ghazanfar — was an awkward blow to the president, who has pledged to place more women in high government posts in the traditionally male-dominated society.
The international community hopes that a stronger government will help keep disenchanted Afghans from siding with Taliban insurgents amid warnings violence will worsen as the U.S. and other countries step up efforts in the country.
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