And
what about the opium?
US
troops staying in Afghanistan after 2014 to get local justice
immunity - draft pact
US
forces that remain in Afghanistan after 2014 will be under the
jurisdiction of the US and not be subject to Afghan courts, according
to a draft security deal released by Kabul on Wednesday. The measure
has been much-debated between the countries.
RT,
20
November, 2013
The
Afghan foreign ministry stated that US forces would keep “the
exclusive right to exercise jurisdiction,” on its website on
Wednesday. The issue was one of many contentious articles to be
resolved before Afghan chiefs assemble on Thursday.
“Afghanistan
authorizes the United States to hold trials in such cases, or take
other disciplinary action, as appropriate, in the territory of
Afghanistan,” the text said.
“There
was still a discussion yesterday - there continues to be - about the
final details and the final language,” U.S. State Department
spokeswoman Jen Psaki said on Wednesday in response to the Afghan
Foreign Ministry draft.
“We
did not expect that every piece would be reflected in whatever was
initially posted. So we are reviewing the text with that in mind and
I would expect that there is still a more final version to come,”
she added.
On
Tuesday, it was revealed that US forces would be allowed to enter
Afghan homes in “exceptional” circumstances, with Aimal Faizi, a
Karzai spokesman, stating that any “extraordinary circumstances”
could not be misused.
The
two countries are struggling to finalize a security pact before
Thursday’s meeting of over 2,500 Afghan chiefs who will debate
whether US troops will be permitted to stay in the country post-2014.
The five-day long negotiations of the so-called Loya Jirga grand
assembly are to begin on Thursday.
Without
such an accord, the US might have to pull out of Afghanistan by the
end of 2014.
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