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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: BigBull who wrote (11758)11/27/2001 8:41:58 PM
From: maceng2  Respond to of 281500
 
Hi BigBull,

Just been reading that article, I think the concern is that the 'ol bogyman mujahideen pays the Russian task force a visit. They look like young kids too. Reading the Russian press over the last month or two tells me no way do they want any military involvement. The "Emergency Situations Ministry" is a humanitarian response organization only imho.



To: BigBull who wrote (11758)12/2/2001 7:32:43 PM
From: maceng2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Jeers, Not Cheers, Greet Russian Clinic in Kabul

By Michael Steen
Reuters

Marco Di Laurio / AP

Emergency Situations Ministry doctors standing inside one of the surgical rooms in the emergency hospital they opened in Kabul.


KABUL, Afghanistan -- Russia opened a high-tech field hospital in downtown Kabul on Sunday, but a crowd of Afghans standing behind Russian guards armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles remained deeply skeptical about their intentions.

Since they arrived under cover of darkness last Monday, the 100 uniformed officials from the Emergency Situations Ministry, which is not part of the military, have provoked concern and intrigue among hundreds of Afghans gathering to watch them.

The Soviet Union's 1979-89 occupation of Afghanistan has left more than bad memories and old gravestones -- if you are one of the 10 Afghans a day who are killed or maimed by a landmine, the chances are it was laid by a Russian sapper.

"I think we'll be here for a long time," said Irina Nazarova, the head doctor. "This hospital will help the local population since there are not enough medical experts here."

She said her staff of crack medics would treat whomever needed their help and, with Muslim sensitivities in mind, the hospital would have separate entrances for men and women.

But among the crowd outside the walled compound, Rayur Kostani, a 38-year-old doctor from the nearby Chaharsad Bestar (Four Hundred Beds) hospital was not happy.

"The Russians came here some years ago and killed a lot of people. I don't like them," he said. "I am a doctor, and I can say we don't need these people."

Another man, who did not give his name, said: "They have come before, but they were defeated. If they do anything bad, we will fight them again."

Although some of the same mujahedin fighters who helped rout the Red Army later became the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance and relied on Russia for arms supplies, many civilian Afghans have never learned to love Moscow.

The Russian clinic, which adjoins a temporary embassy and will also distribute humanitarian aid, is not only near Kostani's hospital. It is barely 100 meters from a brand new brick hospital built with Italian backing.

Russian medics showed the well-equipped hospital, which is laid out in a series of inflatable tents, to a group of officials from the Northern Alliance, which marched into Kabul on Nov. 13 after the Taliban fled.

But asked if it was really so desperately needed in a city with working hospitals, the Russians declined to comment.

"That's not a question for me," said Nazarova, who has treated the wounded from Chechen wars and Russian and Turkish earthquakes. "My task is just to organize medical care."

Deputy Emergency Situations Minister Valery Vostrotin, a veteran of the Soviet Afghan war who was decorated with the Hero of the Soviet Union medal, said his team was merely trying to give Afghanistan "concrete and real help."

"The people of Afghanistan needed help, so why should we wait?" said Russia's special envoy to Afghanistan, Alexander Oblov, who added that Moscow's embassy would be officially opened as soon as possible.

Russia's high-profile armed presence in Kabul contrasts sharply with U.S. and British special forces who have mostly hidden inside Bagram airport to the north, or, when in Kabul, at least tried to pass themselves off as macho journalists.

It is also reminiscent of Russia's swift move into the capital of Kosovo, Pristina, in 1999, after a U.S. bombing campaign prompted Serbian forces to leave the city -- a move that initially alarmed Washington.

But behind the line of armed guards, who say they are there solely for the clinic's security, some Afghans were not taking matters too seriously.

"It's interesting to watch them," said Samargo, a 45-year-old Red Cross worker. "I've been watching them for three hours already."


themoscowtimes.com