KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Afghanistan’s president issued a decree Tuesday formalizing a four-month deadline for private security companies to disband — a move likely to dismay NATO and the U.S. military that rely on such firms to protect convoys and bases.
Security operators — both Afghan and foreign — have become a point of contention between the government and coalition forces and the international community as complaints have mounted that the firms are poorly regulated, reckless and effectively operate outside local law.
According to the decree, security contractors currently working in Afghanistan will have to either join the Afghan police force or cease operations by the deadline.
It does provide an exception for private security firms working inside of compounds used by international groups, including embassies, businesses and non-governmental organizations.
“They will have to stay inside of the organization’s compound and will have to be registered with the Interior Ministry,” the decree states.
All security outside of these compounds will be provided by Afghan security forces, as will all security for supply convoys for international troops, the decree says.
The deadline was first announced Monday by Mr. Karzai’s spokesman but no details were available until the decree was formally issued.
It is expected to meet resistance from NATO officials who rely heavily on private security companies to guard convoys and installations across the country. Officials in Washington have questioned whether a four-month deadline is realistic.
Mr. Karzai pledged in his inauguration speech in November to shutter both foreign and domestic security contractors by November 2011. This decree significantly speeds up the timeline.
The government has estimated that 30,000 to 40,000 armed security contractors are working in the country.
The Afghan Interior Ministry has 52 security firms licensed, but some older contracts are still being completed by unlicensed firms, according to the U.S. military. About half of the companies are Afghan-owned.
About 37 companies are working with the U.S. government, totaling about 26,000 armed security contractors. The majority of those work for the military, though some are employed by the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, according to the military.
Any security contractor currently registered with the government will have the option to sell their weapons and equipment to the police or take them outside of the country, according to the decree. Any unlicensed contractor will have their weapons and equipment seized.
The issue of private security contractors was a topic of talks that Mr. Karzai had earlier in the day with Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who is visiting Afghanistan, along with Gen. David Petraeus, the top commander of U.S. and NATO forces, and U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry. The U.S. officials are pushing Afghan officials to battle government corruption.
A statement Tuesday by Mr. Karzai’s office said he recently sent a letter to President Obama saying the war strategy needed to be reviewed. Without mentioning neighboring Pakistan, Karzai said in the letter that there is a need to focus on the “roots and sanctuaries” of terrorism outside Afghanistan instead of only fighting the war in Afghan homes and villages.
Also Tuesday, officials said bomb attacks killed three U.S. service members and three Afghan.
Two of the Americans were killed in a bombing in the east, while the third was killed in the west, NATO said. It did not provide details on where or how they were attacked.
Meanwhile, a bomb hidden on a motorbike killed two Afghan street cleaners early Tuesday in eastern Ghazni province. The bomb, which was remote-detonated, appeared to be targeting a police truck that was driving down the street in Ghazni city, said Ismail Jahangir, a provincial government spokesman. The explosion also wounded one police officer and four other civilians, he said.
In southern Kandahar province, a tribal elder and district council member was killed early Tuesday by a bomb planted in his office in the border town of Spin Boldak, according to the border police chief for the area, Gen. Razaq Khan.
The bomb had been hidden under a cushion that exploded when the elder, Zekirya, leaned against the it, Gen. Khan said.
Also, NATO reported that they killed a Taliban operative named Bilal who had ties to the network involved in last month’s killing of two U.S. sailors in central Afghanistan. NATO said it is unknown what role, if any, he played in their deaths.
Bilal was killed Monday in Logar province’s Charkh district, NATO said.
Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann, Rahim Faiez and Mirwais Khan contributed to this report.
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