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Afghanistan: Ghulam Qawis Abu Bakr Graft Probe Shut Down

Afganistan Graft Probe

ADAM GOLDMAN and HEIDI VOGT   10/11/11 09:19 AM ET   AP

KABUL, Afghanistan — A major investigation into an influential Afghan governor accused of taking bribes has been shut down and its top prosecutor transferred to a unit that doesn't handle corruption cases, Afghan and U.S. officials said.

The closing of the investigation into the former governor of Kapisa province, Ghulam Qawis Abu Bakr, comes on the heels of a grim, unpublicized assessment by U.S. officials that no substantive corruption prosecutions were taking place in Afghanistan despite President Hamid Karzai's pledge to root out graft.

The Abu Bakr investigation raises troubling questions yet again about how much U.S. taxpayer money is lining the pockets of powerful Afghan officials, and whether the U.S. is doing all it can to persuade Karzai to crack down on corruption. It also suggests that the lax prosecution of corruption has pervaded all levels of government.

U.S. officials had hoped the case would be the first conviction of a relatively significant person in Afghan government. While most of Abu Bakr's influence is in Kapisa province, he is also connected to the Hizb-e-Islami political party, which the government has been trying to court in hopes of getting the group to cut its ties with militants.

Abu Bakr was suspended as governor after CIA Director David Petraeus, then the commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, presented Karzai with documentation showing that he was colluding with the Taliban, according to an Afghan official in Kabul with direct knowledge of the incident.

In the two years since Karzai unveiled a new anti-corruption task force, powerful government figures have been accused of corruption and even investigated, but seldom brought to court. It appears that Abu Bakr will be no exception.

Most of the approximately 2,000 cases investigated by the anti-corruption unit since its birth in 2009 have stalled, said a NATO official familiar with the unit, who spoke anonymously to discuss sensitive matters. The 28 convictions so far have all been of minor players. The attorney general's office has been infiltrated by power brokers, ranging from lawmakers to warlords, who are systematically blocking cases, the NATO official said.

In general, little has come of Karzai's promises after a fraud-marred 2009 election that he would make rooting out graft a priority. In fact, a corruption scandal in the interim involving the country's largest private bank has incriminated a number of Karzai allies, including relatives.

The first evidence that corruption was not being taken seriously in the attorney general's office came in the summer of 2010, when a Karzai aide was arrested on charges of accepting a car in exchange for his help in thwarting a corruption case. Karzai ordered the release of the aide, Mohammad Zia Salehi.

Because of the onslaught of negative publicity, Attorney General Mohammed Ishaq Aloko ordered his prosecutors not to discuss details of their cases with the U.S. officials advising them, saying that if they did, they would be considered U.S. spies, said an Afghan official who worked in the anti-corruption unit.

Both the attorney general and Abu Bakr declined to comment. The current head of the anti-corruption unit at the attorney general's office said the case was ongoing.

"The case against Gov. Ghulam Qawis Abu Bakr has not closed. Our unit is still working on that case. They are trying to collect evidence and complete the case and get it ready to send it to the courts," said Gen. Abu Baker Rafiyee. "When the case will go to court is not clear. It will be whenever it is ready for the court."

Several months ago, U.S. Embassy personnel in Kabul concluded no substantive corruption prosecutions were taking place in Afghanistan, according to a former senior U.S. familiar with the briefing – which occurred before the Abu Bakr case was halted. The former official was told during the briefing the drive to crack down on graft by the Afghan government had come to a halt more than a year ago.

Current and former U.S. officials said the American administration was trying to downplay their anti-corruption work in its Afghanistan policy because it was such a failure.

The case against Abu Bakr opened last year after allegations surface d he had received a $200,000 bribe in exchange for the contract to build a cell tower, an Afghan official said.

Abu Bakr lives in Mahmud-i-Raqi, the capital of Kapisa province, in a large house. He has three other houses in Kabul, all built, according to the original witness statements, with stone and gravel paid for by foreign donations intended for roads, schools and clinics.

About 20 witnesses said the governor forced local construction companies to give him truckloads of gravel and stone for his expensive homes, according to the officials. The witnesses reportedly said the governor threatened to halt their construction projects if he didn't get what he wanted.

However, when prosecutors traveled to Kapisa in late June to get more evidence, the witnesses were no longer willing to cooperate.

"They changed their story," the Afghan official said. Prosecutors also met with Abu Bakr, who denied everything.

Only one witness was still willing to testify, a man named Shah Agha who said Abu Bakr shut down his rock-crushing plant after he refused to donate 100 trucks of gravel – worth about $10,500 – for the construction of one of his houses. Agha said within an hour of giving his statement in Kabul, his phone started ringing.

"It was people, friends, asking me why I had talked against Abu Bakr," Agha told the AP. He said his testimony could only have gotten out so quickly if someone inside the attorney general's office was tipping people off.

Four months ago, the Abu Bakr case was abruptly closed, despite pleas from the prosecutor for more time to gather evidence, according to officials. In July, the top prosecutor was demoted, and sent to oversee conditions in Afghan prisons, according to an Afghan government document obtained by The Associated Press. Her pay was cut by $50 a month, or about a fourth of her monthly salary.

At least three prosecutors who have persisted in sensitive investigations – two of them involving Abu Bakr – have been removed or transferred, either to other departments or to remote provinces, according to a senior U.S. official.

Almost everyone in the Abu Bakr case would only speak anonymously, especially in Mahmud-i-Raqi, for fear of recrimination and of angering a man still considered more powerful than the current governor. One provincial official described speaking to construction companies who acknowledged paying off Abu Bakr in exchange for contracts, including one that involved U.S. funds to pave a road. The official said Abu Bakr demanded the company raise the price of its bid to include a $150,000 kickback.

____

Rahim Faiez and Amir Shah contributed to this report from Kabul. Desmond Butler contributed from Washington.

____

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KABUL, Afghanistan — A major investigation into an influential Afghan governor accused of taking bribes has been shut down and its top prosecutor transferred to a unit that doesn't handle corrup...
KABUL, Afghanistan — A major investigation into an influential Afghan governor accused of taking bribes has been shut down and its top prosecutor transferred to a unit that doesn't handle corrup...
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Salfana
Concerned citizen
05:42 PM on 10/11/2011
Are these women look liberated to you? This was one of the reasons we went in this conflict and have to stay that long. You cannot export democracy, no matter what any governments will tell you. At least they have convinced many of the US citizenry. Worse of all is some of the people in this country think aerial raids are OK, even if Nato miss repeatedly the target. This is so pretentious and arrogant, only in America can some off its citizens think this is possible.

When the Afghanis refuse, or worse complained over too many people get killed in those raids, well some in comment section will have the arrogance to use words only an empire will use. I do not dare repeat them.

Democracy would come not necessarily the American style but, It has to come from within the people. Afghanis just want to prosper like anyone else. Not always the same corporate Talibans or the corporate Kabul's government they have or the new boys in town the Haqanis.

Hey wait! Come to think of it, we just have these corporate bribing governments in this country. However, it's legalized bribery. In return we get Corporations ruling us.
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lambdin1
What's this?
05:17 PM on 10/11/2011
Why am I not surprised?!? The sooner we leave the quicker they will return to business as normal.
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KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
02:12 PM on 10/11/2011
Enough is enough. We must get our troops and even our civilian assistance out of Afghanistan now. There is no reason to repeat the terrible mistakes of the past supporting a corrupt and unpopular regimes.
02:06 PM on 10/11/2011
Do politicians around the world think they can line their pockets with taxpayer money.

There are no ethics in business or politics anymore.

Serving for the public good has been replaced with the greed is good gangs.

Is there any hope for humanity?
10:39 PM on 10/11/2011
Ken unfortunately I think this has been status quo for generations. It's now we have more information access to see the coruption today.
02:02 PM on 10/11/2011
As with the Iraq war and the war on drugs when will we realize that we suck at war since we don't win them after spending 6 times more than any other country? SNAFU or FUBAR you be the judge but in either case the world laughs at our foolishness after crying about it's results. Can we try something different since this has worked so well? As long as there isn't a draft where the elites children have to die for the decisions they make and the lower classes volunteer to fill the void do to few other options you can count on more ill conceived wars since accountability has been removed from the equation. Who paid the price for the Iraq WMD lies? No one!
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fireart
I got mine the hard way.
01:37 PM on 10/11/2011
Remember Viet Nam when our boys needed supplies they sent supply out to the streets to buy them. Seems the supplies were stolen off our supply ships. I forgot who started that war. -NOT
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appeallawy
01:36 PM on 10/11/2011
He's only the one that's been outted. But Karzai's taking shopping bags of euros has similarly faded from sight. I wonder what a real real real investigation of the United States Congress might reveal by independent prosecutors with funding that could not be cut off? Watergate was playing with toys by comparison with likely Washington improprieties today.
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shadow322
01:31 PM on 10/11/2011
The people have a responsibility to see that this practice is stopped! The very idea of our paying for their supposed protection with the lives of our sons and daughters - and our politicians are OK with paying off theirs with what amounts to graft! Our citizens deserve better from OUR government. We need an overhaul from this to Wall Street - (they're connected). It is not what our country is supposed to stand for and I am no longer satisfied with a policy that requires us to constantly "look the other way" in so many "ways" our government conducts business.
01:19 PM on 10/11/2011
Yes we really have helped the Afgan people sounds just like to good old U.S.A. money talks B.S. walks. You can't get corruption prosecuted here either just look at all the bank C.E.O'S still filling there pockets with stolen money and the politicians that then get it from the bankers. Supreme court judges bought and paid for ain't that right C. Thomas NO INVESTIGATION? We can no longer use the old saying only in America!
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Melissa McCarthy
12:00 PM on 10/11/2011
Look, we can leave now. Afghanistan is EXACTLY like America!
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bigbobh
11:58 AM on 10/11/2011
They are ALL CROOKS!!
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ABDUL KADER
11:53 AM on 10/11/2011
Let Afghan decide their fats.
Why Americans are worried and interfering in every matter related to Islamic world?
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ljkcan
Yes, I am prone to spelling errors
11:39 AM on 10/11/2011
Bribery in Afghanistan who can really be shocked over this. I think it is more like downright corrupt.
11:19 AM on 10/11/2011
You know, I wouldnt be suprised if the Taliban or Al Qaeda went to town for supplies under those blue outfit as seen in the articles' picture. Those hands look pretty manly and would provide a pretty easy way for them to move around the city
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Whistlejackett
Niki Ashton for NDP
11:19 AM on 10/11/2011
This is why government needs to be replaced. When tax dollars go into Afghan pockets by the billions without general consensus by the American people.