Afghanistan president rejects resignation of three top security officials

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani speaks during a press conference at the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan. (AP)
Updated 26 August 2018
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Afghanistan president rejects resignation of three top security officials

  • Ghani had asked the three officials to continue with their duties and “work toward the betterment of the security situation”
  • The ministers of defense and interior, as well as a senior security chief, sent their resignations to the president’s palace

KABUL: Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani rejected on Sunday resignations tendered a day earlier by three senior security officials, the government said.
The resignations from Defence Minister Tariq Shah Bahrami and Interior Minister Wais Barmak, as well as Masoom Stanekzai, the head of the National Directorate of Security, were submitted on Saturday hours after National Security Adviser Hanif Atmar quit.
Government spokesman Haroon Chakansuri said in a statement Ghani had asked the three officials to continue with their duties and "work towards the betterment of the security situation".
Two senior interior ministry officials said the security officials had cited policy differences with the government amid deteriorating security as the main reason for resigning.
However, Ghani rejected the resignations and instead instructed them to find ways to prevent fresh attacks by militant groups.
Heavy fighting between Taliban insurgents, as well as other militant groups, and security forces has raged across Afghanistan this year. There have also been suicide attacks in Kabul and other major cities.
Authorities have been bracing for more attacks with parliamentary elections due on Oct. 20. The scale of the violence has shocked government officials, who are facing bitter criticism over their handling of the war.


Portugal far-right hopeful enters vote as favorite

Updated 4 sec ago
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Portugal far-right hopeful enters vote as favorite

LISBON: A far-right candidate in Portugal’s presidential election, Andre Ventura, has emerged as the favorite for Sunday’s first round of voting, according to polls.
But regardless of whom the president of the Chega (“Enough“) party encounters in the second-round runoff in February, he has very little chance of carrying the day to succeed conservative incumbent Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.
Some polls point to a second-round duel between Ventura and Socialist Antonio Jose Seguro, while others suggest that Luis Marques Mendes, who has the support of conservative Prime Minister Luis Montenegro, could make the run-off.
Among the 11 candidates, a record number, two others also stand a chance to win a spot in the second round. They are Henrique Gouveia e Melo, a retired admiral who led Portugal’s vaccination campaign during the Covid epidemic, and Joao Cotrim Figueiredo, a liberal member of the European Parliament.
While Ventura’s chances of moving past the first round are slim, the election marks an important step in his electoral fortunes that have improved at lightning pace since he founded Chega in 2019.
His party, highly centered on its leader, won 22.8 percent of the vote and 60 seats in a general election in May of last year, turning it into the biggest opposition party.
The head of state’s role in Portugal is mostly ceremonial, although the president has the power in times of crisis to dissolve parliament, call elections or dismiss the prime minister.
Ventura has expressed his desire to eventually run the country as prime minister, with experts saying that he sees Sunday’s vote mainly as a test of his popularity.
“Andre Ventura is running to keep his voter base,” said Antonio Costa Pinto, a political scientist at Lisbon University. “There could be a surprise increase,” he told AFP.
A stronger far right would add pressure on the minority government of Montenegro who relies on Chega for support for the implementation of some of his policies.
Portugal, a country of nearly 11 million inhabitants, is a member of the European Union and the eurozone. It accounts for around 1.6 percent of the EU’s gross domestic product (GDP).