TheStar.com | World | Afghan president admits mistakes
Afghan president admits mistakes
Karzai says he'll seek re-election to create a stable government, end corruption and violence
Aug 20, 2008 04:30 AM
Associated Press

KABUL–Afghan President Hamid Karzai said yesterday he would seek re-election next year in hopes of finishing a job he hasn't yet completed.

In a candid admission of some of his failures after four years in office, Karzai said Afghanistan does not yet have a functioning government, corruption remains rampant and the Afghan people "still suffer massively" in the fight against terrorism.

"So I have a job to do, a job to complete. In that sense, yes, I would like to run," a relaxed-looking Karzai said in an interview in the presidential palace in the centre of Afghanistan's heavily fortified capital.

Dressed in a white shalwar kameez, the traditional dress of the region, Karzai reflected on his aspirations for Afghanistan, which is still struggling to recover seven years after the rigid religious Taliban regime were driven from Kabul.

"I have begun a task to rebuild Afghanistan into a peaceful prosperous country, into a democratic country, a country where the Afghan people will have a voice and their rights respected, a country that will be producing on its own and living off its own means," said Karzai.

"I have achieved some of those objectives. I have not achieved some of the other objectives," he said.

"Afghanistan is not at peace. The Afghan people still suffer massively in the war against terrorism and in the war for stability in Afghanistan. Afghanistan is not yet a well off country, still a very poor country,'' he said.

Karzai also acknowledged his country "does not have a properly functional government yet. It must get that.''

Some of the harshest criticism of Karzai has come from his inability to stem the flourishing opium drug trade in which his political allies and even his half brother Ahmed Wali, head of the Kandahar provincial council, have been implicated. Karzai has dismissed the allegations against his brother, but they have stuck.

With an election year looming, Karzai may be less inclined to make powerful enemies of some of the country's political elite who are reputed to be involved in the drug trade.

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