New York Times
KABUL, Afghanistan — President Hamid Karzai, in his first speech since he was declared the winner of the much disputed presidential election, said Tuesday that he wanted to tackle corruption but made no specific commitments to reorganizing his administration.“Afghanistan has been tarnished by administrative corruption, and I will launch a campaign to clean the government of corruption,” he said.Asked if that might involve changing important ministers and officials, he said: “These problems cannot be solved by changing high-ranking officials. We’ll review the laws and see what problems are in the law, and we will draft some new laws.”Mr. Karzai’s cabinet and members of his campaign office attended the news conference, and he was flanked by his two vice presidents, Karim Khalili and Marshal Muhammad Qasim Fahim. Marshal Fahim is among the powerful Afghans the international community has accused of abuses or corruption and has been pressing Mr. Karzai to act against. He is accused of drug trafficking, as is Mr. Karzai’s brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai.Mr. Karzai said he would try to strengthen an anticorruption commission that was set up last year.Although he said repeatedly that his government would seek to unify the country and that he wanted to work with all Afghans, Mr. Karzai did not offer his former rival, Abdullah Abdullah, a place in the government and pointedly avoided answering questions about what role he might have.On Monday, Mr. Karzai was declared the winner of the fraud-marred Aug. 20 presidential election, after Mr. Abdullah’s withdrawal from the runoff.The next days and weeks will be absorbed with choosing Mr. Karzai’s new cabinet and balancing the many demands of his political allies who supported him in the election race and international pressure for competent and reform-minded ministers.He is expected to reach out to Mr. Abdullah and bring some members of Mr. Abdullah’s team into the government in the interests of national unity.No date has been set yet for the inauguration, but Western diplomats are already hoping that Mr. Karzai will use his inaugural speech to lay out an agenda responsive to international concerns ahead of a donors conference in December in Kabul.
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