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Gopher

Joined: 04 Jun 2005
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 3:58 pm Post subject: |
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Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi, the former mouthpiece for top-level Taliban, is now a student at Yale University. His presence at the New Haven, Conn., campus has touched off a firestorm of debate about the school�s admissions policy and U.S. security policy. |
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5415846
Last edited by Gopher on Sun Jun 11, 2006 12:47 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2006 8:20 pm Post subject: |
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On the other hand wrote: |
Yeah, but didn't the heroin trade in Afghanistan made a comeback AFTER the supposedly pro-terrorist Taliban was turfed from power by the Americans? You could probably point to just as many pro-western, anti-terrorist groups who are mixed up in organized crime in one way or another. |
Yep, probably.
PLENTIFUL POPPY: Increasingly, Afghanistan is called a 'narco-state.'
AHMAD MASOOD/REUTERS
Inside the Afghan Drug Trade
In a northern province, four law-enforcement officials describe life built around trafficking.
By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN � The Afghan police chief doesn't realize his voice is being taped. So pardon him if he brags about his life as a drug trafficker.
In a friendly conversation recorded in his home last summer, he tells of his quarrels with another drug-dealing police commander in the country's northern Takhar Province; about driving through a rival's police checkpoint with 500 kilos of heroin in his car; and his adventures in rescuing three heroin-smuggling friends from the clutches of Tajik policemen. It's just another part of the job, he says.
In the Monitor
Friday, 06/23/06
"If my adventure were filmed, it would be a very exciting movie," chuckles the commander, referred to hereafter as "Ahmed Noor." On the tape, he laughs.
"The UN should give me an award."
But on one point the former mujahideen commander is certain:
"Even if all the world were to come to Afghanistan, they will not be able to stop smuggling."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0613/p01s04-wosc.html |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Sun Jul 09, 2006 4:07 am Post subject: |
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Former Taliban Ambassador Denied Yale Admission
Thursday, July 6, 2006; Posted: 8:17 p.m. EDT (00:17 GMT)
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (AP) -- A former ambassador for Afghanistan's Taliban regime was denied admission to a degree-granting program at Yale, but he can continue studying at the school, one of his "financial supporters" said.
Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi, who had been studying at Yale in a special program that does not award degrees, became the topic of debate after a New York Times Magazine story in February described his life at the Ivy League school.
Supporters said the school was promoting understanding across cultures. But critics were aghast that Yale would open its gates to the 27-year-old who once represented a repressive regime that harbored al Qaeda.
Students in Hashemi's program are eligible to apply for admission to the Eli Whitney Program, which awards the same bachelor's degrees received each spring by Yale undergraduates.
Tatiana Maxwell, president of the International Education Foundation, which raised money and helped send Hashemi to Yale, said that Hashemi had informed her that he'd been denied admission, The New York Times reported Thursday.
Yale spokesman Tom Conroy would not confirm that decision. The school does not release the names of applicants who are accepted or rejected.
Maxwell was traveling out of the country Thursday. Messages left on her cell phone and with other members of the foundation were not immediately returned.
The debate over whether Hashemi should have been admitted to Yale in the first place played out on editorial pages and Web logs and in letters to the editor of the Yale Alumni Magazine.
One small group of alumni urged people to mail press-on nails to Yale officials, a reference to the Taliban's threat to pull out the fingernails of women who wore nail polish.
"This was a major victory," said Clint Taylor, a 1996 Yale graduate whose Web log originated the nail campaign. "I think Yale made the right decision. It's a shame they had to do it under so much pressure."
Fahad Khan, an incoming Yale senior who knows Hashemi, said he was unaware of the decision but said it was a shame if he was not admitted. He said having Hashemi at Yale is important "at a time when bridges need to be built."
"If true, it is clearly because of the controversy," Khan said in an e-mail. "His academic performance, which was supposed to be the only determinant, has been better than most students at Yale."
Amid the debate spurred by Hashemi's enrollment, Yale President Richard C. Levin ordered a review of the admission standards for the Eli Whitney Program and said its standards should be as rigorous as those for regular undergraduates.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/07/06/yale.taliban.ap/index.html |
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