Last Update: Sun Oct 17, 2010 02:12 am (KSA) 11:12 pm (GMT)

President Karzai defends new Afghan cabinet

Karzai used the cabinet list as evidence of his commitment to fighting corruption (File)

Karzai used the cabinet list as evidence of his commitment to fighting corruption (File)

Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai on Sunday defended his nominees for ministerial posts and promised that all members of his cabinet will be accountable as he fights to eradicate corruption.

Karzai is facing extreme pressure from his Western backers to tackle graft, which observers say fuels a Taliban-led insurgency and is a major reason for the government's unpopularity.

Amid threats from backers, including the United States and NATO allies with more than 100,000 troops deployed to fight the insurgency, Karzai used the cabinet list as evidence of his commitment to fighting corruption.

 I can say with confidence that the new ministers, as well as those from the last cabinet, will be accountable for anything relating to corruption 
Afghan President Hamid Karzai

The 23 out of a total of 25 ministerial nominees who presented themselves to parliament on Saturday face an arduous approval process.

"Of the new cabinet we presented to the parliament, almost 50 percent of them are new," he told a press conference with visiting Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme.

"I can say with confidence that the new ministers, as well as those from the last cabinet, will be accountable for anything relating to corruption," he said, adding: "I will be accountable."

The nominees are individuals "who can work, serve the people and achieve goals we have for the people of Afghanistan," Karzai said.

The new government was representative of all ethnic groups in the country, he said.

The United Nations has said the cabinet choices were a positive step and Canada, with 2,800 troops in Afghanistan, was the first Western country to say it was "pleased" with the list.

"We have tried to ensure the cabinet is a mirror of Afghanistan's people, a cabinet that all Afghan people can see themselves in," he said.

But the addition of an extra ministry to Karzai's cabinet has not pleased others who say its size will not help the fight against the endemic graft which so angers Western nations who pump in billions of dollars of aid.

Afghan lawmakers had already complained they had not been consulted about the extra office. Some diplomats see the increase as a sign Karzai is creating unnecessary jobs for people who supported him in the disputed August poll.

Only one female minister

The cabinet list includes many old faces who have won approval from the international community, two warlords, some former ministers making a return to public office, and a few new faces.

Only one woman -- minister for women's affairs Husn Banu Ghazanfar -- was named, sparking criticism from women's groups. Karzai promised to bring in more women although he did not say to what portfolios.

Each nominee must receive a vote of confidence from parliament before being confirmed.

Leterme said the cabinet list had been "very much awaited by the international community" as Afghanistan continued to strive for good governance.

"Tackling corruption is a very important issue for us and so we want to support President Karzai (and hope) that the cabinet functions in the right way and shows good governance in the country," he said.

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