NATO Frustration as Afghan Police Flunk Drug Tests, Reuters, 9 February 2010
EXCERPT: "When British trainers administered random drugs tests to 25 Afghan police recruits at a base in southern Helmand province, most of them failed. One recruit was kicked out of the force. The others were given warnings. Heroin shouldn't be tolerated, but there is no point kicking out the ones who smoke hashish: there would be too few left, their Afghan commander said. Training Afghan police is a central part of NATO's strategy to eventually turn over responsibility for security in the country to Afghan forces so that Western troops -- soon to number 150,000 -- can begin withdrawing next year. NATO aims to increase the number of Afghan soldiers and police by 50 percent to a total of 282,000 by mid-2011, when U.S. President Barack Obama says he will begin withdrawing forces. But commanders acknowledge it is an uphill battle. Afghan recruits are frequently illiterate, many desert soon after joining. Some may be insurgent infiltrators. One policeman killed five British soldiers in November. And -- if the random testing administered in Helmand is anything to go by -- many are on drugs."
Read the full story.
Related articles:
Afghanistan in need of policewomen, Al Jazeera, 8 February 2010
Canadian-trained police seen as key to Afghan recovery, Edmonton Journal, 25 January 2010
Related posts:
NATO will "transform" ANP failures, 15 January 2010
Afghan National Police "part of the problem", 21 December 2010
Drugs, defections plaguing Afghan forces: NATO commander, 6 November 2009
Afghan police weak link in security sector reform, 14 August 2009

