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KABUL - Britain plans to pay tribal elders in Helmand province monthly cash "bribes" as part of a controversial "Afghan Awakening" scheme to raise the tribes against the Taleban.
British officials in Kabul are bankrolling an Afghan initiative to pay community leaders monthly wages to get them talking to the Government.
News of Britain's involvement came as Foreign Secretary David Miliband met President Hamid Karzai during a surprise visit to Kabul yesterday. He then flew to Helmand to meet some of the community leaders likely to be involved.
Parallels have been drawn with the Iraqi "Awakening Councils", overseen by General David Petraeus, now the head of United States central command, which helped to unite Sunni tribesmen against al Qaeda insurgents in Iraq. Similar tribal militias in Pakistan have also begun to mobilise against the Taleban and its al Qaeda backers.
But the problems in Afghanistan are complex because the Taleban, and other extremist groups, are often from the same tribes as the people the Afghan Social Outreach Programme (Asop) scheme hopes to reach.
The new strategy comes amid growing violence across Afghanistan and a steady trickle of British casualties in Helmand. Afghan officials have accused Britain of "losing the support of the people".
The Outreach Programme is seen as the first step towards winning back influential tribal elders, on a district level, who might one day command irregular forces against the Taleban insurgents.
The elders will be handpicked by Helmand's governor, Gulab Mangal, and they are expected to earn about 800 ($2240) a year for attending up to two meetings, or shuras, a month.
But critics fear the payments, which are about 30 per cent more than civil servants earn, are Karzai's way of bribing tribal elders to deliver votes ahead of elections next year.
A senior Western policy analyst in Kabul said: "It's anti-democratic. If this is perceived as more political patronage, or bribery, it runs the risk of generating friction and resentment."
US officials are financing a similar initiative in the east, where their troops are based. It comes ahead of a major strategy review by Petraeus which is expected to advocate closer engagement with Afghanistan's myriad tribal communities when Barack Obama takes office next year. Obama said before the presidential election that the "Awakening" scheme should be explored in Afghanistan following the success of the Sunni Awakening in Iraq which "changed
the dynamic fundamentally".
Western backers insist the cash payments are just a way of harnessing informal government structures, so people in the provinces can air their grievances to the governor. Afghan officials insist it is the beginning of a much more ambitious plan to connect with fighting-age men who give their loyalty to village, family and tribal elders before any allegiance to Kabul.
Humayun Hamidzada, the President's spokesman, said existing strategies had seen the Taleban gain ground: "We don't want to create militias, but we need to be empowering tribal arbakai [community forces] and citizen patrols. Equip them, not just with weapons but with whatever it takes, so they can protect their territories.
"We have lost a major part of Helmand to the Taleban because we failed to keep the population," Karzai's spokesman added.
The programme will be piloted in two districts in Helmand in the coming weeks, and it is expected to be rolled out across the province next year.
But charities fear it could legitimise militias and store up problems for the future after years of international efforts to disarm irregular forces.
Matt Waldman, Oxfam's head of policy in Afghanistan, said: "Given the fragile security situation, Asop is a high-risk strategy which, if mishandled, has the potential to make matters worse."
- INDEPENDENT