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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) The Taliban have threatened to
execute any U.N. worker who uses computers and communications
equipment in Afghanistan, forcing a near halt to the remaining
relief work in the country, U.N. officials said Monday.
The militia raided U.N. offices in Kabul, the capital, and
Kandahar, where the Taliban leadership is based, during the weekend
and sealed their satellite telephones, walkie-talkies,0computers
and vehicles to bar them from use, according to U.N. spokeswoman
Stephanie Bunker.
"They warned our staff that if they use these things they will
face execution," said Gordon Weiss, the spokesman for UNICEF in
Islamabad.
There was no immediate comment from the Taliban.
After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, the
United Nations removed its foreign staffers from Afghanistan for
their safety but left behind Afghan employees. The U.N. workers are
one of the last providers of subsidized food and health care to the
impoverished and war-ravaged country.
"We are worried about the safety of our remaining workers there
and concerned about the fate of our programs," Weiss said. "Life
will become more miserable for the more than 1 million people
displaced because of drought and civil war."
Bunker said that without communications, relief operations would
be impossible.
"The U.N. has ordered its staff to obey the Taliban directive
to avoid risking their lives," she said. "We have requested the
Taliban to allow at least one high frequency radio transmitter" in
cities with U.N. operations.
U.S. forces have begun mobilizing in the Persian Gulf for an
expected attack on Afghanistan to punish the hard-line Taliban
government for refusing to extradite Osama bin Laden, the prime
suspect in the deadly suicide attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon.
Tens of thousands of Afghans have fled their homes in areas that
could be targeted by U.S. forces and have been stranded along the
country's borders with Pakistan, Iran and Tajikistan, which were
recently closed at Washington's request.
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