KABUL,
October 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. special forces
bodyguards, providing 24-hour protection to Afghan President Hamid
Karzai, were Sunday, October 27, involved in a stand-off with Afghan
soldiers, news agencies reported.
According
to security guards at Afghanistan's Interior Ministry, the dispute
arose when (U.S.) men guarding Karzai refused to allow Afghan soldiers
attending a conference to bring their weapons into the venue, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"There
was a small problem, they were not letting Afghans go in, there were
no shots fired, it was just something simple," said one guard who
did not wish to be named.
A
spokesman for the Interior Ministry, where the conference was taking
place, confirmed the incident but was unable to give further details.
Karzai
was among several senior Ministers attending the event to mark the
anniversary of the death of Afghan resistance hero Abdul Haq, killed
by Taliban officials last year for aiding U.S.-led operations against
Afghanistan.
The
Afghan President has enjoyed American military protection since the
assassination earlier this year of vice President Haji Abdul Qadir,
Haq's brother.
On
September 5, the bodyguards shot dead a gunman who fired at Karzai,
missing him by inches during a visit to the southern Afghan city of
Kandahar.
Sunday's
incident is not the first time his protection forces and Afghan army
troops have nearly come to blows. A similar stand-off at the
Presidential palace was reported just over one month ago.
The
dispute will add to speculation of a growing rift between Karzai and
his Defense Minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim, chief of the Afghan army,
who is said to disapprove of the U.S. guards.
Fahim
arrived back in Afghanistan late Friday, October 25, after a prolonged
trip to Europe which was dogged by rumors that Karzai was getting
ready to cut him adrift.
Both
Fahim and government officials have continued to deny that Karzai and
the Defense Minister do not see eye-to-eye.
Karzai
led tributes to Haq Sunday at a conference at the government's
Interior Ministry in the centre of Kabul, a day after mourning
ceremonies were held in outlying provinces.
"He
was a personality who spent most of his life fighting for the freedom
of Afghanistan," Karzai told the conference attended by senior
Ministers.
"He
lost his wife and his son in the way of freedom for his country."
Haq's
wife and child were killed by unknown attackers in their home in the
Pakistan frontier town of Peshawar during the Taliban regime.
"When
I was told that Abdul Haq had been killed, at that moment I thought
about his death and knew he would not have felt fear even with a
Kalashnikov to his head because he was doing something for his
country," Karzai said.
Haq,
whose heroic status in Afghanistan is second only to slain
anti-Taliban resistance leader Ahmad Shah Masood, was killed on
October 26 last year.
He
had been on a mission to muster support among Pashtuns, the dominant
ethnic group and the Taliban's main power base, for an alternative
multi-ethnic government under the banner of ex-king Mohammed Zahir
Shah.
But
his lightly armed group was discovered and surrounded by Taliban
troops. U.S. air support failed to help him escape and he was executed
near Kabul.
Zahir
Shah, who returned to Afghanistan Saturday after a medical trip to
France, also paid tribute to Haq.
"I'm
sure that patriotic Afghans will remember this young mujahed (holy
warrior) and he will be preserved in Afghanistan's history," he
said, according to newspaper reports.
"In
the period of jihad [holy struggle] and resistance, Abdul Haq was one
of the brilliant commanders of Afghanistan who resisted against the
foreign invaders in the country. It is a pity that before the victory
and rescue of Afghanistan, Abdul Haq was killed by its enemies."
Born
to a wealthy Pashtun family in 1958, Haq became politically and
militarily active as a teenager opposing the Soviet-backed government
of President Mohammad Daoud.
He
was a supporter of Zahir Shah, whose reign ended in a Daoud-led coup
in 1973.
When
the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979 following Daoud's ouster
in a Marxist coup, Abdul Haq quickly became a mujahedin resistance
leader, operating in and around Kabul and building his reputation as
one of the country's leading heroes.