By EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) The U.N. Security Council joined calls
Friday on Afghan President Hamid Karzai to fight corruption, with
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calling the country's political
situation ''delicate'' following deeply flawed elections.
In a tepid statement, the Council ''acknowledged'' rather than
welcomed the conclusion of the tumultuous electoral process where
Karzai was declared the winner after challenger Abdullah Abdullah
withdrew from a runoff race saying it could not be free or fair.
Abdullah on Wednesday called Karzai's victory illegal and his
government a failure, saying the president's tainted administration
would not be able to check corruption or fend off the Taliban.
Ban acknowledged there were problems with the elections,
following a closed-door meeting briefing the Security Council on
his recent trip to Afghanistan.
''It is obvious that the political situation remains delicate,''
Ban said. ''Clearly, the recent elections were seriously flawed.''
The U.N.'s most powerful body said nonetheless that it looked
forward to working with Karzai. It urged him to improve security,
promote good governance and fight corruption and the narcotics
trade.
The statement and Ban's comments come on a day when British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown toughened his tone toward the Afghan
leadership.
''I am not prepared to put the lives of British men and women in
harm's way for a government that does not stand up against
corruption,'' he said Friday in London.
President Barack Obama had earlier warned Karzai that he must
fight corruption, just as the U.S. must decides whether to raise
troop levels or redefine the goals of the NATO-led mission.
Ban said that during his meeting with Karzai: ''I strongly
stressed the need for good governance in the country and to take
all determined measures against corruption.''
Ban noted that Karzai said in his acceptance speech that ''he
would do his best efforts to eradicate corruption.''
''The international community will closely work with him and
will continue to urge him to keep his commitment,'' the
secretary-general said.
Ban said he also discussed improving security for U.N. staff
following the Oct. 28 attack on a private guesthouse where dozens
of U.N. staffers lived, killing five U.N. workers and three
Afghans. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the assault, saying
they intentionally targeted U.N. employees working on the
presidential election.
The United Nations announced Thursday it is sending about 600
foreign staff either out of the country or into secure compounds
because of the attack.
Ban told reporters Friday that about 200 will relocate to other
U.N. offices in the region in a phased way.
The secretary-general said the U.N. is also reassessing the 93
guest houses in the country to determine which have good security,
which need security to be improved, and which will be vacated.
They include 120 administrative staff and 30 involved in
development activities who will be relocated in six to eight weeks
and 50 administrative officers who will be rotated between Kabul,
Dubai and Kuwait, he said.
Ban said no field staff or election officials with the U.N.
mission will be moved out of Afghanistan, but he said only 30 of
the 125 election staff from the U.N. Development Program are still
in the country.
He said a new residential compound for U.N. staff will be bought
or built within 12 months.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)