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The GW Hatchet

AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING THE GW COMMUNITY SINCE 1904

The GW Hatchet

Serving the GW Community since 1904

The GW Hatchet

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Karzai speaks to Afghan-Americans in speech at Georgetown

Posted 11:27 a.m. Jan. 28

By Patrick W. Higgins
U-WIRE (DC BUREAU)

(U-WIRE) WASHINGTON – Newly appointed Afghan leader Hamid Karzai called upon Afghan-Americans to return to their native land to aid in the reconstruction of the economy in a speech at Georgetown University on Sunday night.

Karzai expressed his desire for Afghanistan to become a member of the global market in the hour-long speech to a packed McDonough Gymnasium full of hundreds of enthusiastic Afghan-Americans. Karzai is scheduled to meet with President George W. Bush on Monday, as part of his first trip to the United States as the leader of Afghanistan.

“Our effort as a country is to become donors, not merely takers,” Karzai said. “We have to show the world that we can deliver also.”

Karzai — who was appointed chairman of the Interim Administration of Afghanistan last year — praised the citizens of his nation for their “loyalty and courage,” using personal anecdotes to illustrate his view of the unity among his countrymen.

He rallied the crowd behind him with a plan for universal suffrage after 23 years of war.

“I have spoken to people across the country, from all types of backgrounds,” he said. “They want one thing: central government, independence and unity for Afghan people.”

While in Tokyo early last week, Karzai secured $4.5 billion in financial aid from the Japanese government, funds he said will be used to rebuild roads, construct buildings and to create an economic infrastructure.

“In the next two months, over one million Afghan children will enter schools,” Karzai said, after audience members shouted out questions about the education system.

Following Karzai’s promise to root out “cheating and corruption” in the government, the focus of the speech shifted towards women’s rights. In response to an unexpected comment on the topic from the audience, Karzai invited an Afghan-American woman to take the stage and respond in a moment of lightheartedness.

Young Afghan-Americans were encouraged to “study, learn, and make money to bring home to Afghanistan,” Karzai said.

Prior to Karzai’s speech, GU President John J. DeGioia laid out the university’s plans to aid Afghan education by sending American business graduates to the war-ravaged country and granting scholarships to Afghan students.

DeGioia expressed his hope that the programs will bring education to the devastated country. “Nothing could be worse than a generation doomed to illiteracy,” DeGioia said.

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