Wednesday, November 18, 2009

News: Biometrics to be Used to Identify 'Outsiders' in Afghanistan

From the Sunday Times: in Afghanistan biometrics such as fingerprints, retina scans or DNA tests are being proposed as a means to draw up "gated communities" in which outsider 'rebels' can be swiftly identified. In Basra, patrolling US soldiers are being issued with iPODs with a list of all local people.

Brigadier James Cowan, the new commander of British forces in Afghanistan, gave an interview to the Sunday Times in which he emphasised the importance of reassuring the local population of UK and US ability to provide security.

For the brigadier it is all about challenging the Taliban’s rule of fear: “What you have to do is create communities where people wish to be separate from the enemy because they have the confidence to be separate from them.”

Cowan’s staff have embarked on a huge exercise known as “human terrain mapping”. It involves not only delineating tribal boundaries, but also family networks, land ownership and all the possible grievances that can be exploited by the Taliban.

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