Rohrabacher gets Afghan honor
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Paul Clinton
Afghan King Zahir Shah honored Rep. Dana Rohrabacher earlier this
week at a small ceremony in the country.
Shah handed Costa Mesa’s congressman a royal medallion for his
vocal, and public, support for his regime. Rohrabacher was one of few
congressional leaders who regularly spoke out against the Soviet
invasion of the country in the late 1970s, the repressive policies of
the Taliban regime and Osama Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda training camps,
which have been linked to the Sept. 11 attacks.
“In our fight against the communists, the Taliban and Bin Laden,
you were with us when no one else was,” Shah said. “You will always
have the gratitude of the Afghan people and their king.”
Shah had been deposed by the Taliban, but returned to his
ceremonial post earlier this year after U.S. troops helped resistance
fighters overthrow the Taliban regime.
Rohrabacher, who won election to the new 46th District on Nov. 5,
spent three days visiting Afghanistan this week before the
Thanksgiving holiday.
He also met with Iraqi resistance leaders and with the United
Nations weapons inspectors before returning to his home district.
In meetings with Shah and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the
garrulous congressman promised that the United States would continue
to help stabilize their country, even with President George Bush
readying the military to depose Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
Rohrabacher was one of the chief architects of the Afghanistan
Freedom Support Act of 2002, passed in the Senate on Nov. 14. The
legislation authorizes $3.3 billion in funding for Afghanistan over
the next four years in economic, political and humanitarian aid.
A GRANT FOR AIR
The city of Newport Beach is turning to the federal government for
aid to prepare for any terrorist attack.
The City Council, at its Tuesday evening meeting, accepted a
federal grant to help pay for equipment purchased by the city’s fire
department.
Fire Chief Tim Riley, earlier this year, bought several breathing
apparatuses. The department bought 19 such air bottles, which cost
$11,888.
Riley, with the council’s blessing, successfully tapped federal
grant money to pay for the purchase. The funding came from a Federal
Emergency Management Agency grant for that exact amount.
The agency provided funds from its “weapons of mass destruction”
grant program, which provides aid to communities working to “improve
their readiness to handle terrorist attacks” and other incidents
caused by biological or chemical weapons.
The council unanimously approved accepting the grant, which comes
from FEMA’s 2001-02 fiscal-year budget. The agency approved the fire
department’s grant application in August. The department has already
received the check.
GREEN COPS COMING?
Newport Coast’s county supervisor wants sheriff’s deputies to
pitch in to protect the environment.
Supervisor Tom Wilson, who represents the recently incorporated
area, has been working closely with the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department to implement a program to train deputies to cut down on
urban runoff.
Deputies will learn how to reduce the flow of harmful materials
and objects from entering local storm drains and reaching the ocean.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
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