ZNews12/08/2007By [Printer Friendly Version] Kabul - President Hamid Karzai on Saturday said addressing human rights abuses in Afghanistan's violent past would take years with his government still too weak to take on those behind the continuing atrocities. The President said he had held back on implementing a three-year peace, reconciliation and justice plan that he signed in 2005 "on purpose" to prevent any violent backlash from those behind human rights violations in the past. "There are tyrants in our land," Karzai said at a meeting of around 200 rights activists and victims of alleged war crimes in this country's three decades of conflict. "They exist in our political circles, but we must move with lots of caution so as not to cause lots of noises and more human rights violations," he said at the event to mark the 60th anniversary of Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Former warlords and other people alleged to be linked to murders, rapes, torture and other atrocities in Afghanistan's bloody past hold seats in the administration and democratically elected parliament. Several people at the meeting, including some claiming to be victims of abuse, demanded Karzai explain why these alleged abusers had not been dealt with and the reconciliation plan acted on. "Because the power to implement it does not exist in the government," Karzai responded. "It will take time. We are better than five, six years ago but to bring an ideal justice would maybe take several years, nine, 10 years," said Karzai, who took power six years ago after a US-led invasion toppled the Taliban regime.