2004-05-25
from
RAWA, the following article:
War Returns with a Vengeance as Allies Fail the Afghan People
George Bush and Tony Blair made grand promises when they took on the Taliban.
They sound hollow now. What does it all mean for Iraq?
The Independent/UK, May 25, 2004
by Kim Sengupta
The road from the village of Ozbin Khol is safe no longer. The eight aid
workers packed into a Toyota LandCruiser were keen to get to their destination,
Sarobi, before nightfall. But a punctured tire stopped them. Two young men,
carrying Kalashnikovs, their faces covered by keffayahs, came out of the
darkness, lined up the passengers and opened fire, killing five.
The
killings, in Paktika province, south-east of Kabul, were at the end of
February. The next month, gunmen burst into a guesthouse near the southern city
of Kandahar, killing three more aid workers. Two weeks ago, two Europeans, one
with a Swiss passport, were stoned and stabbed to death at Bagh Chilsthan, just
15 minutes' drive from the center of Kabul.
Reports
of the murders appeared in the international media, briefly, because the
victims were either from the West, or had links with international relief
agencies. There have been other deaths - 15 children killed by United States
warplanes in raids while attempting to eliminate a warlord in December. Another
dozen Afghans were killed in the next few weeks, either enemy combatants, said
the Americans, or the result of collateral damage among civilians.
In
Herat, internecine fighting between forces of the warlord, Ismail Khan, and the
governor sent by Hamid Karzai's government in Kabul led to the deaths of 100
people, including Mr Khan's son.
These
are snapshots of a continuing conflict in Afghanistan, a war of attrition
taking place largely in the shadows with the focus of the world's media firmly
fixed on Iraq.
The
Afghan war was, of course, the first chapter of the War on Terror launched
after 11 September. After a relatively quick and casualty-free campaign - for
the American military, if not Afghan civilians - George Bush declared victory.
Tony Blair pledged: "This time we will not walk away", as had
happened following the war the mujahedin fought against the Russians with
Western money and arms.
But
that, say many Afghans, is exactly what the United States and Britain have
done. And just as the official end to hostilities in Iraq has been followed by
unremitting violence, so the war has returned with a vengeance in Afghanistan.
With international interest concentrating on Iraq, aid money has dried up for
the Afghans. The military bill for the Pentagon, so far, is $50bn (£27bn). The
money for humanitarian work, on the other hand, has been $4.5bn. Out of that,
much of the $2.2bn earmarked for this year has been diverted to military
projects and emergency relief from long-term development.
Even
where aid money is available, the security situation is preventing
distribution. The five men killed in Paktika worked for the National Solidarity
Program (SDF), which is now pulling out of 72 areas in the country.
Ihsanullah
Dileri, the organization's head of co-ordination said in his Kabul office:
"This is a very bad, very desperate situation. We had $60,000 to spend on
each of those 72 areas, now this cannot be done.
"All
these areas are badly deprived, with poor people lacking basic facilities. But
I am afraid the security simply is not there for us to continue with our work.
It is too dangerous."
Barbara
Stapleton, of the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief (ACBAR) an
umbrella body representing 90 national and international aid agencies, added:
"We are very concerned about security and the deterioration of the
situation. Impunity rules in the country. It's not just the NGO
[non-governmental organizations] community, but the Afghan people at large who
are exposed to these levels of insecurity."
There
is also evidence that the American military is using aid as a means of
acquiring intelligence. Delivering blankets and food to refugees at Dwamanda in
the south, Lieutenant Reid Finn had no hesitation in telling journalists:
"It's simple. The more they help us find the bad guys, the more good stuff
they get." Teena Roberts, the head of Christian Aid's mission in the
country, said: "The result of this is aid workers have become targets. I
have not come across the use of aid in this way before."
After
the fall of the Taliban, the streets of Kabul used to be busy until the 10pm
curfew. Now they are deserted by eight in the evening, with the headlights of a
few solitary cars hurtling through the darkness. Foreigners travel in convoys,
with armed guards. Amanullah Haidar runs a stall 100 yards from the Mustafa
Hotel in the city center, one of the few places deemed to be safe for the
expatriate community to meet in the evening, where the two brothers who run it
carry pistols in shoulder holsters, and guards with semi-automatic rifles man
the main door.
"We
are disappointed by lack of progress, lack of money, lack of jobs," said
Mr Haidar, a Tajik former Northern Alliance soldier. "I remember all these
people who came here from Europe and America and told us how they are going to
help us. But where are the factories and the offices we thought we would get?
What about the elections we were promised?"
President
Hamid Karzai was forced to put back to the autumn elections because of the
instability. Only 1.6 million out of 10.5 million eligible to vote have
registered. In the Pashtun belt, where Taliban influence is still strong, the
number of women registered is below 20 per cent.
The
emancipation of women, subjugated by the fundamentalist Taliban, was one of the
stated objectives of the West. Even before the war ended America's First Lady,
Laura Bush, declared: "Because of our recent military gains in much of
Afghanistan, women are no longer imprisoned in their homes. The fight against
terrorism is also a fight for the rights and dignity of women."
According
to an Amnesty International report, however: "Two years after the ending
of the Taliban regime, the international community and the Afghan transitional
administration, led by President Karzai, have proved unable to protect women.
The risk of rape and sexual violence by members of armed factions and former
combatants is still high. Forced marriages, particularly of girl children, and
violence against women in the family are widespread in many areas."
After
the war, dozens of girls' schools reopened throughout the country. But an
Islamist resurgence has seen many of them closed down through intimidation.
Families who still dare to send their female children for education can pay a
terrible price. Earlier this month, three young girls, aged eight to 10, were
poisoned in eastern Afghanistan, apparently as punishment for attending
lessons.
The
government points out, however, that four million pupils are enrolled in schools
this year - including one third of the country's female children.
Twenty-five
years of war have destroyed what there was of Afghan infrastructure. In a
number of regions, such as the Shomali Plain, the Taliban and their Pakistani
allies destroyed centuries-old irrigation systems in a scorched-earth policy
against the Northern Alliance.
Following
the last war, attempts were made to restore water and power. But systematic
strikes by the Taliban on power lines and irrigation projects, and murders of
foreign engineers, has ground much of it to a halt. At present, just 9 per cent
of the population have access to electricity. Safe drinking water is estimated
to be restricted to 6 per cent. The World Bank has authorized a $40m loan for
water projects, but while work can begin with the funds in the north and west,
it is deemed to be too dangerous in the Pashtun belt of the south and east.
The
UN has stressed irrigation is essential for agriculture in a country where the
overwhelming majority of the population live in rural areas. However there is
no shortage of one particular crop - opium. Poppy cultivation reached a new
high last year. According to the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, the area of cultivation has grown from 1,685 hectares in 2001 to 61,000
hectares in 2003. The country has the dubious distinction of accounting for 75
per cent of the world's output.
FACTS AND FIGURES THAT TELL THE STORY
HEALTH
Pregnancy: One woman
dies every 20 minutes in pregnancy/childbirth
2002: Pregnancy and childbirth the leading cause of death in women
500 trained midwives for female population of 11 million
Life expectancy:
2001: 46
2004: 43
Under-five mortality
rank:
2001: 4
2004: 4
Measles: 2000: 1,400 cases of measles per month
2003: 40 cases per month
Polio:
1999: 27 reported cases
2003: 7 reported cases
2004: 3 reported cases
CHILD SOLDIERS
8,000 child soldiers in
official army
Feb 2004: Government starts to demobilize 2,000 child soldiers
400 children killed each month from landmines
EDUCATION
Four million children
in education
1.2 million girls in education; aim to get a million more girls into education
Net primary school
enrolment ratio:
1995-99: M:F 53:5
2004: M:F 42:15
Total adult literacy:
1995-99: 32
2004: 36
OPIUM PRODUCTION
2001: 185 tons of opium
(reduction of 96 per cent from 1999)
2003: Second-largest opium harvest (after 1999) with yield of 3,600 tons
Poppy cultivated in 28 of 32 provinces, involving 1.7 million Afghans. Drug
trade income is $2.3bn, more than 50 per cent of Afghanistan's legal GDP
69 per cent of farmers surveyed intend to increase cultivation in 2004
Nearly 30 per cent of farmers plan to more than double production
43 per cent of non-poppy farmers intend to start cultivating in 2004
Sources: UNICEF SOWC (State of the World's Children) annual report); CARE
International; Afghanistan Annual Opium Poppy Survey 2001); Afghanistan
Farmers' Intentions survey 2003-04); Amnesty International