Afghanistan In A Convoluted Mess

  • November 2019
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Afghanistan: A Convoluted Mess Sami Alrabaa The Mullas is an Afghan family that fled Afghanistan in the early 1980s and settled in Bielefeld/Germany as asylum seekers. They were granted one and since then they have been living in Germany. Muhsen, the eldest son was born in Germany. Now he is 26 years old and works as a mechanical engineer for the German Society for Technical Cooperation (GTZ) which builds a water treatment facility in Kandahar in the conflictridden south of Afghanistan, financed by the German Government. Hasna, his sister, who was also born in Germany, is 24 and works as a nurse in a hospital in Kabul. Before going to Afghanistan one year ago, both Muhsen and Hasna knew Afghanistan only from maps and photos. Back in Bielefeld on a short visit to their parents they depicted a bleak picture of current Afghanistan. Muhsen says, “Afghanistan is still in ruins after 20 years of war and destruction. In order for us to work on the project, a water plant for Kandahar, the GTZ pays protection money to the local Taleban war-lord, Abdulqader Mohammadi. We have never seen the man. He monthly sends his men to cash the money, about $ 20.000 a month. For working 12 hours a day, I get only $ 5000 a month. In addition, Mohammadi forces workers in the project to pay him $ 2 from the $ 5 each of them earns a day from hard work under tough conditions.” Hasna works for a local hospital in Kandahar, called Mirwais. “The hospital is in a "state of complete decay ... When I arrived in the hospital it was very cold, I could see my breath. The hospital lacks heating in the winter and air conditioning in the summer. The place is filthy, and there is absolutely no medical equipment, except a couple of bloodpressure cuffs. The hospital does not have any diagnostic equipment, oxygen, or even a reliable supply of medicine. Patients, including children, are dying from treatable ailments ranging from dehydration to war inflicted injuries. Since then, the situation has hardly improved." Hasna said. “Further”, said Hasna, “because there is no medication, a lot of people use opium. It contains morphine which acts as a painkiller. It also contains codeine which suppresses coughs, something which especially children suffer from due to the harsh winter in the area. I was shocked when I once visited Khaula, a mother of 7 children and a distant relative of my parents. She used opium as a tranquilizer by sucking the smoke from a hookah and then blew the smoke into the mouths of her children. One of the children had pneumonia and the others suffered from bronchial diseases. They looked skinny and pale due to their opium consumption. But thanks to the morphine, the children kept quiet and had stopped crying. Khaula is unaware that the smoke would only aggravate her children’s disease, and that they would become addicted, just like she is.”

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates that a million people all over Afghanistan have now become addicted to opium. Muhsen and Hasna emphasized that hardly a day goes by without horrifying news of deaths and bloodshed coming out of Afghanistan – and what reaches the West is just a tiny portion of the actual brutal truth. Most of Afghanistan experts assert that Afghanistan is ruled by a motley alliance of former warlords, former Mujahedeens, old communists, and royalists. Hamid Karzai, the President of Afghanistan, called the great “accommodator” by Western observers, is tolerated as long as he does not jeopardize the interests of members of this alliance. Karzai hardly has any power. He is only able to leave his compound by helicopter. The alliance comprises: -

Former warlord and Karzai’s current chief of staff General Dostam. Ex-Governor Ismail Khan, known as the “Lion of Herat” during the anti-Soviet resistance is currently the Minister of Energy. Former Minister of Defense and former head of the Northern Alliance’ secret service Marshal Fahim. Retired General Olumi who was Najibullah’s chief in Kandahar. Yunus Qanuni, currently Speaker of Parliament and a former Mujahedeen member.. Sayed Mohammad Gulabzoy, a former communist lieutenant who toppled the regime of Daud in 1978. Prince Mustafa, the grandson of King Mohammad Zahir. Burahanuddin Rabbani, the President of Afghanistan under the Mujahedeens and Talebans, is a radical Islamist and opponent of democracy.

The alliance is a gathering of men who were bitter enemies and accused of a number of serious human rights atrocities. During the civil war that followed the Soviet withdrawal, men like Rabbani and Dostam turned Kabul into a pile of rubble, and killed thousands of civilians. Ayman El Amir, an Afghan expert who has just toured Afghanistan, told Al Ahram Weekly (July 23), “If these people were living in the Balkans, they would most likely be sitting in a cell at the International Tribunal in the Hague today.” Rabbani and Dostam issued a joint manifesto calling for abolishing the presidential system and replace it with a “governor” one. The aim is nothing less than weakening Karzai and establishing a tribal-chief system and provincial warlords which would locally have all the say. The Afghan Times said in an editorial (July 15), “De facto, warlords have all the say all over Afghanistan.”

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In an interview with the German Radio, WDR5, (July 2) Prince Mustafa said, “Corruption under Karzai has become worse. Billions of dollars of international aid have disappeared in private pockets.” Both the USA and Europe are looking at Afghanistan with deep concern. The country – torn by 20 years of civil war and Taleban rule and now occupied by US-let troops – appears to be spiraling out of control. The Talebans are omnipresent and the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) is only capable of reacting, rather than acting. Peter Scholl-Latour, a veteran German international reporter, who recently toured Afghanistan said in his latest WDR TV report on June 5, “The country is edging closer to the abyss.” The German right-leaning newspaper, Die Welt writes (July 19) “It is illusionary to think that 54,000 ISAF soldiers are enough to appease a huge rocky tribal country (647,500 km2). International security experts point out that more than 300,000 would be needed to bring the level of violence there up to that in Kosovo. The recent visit by the German Foreign Minister, Frank Walter Steinmeier to Herat in western Afghanistan to inaugurate a water plant can be described as symbolic, at best.” Kofi Annan, the former UN Secretary General, once said in Afghanistan, “You cannot have development without security, and you cannot have security without development.” We should add that national security is also an integral part of international security. The Scandinavian countries and Germany, for instance, have realized that national security is only possible through social security. Social security is capitalism plus a fair tax system which primarily takes form the haves, from the strong and gives the haves not, the weak in society. Therefore, the violence and crime rate in these countries is the lowest in the world. Security and development in Afghanistan go hand in hand and are an indispensable investment in terms of international security, for all, for the USA, Europe and for the world at large. Without these peace pillars, Afghanistan will never see peace and will continue breeding and exporting terrorism.

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