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A humanitarian catastrophe in the making in Afghanistan
By our correspondents
25 September 2001
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Whatever form the military assault being prepared by the US
and its allies against Afghanistan takes, a humanitarian crisis
is already under way in the impoverished country, which has been
ravaged by more than two decades of civil war, drought and a long
legacy of economic backwardness and deprivation.
Around three million Afghanis are living in rudimentary refugee
camps in neighbouring Pakistan and Iran. Within Afghanistan itself,
an estimated one million people are described as internally
displacedrefugees in their own country, desperate
for food and shelter. According to several reports, the situation
facing many trapped in villages, lacking basic resources and transport
to escape, is even worse.
Now, the danger posed by US military attacks and an escalation
of fighting between the Islamic fundamentalist Taliban regime
and the opposition Northern Alliance has driven thousands more
onto the roads. Even though Iran and Pakistan have closed their
borders, some 10,000 refugees have crossed into Pakistan using
small back roads. Aid agencies estimate that over a million people
are already trying to get out of the countrya figure that
will rise sharply as the conflict escalates.
Reports from Afghanistan indicate that the cities are emptying.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) reported
that the southern city of Kandahar, where the Taliban have their
headquarters, was half-empty. Kabul and Jalalabad were also being
cleared out.
UNICEF spokesperson Gordon Weiss, speaking from the Pakistani
capital of Islamabad, warned: We have less and less of a
picture of whats going on as our sources of information
are shut down. Thousands of women and children without food, medical
care or even proper clothing are on the move... Women will be
giving birth on the roads and dying and the newborns will be taken
up by siblings, children weak and sick themselves, clothed in
rags and desperately hungry.
Aid agencies are stockpiling food and other basic items at
points along Pakistans border with Afghanistan, anticipating
a flood of hundreds of thousands of new refugees. Life in the
dusty camps within Pakistan is bad enough. But within Afghanistan
itself a significant proportion of the countrys population
of 20 million faces disease and starvation. Aid agencies warn
that some 7.5 million peoplethe majority of them women and
childrenare at risk.
According to a recent current affairs program on the Australian
Broadcasting Commissions Four Corners, one third
of Afghanistans population can no longer afford to feed
themselves. Newly arrived refugees to Pakistan interviewed on
the program pointed to the civil war and the countrys three-year
drought. Previously, one man explained, they had enough resources
to survive and rebuild, despite the fighting. This time,
he said, we had nothing left. Another said the group
had run out of water and had no means by which to survive.
Conditions in the refugee camps inside Afghanistan are appalling.
Earlier in the year, aid agencies reported the deaths of nearly
500 people in a camp near the city of Herat. Most were children
who had perished in the bitterly cold winter due to the lack of
adequate clothing, shelter, food and medicine.
Those currently fleeing to areas held by the opposition Northern
Alliance can expect no better. About 6,000 refugees exist in primitive
conditions at the Anoba camp in the opposition-held Panjshir Valley.
According to its manager Mohammad Tareq, he has room in tents
for just 800 people and the rest are living in makeshift shelters,
with winter approaching. Lack of food has forced them to scavenge
for seeds, nuts and berries, which in turn has led to the outbreak
of skin diseases.
The US has not yet fired the first shot, but among the first
casualties of its war drive have been aid programs inside Afghanistan.
On September 12, the day after the terrorist attacks on New York
and Washington, the UN World Food Program (WFP)on which
an estimated four million Afghanis depend as their primary food
sourceannounced that it was stopping the transport of food
into the country.
The programs spokesman Khaled Mansour pointed to the
lack of available transport to take supplies into rural areas
but also made clear that the decision was politicalaimed
at ensuring that none of the food got into the hands of the Taliban
or its militia. We cant allow food to be diverted,
he said. We have to be assured that the people who deserve
the food will get it. Despite the protests of non-government
organisations, the WFP has not resumed food supplies.
With only three weeks of WFP food stocks left inside Afghani
cities, Mansour is well aware of the consequences. We have
pre-famine conditions. If for a long period of time we cannot
have access to Afghanistan... then Im afraid people may
starve, he said. About one million people would be
most threatened... The last time I was there, I saw people eating
locusts, eating animal fodder, eating grass. People are just trying
to live by any means available. Due to the drought three years
ago, they spent their savings. The year after, they sold their
houses.
For its part, the Taliban has ordered all international aid
workers to leave, saying it could not guarantee their safety,
and banned the remaining national aid employees from using communication
equipment. On Monday, it shut down the UN communications network
inside the country, took over the UN office in Kandahar and seized
1,400 tonnes of WFP food supplies. According to UN spokesperson
Stephanie Bunker: While some activities are going on, most
UN activities have been disrupted or have ceased.
A backward and impoverished country
Long the subject of great power rivalry for control of the
strategic Central Asian region, Afghanistan is one of the most
impoverished and backward countries in the world. Its social and
economic disintegration has been compounded by the protracted
war since its invasion by the Soviet Union in 1979first,
between the Soviet-backed regime and Islamic Mujahideen groups
armed and financed by the US and Pakistan, then following the
Kabul regimes collapse in 1992, between the various factions
based on clan, language and religion.
The Islamic fundamentalist Taliban, backed by Pakistan with
tacit US support, took control of Kabul in 1996 and now controls
most of the country. The disparate coalition of opposition forces
that comprises the Northern Alliance, which receives varying degrees
of support from Russia, Iran and India, controls just 5 percent
of the country from bases bordering the Central Asian republics
of Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
For decades, Afghanistan has been highly reliant on economic
aid. In the late 1980s, according to the governments own
estimate, financial contributions from the USSR constituted 40
percent of the countrys civilian budget. Eastern bloc countries
accounted for almost 70 percent of the foreign trade turnover
in 1986-7. But these arrangements rapidly broke up after the disintegration
of the Soviet Union in 1991. Subsequent financial assistance from
the UN and European Union has sharply declined in recent years,
due to the imposition of sanctions against the Taliban regime
at the insistence of the US.
Even prior to the Soviet invasion, around 67 percent of Afghanistans
labour force was engaged in eking out a living on the countrys
12 percent of arable land. Agriculture, however, has been severely
disrupted by continuous warfare. By the first half of the 1990s,
there had been a sharp reduction in the production of traditional
crops such as wheat, fruit and nuts, and a 50 percent increase
in land under opium poppy cultivation.
Much of Afghanistans traditional economy has been replaced
by one based on drugs and smuggling. In 1999, the country was
the largest producer of opium in the world and up to a million
Afghans were involved in the opium trade. In an effort to avoid
even tougher UN sanctions imposed earlier in the year, the Taliban,
which has been intimately involved in the opium trade, has banned
poppy farming.
Afghanistans industry has been largely destroyed over
the last two decades. Prior to the Soviet invasion there were
about 220 state-owned factories and manufacturing employed about
11 percent of Afghanistans labour force. By 1999, only one
of the four existing cement plants and about 10 percent of its
textile mills remained in operation. The countrys annual
per capita GDP is estimated at just $US800.
Basic health services, scarce even before the outbreak of civil
war, are now available to only a handful. There is only one doctor
per 7,357 people. Life expectancy is one of the lowest in the
world46 years for males and 45 for females. Infant mortality
rates are the highest in Asia250 for every 1,000 live births,
three times that of neighbouring Pakistan and 100 times that of
Britain.
There is a very real danger of epidemics. World Health Organisation
representative Hilary Bower said last week that some 5,000 cases
of cholera and 100 cholera-caused deaths have already been reported.
These numbers are only indicative: low because in the current
situation there is underreporting.
Afghanistan has one of the highest levels of adult illiteracy
in the worldestimated at 53 percent for males and 85 percent
for females. The Talibans reactionary social measures against
women, including forbidding them from working and banning girls
over the age of eight from attending school, has resulted in a
large-scale exodus of teachers. In addition, prolonged warfare
has resulted in nearly 2,000 school buildings being destroyed
with only 600 primary and secondary schools currently operating.
Until this month, notwithstanding the devastation of Afghanistans
infrastructure, the Pakistan government had been forcibly repatriating
some of the two million Afghan refugees in its camps. A UNHCR
spokesperson reported that mass deportations were creating a climate
of constant fear among the refugees. At least one death had been
recorded after Pakistani police hit an Afghan refugee over the
head with a bottle and threw him out of a police car.
According to Mohammad Zahin Jabarkhil, leader of the Nasir
Bagh camp, home to some 100,000 Afghan refugees, 80 percent of
the camps residents did not want to return to Afghanistan
because it was not safe. Jabarkhil said Pakistan had treated Nasir
Bagh as a showcase camp during the 1980s. When
we were fighting the Soviets, President Carter came here, Vice-President
Bush came here. The refugees were called heroes of the world.
But those times are gone now. Now the government just wants us
to leave.
While backing the US war plans, Western powers have refused
to accept all but a handful of Afghan refugees, leaving the vast
majority trapped inside the country or in the sprawling camps
of Pakistan and Iran, which are also among the poorest countries
in the world.
In all of the extensive media coverage of the US administrations
preparations for war in Afghanistan, scant attention has been
given to the plight of the Afghani people. In 1999, heart-rending
pictures of Kosovo refugees were cynically used to justify the
NATO bombardment against Yugoslavia although the humanitarian
pretext for the war did nothing to deter the US and its allies
from perpetrating atrocities against the civilian population of
Serbia or levelling much of its infrastructure. But it is an ominous
sign that in the US drive to war against one of the most destitute
countries in the world, the rhetoric in Washington, London and
elsewhere does not even pay lip service to humanitarian concerns.
See Also:
Pakistan's military regime rallies to
US war coalition
[25 September 2001]
Where is the Bush administration taking
the American people?
[22 September 2001]
Why the Bush administration wants war
[14 September 2001]
The political roots of the terror attack
on New York and Washington
[13 September 2001]
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