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: Afghanistan
Kabul police raids aimed at intimidating political opposition
By Peter Symonds
6 April 2002
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A series of police round-ups in Kabul over the last week have
the character of a crude witchhunt aimed at silencing the political
opponents of the US-backed interim administration headed by Hamid
Karzai. The vague, contradictory and unsubstantiated nature of
the accusations and the lack of detail about those detained simply
confirm this conclusion.
Even the figures are doubtful. According to Interior Minister
Yunis Qanooni, a member of the Northern Alliance, more than 300
people were detained for being engaged in undermining, threatening,
sabotaging and harming this government. He claimed that
a number of prominent figures had been targetted, including Karzai
and the former king Zahir Shah, but admitted the accusations
are not yet proven. Nearly half of those arrested were released
through lack of evidence.
Others put the number detained far higher. One of Karzais
senior advisers told the New York Times that more than
700 people had been arrested. Interior Ministry thugs attempted
to prevent journalists interviewing those who were being released
and threatened to beat up a photographer. But, according to the
Boston Globe, some of the detainees spoke to reporters.
They complained of wrongful arrest and cramped conditions and
estimated that as many as 800 had been rounded up.
Many of those caught up in the police operation were completely
innocent. Haji Gula Mir Shah, 56, said he had come to Kabul
from Logar Province to see a doctor and was in front of the Ministry
of Public Health when he was grabbed by an intelligence agent,
the Boston Globe reported. Those released said they were
interrogated about their political affiliations and their activities
under the Taliban regime.
Qanooni denied that the police dragnet was aimed at stamping
out political opposition and insisted the issue has nothing
to do with ethnicity. Yet the National Directorate of Security,
which carried out the arrests, is firmly under the control of
the Northern Alliance which is a loose coalition of militia groups
based on ethnic Tajiks, Uzbeks and Hazaras. Qanooni along with
Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and Defence Minister Mohammad
Fahim belong to the mainly Tajik Jamiat-e-Islami. The detainees
are predominantly ethnic Pashtuns who live in the south and east
of Afghanistan.
Interior Ministry officials alleged on Thursday that the chief
culprit was Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, head of the Islamic extremist
organisation Hezb-e-Islami, which rose to prominence in the 1980s
when the CIA and Pakistani intelligence strongly favoured it over
other Mujaheddin groups fighting the Soviet-backed administration
in Kabul. Following the collapse of that regime, Hekmatyar engaged
in bitter fighting with the militia that later formed the Northern
Alliance destroying much of Kabul, briefly became prime minister,
fought the Taliban and then fled to Iran after the fundamentalist
militia seized the capital.
Hekmatyars whereabouts, however, are unknown after Iranian
authorities, responding to US pressure, shut down his offices
earlier in the year. Moreover, one of the main targets of the
police raids was Wahidullah Sabawoon, a man who appears to have
broken with Hekmatyar in 1996. Sabawoon remained as finance minister
in the administration headed by President Burhanuddin Rabbini
when Hekmatyar left for Iran. To complicate the issue even further,
Sabawoon, like Northern Alliance leader Rabbani, was pushed aside
at the UN conference in Bonn last December that installed Karzai.
Hezb-e-Islamis Pakistan-based spokesman Ghairat Baheer
denied the party had any involvement in the alleged plot or even
that Sabawoon, as Kabul police chief General Deen Mohammad Jurat
claimed, was Hekmatyars son-in-law. These people are
not related to Hezb. It is just an excuse. They have their own
internal differences, he said in Islamabad.
There is undoubtedly opposition to the Karzai regime. It is
quite possible that Hekmatyar, Sabawoon and Rabbani, as well as
other political figures such as Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, a Pashtun
Islamic leader, have been in contact. All of them are bitter about
being left out of the Karzai administration and may even be scheming
to rally support against it. Several newspaper articles have speculated
on possible opposition alliances but none of these reports can
be counted as reliable in the hothouse of rumour, intrigue, double-dealing
and vested interests in Kabul.
There is no evidence, however, that any of alleged plotters
have been preparing for sabotage or assassination. Kabul police
claimed to have seized bomb-detonating devices and documents
containing detailed plans. But even Qanooni was forced to note
that the alleged plot never proceeded past the planning stage.
None of the documents have been released, and, if one were to
judge plots on the basis of stored weapons or explosives,
a substantial portion of the countrys population would be
equally guilty.
Anti-democratic methods
The police crackdown coincides with the announcement this week
of the rules for the convening of a loya jirga or tribal
assembly in mid-June. The gathering is to select a transitional
administration to replace the present interim arrangements and
to establish the mechanisms for drawing up a constitution, consolidating
the state apparatus and holding national elections. Already intense
jockeying has begun to determine the 1,450 delegates who will
be either appointed or chosen through indirect, unrepresentative
pollsmethods that are subject to the whole gamut of influences
from bribery to intimidation.
This weeks police raids have all the hallmarks of the
latteran attempt to intimidate, harass and possibly jail
the more outspoken critics of the Karzai regime. Hekmatyar has
been singled out as a convenient target because, unlike the other
warlords and militia leaders who quickly fell into line with Washington,
he has been openly critical of US military aggression in Afghanistan.
As a result, Interior Ministry officials have been quick to allege,
without any evidence, that Hekmatyar is intriguing with the Talibanignoring
the fact that the two groups were bitter enemies in the mid-1990s.
According to the Washington Post, the raids have not
been confined to Hekmatyars organisation. Over the last
week, a group of Sayyafs supporters have also been detained,
allegedly for criminal and violent activities. A spokesman
for the British-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
in Kabul, Lieutenant Colonel Neal Peckham, told the media that
Sayyafs men were accused of instigating troubles
but was unable to say if these arrests were linked to the broader
round-up of Sabawoons supporters.
One aspect of the police operation would tend to indicate that
Qanooni and the Northern Alliance are targetting rivals inside
the administration as well as figures like Hekmatyar. The Boston
Globe reported: Several associates of Karzai, who is
a Pashtun, were swept up in last weeks sting, including
a deputy agriculture minister, the governor of Paktia Province,
a senior judge, and a special adviser to Karzai, according to
detainees interviewed. Karzai did not know about or approve the
sting, according to one of his associates who has been released.
The whole episode highlights the role of the US in Afghanistan.
ISAF spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Neal Peckham was circumspect
in his comments on the police operation but did acknowledge that
the British-led force had been forewarned and advised to keep
away from certain areas. Another representative, Flight Lieutenant
Anthony Marshall, expressed scepticism about the purpose of the
round-up, saying: I think we would know if there was an
[anti-government] coup plot.
But if the ISAF command was informed then the US military and
the CIA certainly knew about the police raids and, at the very
least, gave the nod of approval. Given the political clout the
US carries in Kabul, the mere hint of opposition from Washington
would have been enough to prevent the operation. The round-up
reveals a distinct nervousness about the emergence of any opposition
to the Karzai administration and provides a clear indication of
the methods that will be used to suppress it.
See Also:
Washington presides over a
political and social disaster in Afghanistan
[29 March 2002]
The makings of a protracted
colonial war in Afghanistan
[22 March 2002]
Murder of an Afghan minister
reveals a weak, divided government
[19 February 2002]
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