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Afghanistans loya jirga convened to rubber-stamp an
anti-democratic constitution
By Peter Symonds
18 December 2003
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The loya jirga or grand tribal council currently underway
in the Afghan capital of Kabul is a thoroughly cynical political
exercise. For all the hype about consulting the Afghan people,
a select group of 500 delegates has been convened to endorse an
undemocratic constitution and to consolidate the position of Washingtons
political puppetPresident Hamid Karzai.
The gathering is taking place in a large tent in the grounds
of Kabul Polytechnic Institute, heavily guarded by army units
that have stationed tanks and set up machine gun posts near the
perimeter. Soldiers from the 5,500-strong International Security
Assistance Force based in the capital are patrolling nearby hills
in order to prevent rocket attacks on the assembly.
The loya jirga opened on Sunday after being postponed
for a day. According to Afghan and UN organisers, the delay was
to allow time for delegates from outlying areas to arrive. Karzai
and his backers, however, used the time to consolidate support
for his choice of chairmanSegbatullah Mojaddediand
for the proposed constitution that concentrates enormous power
in the hands of the president.
Former president Burhanuddin Rabbini, a key Northern Alliance
leader, has been one of the main figures criticising the proposed
constitution. On Saturday after a flurry of high profile visitors,
including Karzai, US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and UN special
envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, Rabbani indicated that he would accept
a presidential system with certain checks.
The behind-the-scenes deal making was evident on the first
day when Mojaddedi was elected chairman, defeating Abdul Hafiz
Mansoor, a newspaper editor and Karzai critic, 251 votes to 154.
The decision is a pointer to the outcome of deliberations on the
constitution itself.
Right from the outset, the entire process has been carried
out behind the backs of the Afghan people. The framework was decided
at a UN-sponsored conference in Bonn, Germany in December 2001,
shortly after the collapse of the Taliban regime. While the UN
organised the affair, it was the Bush administration that called
the shots, insisting Karzai be installed as interim president.
The hand-picked delegates in Bonn also rubberstamped the procedure
for drawing up and approving a constitution and for national elections.
Whatever their factional differences, all of those present traced
their origins to the various right-wing Mujaheddin militia that
were financed, trained and equipped by the CIA in the 1980s to
fight the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul. Karzai developed an especially
close relationship with Washington when he ran the Pakistani office
of the group headed by Segbatullah Mojaddedi.
In June 2002, to provide a democratic veneer for the arrangements
made in Bonn, an emergency loya jirga was convened in Kabul.
Some 1,600 heavily-screened delegates were bullied, threatened
and bribed into approving Karzai as president as well as his proposals
for three vice-presidents, the chief justice and cabinet. Even
at this stage-managed affair, there was bitter criticism of the
standover tactics used, particularly by Zalmay Khalilzad, then
US special envoy to Afghanistan.
Karzai and his transitional administration have applied the
same anti-democratic methods to the constitution. A carefully
selected committee drafted it in secret. The much-vaunted public
consultative process, which involved stage-managed discussions
with focus groups, began in June this year and was
completed in late July, before the draft constitution was even
available. When it was finally published on November 3, it clearly
reflected the desire of Karzaiand Washingtonfor an
autocratic presidency.
The final draft eliminated a proposal, contained in earlier
versions, for establishing a prime minister as head of government.
Instead the president will have extensive powers, including the
appointment and dismissal of ministers, the attorney general,
the central bank governor, judges, officers of the armed forces,
police and national security, heads of diplomatic missions and
other high ranking officials. The president will also appoint
one third of the members of the upper house of the national assembly.
The president will be the designated commander-in-chief of
the armed forces, with the power to declare war or a state of
emergency and to dispatch contingents of troops to foreign countries.
He or she will preside over the government as chairperson of the
cabinet and have the power to issue decrees. The president will
be able to convene loya jirgasdeclared to be the
highest manifestation of the will of the people of Afghanistanthat
will have the power to amend the constitution and override the
national assembly. He or she will also be able to call a referendum,
which can be used as means of sidestepping parliament.
The two houses of the national assembly by contrast will have
very limited means for constraining the president. While both
houses will have to approve laws, they will not be able to delay
government bills indefinitely. The lower house may question and
impeach ministers. But the impeachment of a president requires
a two-thirds vote in the lower house to convene a loya jirga,
a two-thirds vote in the loya jirga, and the approval of
a special court, making such an eventuality all but impossible.
The draft constitution is dressed up with a list of fundamental
rights for citizens. All of these are routinely flouted, however,
not only by the warlords, military commanders and tribal chiefs
who control most of the country outside Kabul, but by the US military.
American troops conduct operations, often with terrible consequences
for civilians, free of any constraints. Whatever is decided at
the loya jirga, it is certain that basic constitutional
rights will not apply to the prisoners held indefinitely without
charge or trial, interrogated and tortured at US-run detention
centres at Bagram airbase and elsewhere.
The US actions have generated widespread opposition to its
occupation of the country, particularly in the majority Pashtun
areas in the south and east. In the leadup to the loya jirga,
the US military conducted its massive sweep involving 2,000 US
troops along the border areas with Pakistan, in part to preempt
any attacks on the assembly in Kabul. Washingtons tenuous
position in Afghanistan is the prime reason it has insisted that
the constitution concentrate power in the hands of its stooge
Karzai, even at the expense of the Northern Alliance which were
its main military allies in the ousting of the Taliban.
For his part, Karzai is completely dependent on the USpolitically,
financially and militarily. He has no significant base outside
a limited one among his own Pashtun tribe. So precarious is his
position that the US is providing a special guard to protect him
from his nominal allies as well as his enemies. Until now, he
has had to coexist with a cabinet in which the Northern Alliancecomposed
of ethnic Tajiks, Uzbeks and Hazarasholds the key posts
of foreign affairs and defence.
Under the new constitution, however, the president will have
significantly more powers than any of his ministers, including
the right to dismiss them. This is the main reason for the opposition
from Rabbani and sections of the Northern Alliance, who view the
proposed constitution as a threat to their own power bases. Their
criticisms also appear to have behind-the-scenes support from
the European Union, whose representative Francesco Vendrell, argued
that the regional warlords had to be given a parliamentary avenue
in order to convince them to disband their military forces.
The only other opposition inside the loya jirga to the
draft constitution has come from Islamic fundamentalists who insist
that the document does not go far enough in entrenching reactionary
Islamic law. These layers are demanding restrictions on the basic
rights of women and a form of retributive justice that is not
so different from that imposed by the Taliban regime before the
US ousted it.
Whatever the factional differences between the delegates, it
is highly likely that a majority will approve the draft constitution
with minor amendments. In part, this reflects the fact that those
present have either been appointed directly by the president or
have been elected by carefully vetted groups of district
representatives. It also a product of the enormous clout that
Washington wields behind the scenes. On Saturday, Karzai insisted
that he would only stand in next years presidential election
if the presidential powers were passed intact. His statement only
carried any political weight because all the powerbrokers in Kabul
were well aware that behind the non-entity Karzai stands the Bush
administration.
See Also:
Afghanistan: Report documents
violence and repression by US-backed warlords
[2 August 2003]
A year after the fall
of Kabul: Afghanistan mired in poverty, insecurity and despotic
rule
[30 November 2002]
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