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: Afghanistan
Anti-US protest reveals depth of Afghanistans social
and political crisis
By Peter Symonds
8 May 2003
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Several hundred Afghans chanting Death to Bush
and Long Live Islam marched through Kabul on Tuesday
in the first demonstration explicitly against the US military
occupation of the country. The protest revealed the deep hostility
and resentment of broad layers of the population to the countrys
appalling social conditions and the broken promises of the US
and its allies to alleviate the situation.
Organised by self-styled philosopher Sediq Afghan, about 300
people gathered outside government offices in the city centre.
The group, which included university students, government workers
and political activists, swelled in size and marched through the
streets to the presidential palace to register demands for better
security and economic reconstruction. Others called for the withdrawal
of foreign troops. We dont want the Brits and the
Americans, one student shouted.
Afghan, a prominent critic of the Soviet-backed regime in the
1980s, bitterly explained: They have lied to us. At the
beginning we thought that the United States was one of the good
countries, the most wealthy country, and it would help us. Then
we saw they came here to capture Afghanistan. I think the US intends
to keep us hungry. He pledged to continue the peaceful protests
until the demands are met.
Those who participated had a confused mixture of grievances
and demands, including reactionary denunciations of Jew
and Christians and calls for an Islamic state. But the overwhelming
sentiment was anger at the failure of Washington and the US-backed
government in Kabul to provide for the most elementary needs of
ordinary people. Many were government employees who simply have
not been paid for months.
Said Reshad, 19, told the Washington Post that his father,
who works for the Finance Ministry, has not received any wages
for three months. We sold the carpets and the refrigerator.
Now well borrow money to live. Finally, well have
to start stealing something to eat. Well join the Taliban
just to support our family. If theyll give us money, well
join them.
Abdul Mohammad, a former soldier who lost part of his arm in
a mine explosion, explained to the Chicago Tribune that
the government compensation payment for wounded war veterans was
$2 and sometimes even that was not being paid. They [the
US] are breaking their promises, he said. They promised
to build our country and make factories but they have not kept
their promises. They put one leg in Afghanistan and one in Iraq,
and they keep both peoples hungry. The only things we got from
America is bombs... nothing else.
The Afghan administration is acutely conscious of the widespread
public anger and of its own inability to resolve any of the countrys
pressing social problems. Speaking about the protest, Deputy Interior
Minister Hilaluddin Hilal explained: This is a problem for
the government of Afghanistan. If the US would help rebuild Afghanistan,
then the organisers wouldnt have so many people joining
them.
The protest came just days after US Defence Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld visited Afghanistan and declared that the US had moved
from major combat activity to a period of stabilisation
and reconstruction activities. There were pockets
of resistance in certain parts of the country that the US
military would help the Afghan government and army deal with.
However, the bulk of this country today is permissive, its
secure, he insisted.
Rumsfelds remarks bear no relation to the actual military
situation. Operations involving hundreds of American troops, backed
by massive air support, are continuing in an effort to suppress
a growing number of attacks on US and allied troops. On April
25, two US soldiers were killed and four others wounded in a daytime
clash near the border with Pakistan, sparking another major hunt.
Last week, just prior to Rumsfelds visit, US Major General
John Vines bluntly explained to the press that while certain parts
of the country were stable, in other parts, its terribly
dangerous. That has not changed and that probably wont change
in the foreseeable future. He denied he was contradicting
the assessment being made by Rumsfeld and the Pentagon, but did
not explain why.
Rumsfelds announcement certainly does not mean that Washington
is about to relinquish its military grip over Afghanistan or wind
back US troop numbers. Last week Lieutenant General Dan McNeill,
the top US commander in Afghanistan, said he doubted that any
reduction in the 8,500-strong American force could take place
for at least a year. While McNeill indicated Afghan troops were
being trained to take over, the New York Times reported
that other US commanders felt there was still a long way
to go before they feel confident enough to turn over Afghanistans
security to the Afghans.
The real purpose of Rumsfelds statement had nothing to
do with a changed military situation but was aimed at improving
Kabuls prospects of soliciting international reconstruction
money. As the New York Times noted, McNeill and Afghanistan
President Hamid Karzai have been pressing Washington for
months for this transition, so as to attract international contributions.
Large new reconstruction projects like rebuilding the road between
Kabul and Kandahar in the south would give Mr Karzai a big political
boost and reenergise the flagging Afghan economy.
Narrow social base
This weeks anti-US protest simply highlights the very
narrow social base on which the Karzai administration rests. Its
writ does not extend beyond Kabul and the immediate surrounds,
and, as the demonstration indicated, even in the capital, Karzais
support is tenuous at best. Those who took part in the protest
were for the most part educated and better-off layers who initially
took Washington at its word. But as their hand-to-mouth existence
shows no signs of improving, they are becoming increasingly hostile.
The Karzai government has no money with which to pay the majority
of its employees. It has a budget of just $550 million for the
present fiscal year. In the Interior Ministry alone, 96,000 workers,
most of them police and border guards, have not been paid for
at least two months. Last year the government received only 16
percent of the $1.8 billion in international aidthe rest
was managed directly by donor countries and aid agencies.
The Bush administration has made clear that it is not going
to foot the bill. The Pentagon is ostentatiously pointing to the
assistance being offered by its military civil affairs teams outside
Kabul. By the end of the year, the US military will have several
hundred military personnel stationed in eight regional centres
who will be engaged in building schools, digging wells and other
small-scale projects. However, the total budget for the teams
is a mere $12 million.
The scale of the social disaster in Afghanistan is immense.
Even in comparatively better-off Kabul, where most of the aid
agencies are concentrated, there is widespread unemployment and
poverty. In an interview last week, Pierre Salignon, program director
for the aid group Médecins Sans Frontières, explained:
Kabul is 70 percent destroyed, and people throughout the
city live in an extremely precarious situation. The public assumes
that peace in Afghanistan has returned but the reality is different:
insecurity for civilians amidst an armed peace with ethnic tensions.
And while international aid is concentrated in the capital, it
has been poorly developed.
Salignons agency has concentrated on helping the many
thousands of squatters in Kabulrefugees who have returned
to the capital but have no job. The squatters in Kabul are
proof that the reconstruction process has stalled, Salignon
said. Even with so many humanitarian agencies present, little
is being done for these tens of thousands of families who cant
find stable work, a regular food supply, or access to basic medical
care. They live in cramped rooms, often with several other families,
so there is a high risk of child mortality and the spread of epidemics.
Outside Kabul, conditions are far worse. The US has perpetuated
the arbitrary rule of a myriad of feuding warlords and local militia
leaders who establish their own laws and exact their own taxes,
taking the lions share for themselves and their close supporters.
At last months session of the UN Commission on Human Rights,
US officials blocked any criticism of the human rights abuses
in Afghanistan, past or present, for the simple reason that any
investigation would be compelled to focus on the atrocious record
of those being supported by the Bush administration.
An article in the Washington Post last month described
the situation in Kandahar where US-sponsored warlord Gul Agha
Shirzai presides as local governor. As the newspaper politely
put it: During his tenure in office, Gul Agha, his family
and his tribe have benefitted visibly from US largessewhile
rival tribal leaders seethe and life for Kandahars poor
remains unrelentingly hardscrabble. Gul Agha rakes in taxes
and duties, runs local businesses and maintains his own private
militia.
Sarah Chayes, field director of the Kandahar-based Afghans
for Civil Society, told the newspaper that Gul Aghas family
had made it difficult for her group to get stone from public lands
to rebuild homes razed by US bombs. Our tractors were held
up at gunpoint, she said. Gul Agha told me, Were
making a cement factory. So my advice to you is make your foundation
out of brick with cement. I took that to mean: Buy my cement
and give me money.
A local car dealer summed up the situation. We have so
many problems in Kandahar. We dont have drinking water.
The roads are broken. Nobody has helped us. We havent seen
anything here from the Americans. We are not happy. The Taliban
are trying to get the power again. Some people are supporting
them.
Elsewhere, villages remain in ruins after being bombed by the
US military. A Washington Post article on April 28 pointed
out that Madoo in eastern Afghanistan has received no US assistance
some 17 months after American war planes levelled much of the
hamlet killing at least 55 men, women and children. Madoo was
just one of several villages attacked during the US offensive
at Tora Bora in December 2001.
The newspaper explained: Once home to 300 people, Madoo
has lost roughly half of its population, villagers say. In addition
to the dozens killed by US air strikes, many others lost their
homes and moved away. The people who remain are destitute. They
live crowded in a few stone and timber homes theyve managed
to rebuild on their own. They subsist on bread and the vegetables
they grow. Several children look slight and frail.
The US Congress has proposed aid for the victims of American
bombing in Afghanistan, but the Bush administration, not wanting
to admit to any of its crimes, has effectively blocked the scheme.
Both the US military and the State Department are leery
of setting legal precedents for compensation and have declined
to establish programs that either systemically document civilian
losses or give Afghans the opportunity to apply for reparations,
the Washington Post wrote.
The anger and frustration revealed in this weeks protest
in Kabul is just the tip of the iceberg. As Karzai commented recently
with a note of despair, we really are at the eleventh hour.
See Also:
US military kills 11 civilians
in ongoing war in Afghanistan
[12 April 2003]
Continuing civilian deaths
in US operations in Afghanistan
[19 March 2003]
Afghan President Karzai back
in Washingtonand few take notice
[8 March 2003]
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