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US-imposed democracy in Afghanistan
Loya jirga rubber-stamps autocratic regime
By Mike Head
8 January 2004
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After more than three weeks of cajoling, back-room haggling
and standover tactics, the 502 largely unelected delegates to
the United States-orchestrated loya jirga, or grand tribal
council, in Afghanistan this week endorsed a constitution aimed
at strengthening the crumbling position of Washingtons handpicked
interim president, Hamid Karzai.
Following intense arm-twisting of faction leaders by US President
George Bushs envoy and ambassador to Afghanistan, Zalmay
Khalilzad, and UN special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, the assemblya
huge tent full of representatives of warlords, mullahs and outright
US stoogesrubber-stamped a constitution on January 4.
While media reports presented the outcome as a triumph for
democracy, the assembly was a travesty from start to finish. Karzai
selected 50 of the delegates, while the various militia, religious
and ethnic elites that have been complicit in the US-led military
occupation, chose the others. Amid growing resistance to the puppet
regime, they could only meet under armed guard. Even then, the
proceedings were threatened by a series of rocket attacks on the
site, including one last weekend.
Perhaps the most revealing moment came when Malalai Joya, a
26-year-old female social worker from the rural province of Farah,
stood up to condemn most of the jirgas committee chairmen
as criminals. Instead of being given influential positions, she
declared, they should be tried for their crimes. Joya was initially
thrown out of the meeting, then allowed to remain and is now under
UN protection from death threats.
The crimes to which she referred were the widespread rocket
shellings, torture, rape and mass killings of civilians committed
by Islamic fundamentalist warlordsmujahideen, or holy warriorsfrom
1992 to 1996 before they were ousted by the Taliban extremists.
The US and its allies are today relying upon the same thugs to
rule Afghanistan. One of the most prominent delegates was General
Abdul Rashid Dostum, whose Northern Alliance forces massacred
thousands of Taliban prisoners in the desert near Mazar-i-Sharif
during the US invasion in November 2001.
So anti-democratic was the entire process that no vote was
even taken on the final version of the document. Instead, at the
urging of the chairman, most of those present simply stood briefly
to signify their acceptance. Just three days earlier, the meeting
had been suspended in disarray when some 40 percent of the delegates
boycotted the first and only vote at the gathering.
Led by former president Burhanuddin Rabbani, the coalition
of minority ethnic factions, including his Tajik clan, Uzbeks
and Hazaras, called for the appointment of a prime minister to
restrict the sweeping powers allocated to the president. They
also demanded official recognition of minority languages and called
for a ban on ministers holding dual citizenship. The latter provision
was primarily directed at those in Karzais camp who are
US citizens.
Once Khalilzad and Brahimi stepped in to lay down the law,
Rabbani and his allies quickly acceded to an autocratic presidency.
The president will rule without a prime minister. He will have
the power to appoint and dismiss ministers, key officials, judges
and military, police and intelligence chiefs, as well as one-third
of the upper house of the national assembly. He will be the commander-in-chief
of the armed forces and can declare states of emergency for the
whole or parts of the country.
In return, Karzai and his backers made minor concessions. They
added a second vice president to represent minority interests
and gave the national assembly the right to approve some presidential
appointments. Alongside the two official languages, Pashto (spoken
by ethnic Pashtuns) and Dari (Tajik), other languages will be
recognised in regions where they are spoken by a majority of people.
Apparently, Karzai agreed to learn Uzbek. There will no ban on
dual citizenship, but the national assembly can reject individual
officials who hold foreign passports.
Karzai also struck a deal with hard-line Islamic fundamentalists
to include a clause prohibiting any law from offending Islam.
This means that, despite the lip service paid by the constitution
to democratic rights, including equal status for women, reactionary
Islamic precepts will prevail. Karzai had already appointed Fazal
Hadi Shinwari as chief justice of the Supreme Court. In violation
of the constitution, Shinwari is over the age limit and has training
only in religious, not secular, law.
He is an ally of the pro-Wahhabi, Saudi-backed fundamentalist
leader Ustad Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, who was a committee chairman
in the loya jirga. Shinwari has packed the Supreme Court
with sympathetic mullahs, called for Taliban-style punishments
and brought back the Talibans dreaded Ministry for the Promotion
of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, renamed the Ministry of Haj
and Religious Affairs. It deploys squads to stop public displays
of un-Islamic behaviour among Afghan women.
Presidential elections are meant to be held under the new constitution
by June, to be followed by assembly elections. But the deteriorating
economic and security situation in the country makes that schedule
unlikely. UN envoy Brahimi has already told the New York Times
that assembly elections would be well nigh impossible
because the threat of Taliban insurgents make large parts of the
country inaccessible.
For his part, Rabbani has made it plain that the conflicts
that wracked the loya jirga have by no means receded. He
declared that the backroom dictates issued in Kabul had only damaged
the administrations credibility and warned that the strong
presidential system could push Afghanistan to a dictatorship.
Despite the deeply reactionary character of the gathering in
Kabul, UN secretary-general Kofi Annan praised the outcome as
an historic achievement. President Bush welcomed the constitution,
declaring that a democratic Afghanistan will serve the interests
and just aspirations of all the Afghan people.
The major media outlets, including the erstwhile liberal press,
dutifully echoed these remarks. The New York Times editorial
called the constitution enlightened and said the Bush
administration was justifiably thrilled by the outcome.
It endorsed ongoing US military control of the country, to
help provide the political support and military security to make
presidential and parliamentary elections possible.
No democracy
To even speak of democracy in these circumstances is farcical.
Washington has illegally conquered one of the most impoverished
and ruined countries on earth, overturned its government and joined
hands with notorious butchers to repress and intimidate the population.
Around 12,000 US-led combat troops remain in Afghanistan, terrorising
the population in the name of hunting down Taliban and Al Qaeda
supporters. They are accompanied by 5,700 NATO peacekeepers,
which are mainly propping up the Karzai administration in the
capital.
Even the timetable for elections in Afghanistan is driven by
the Bush administrations immediate domestic political considerations.
It badly needs a symbolic show of success for its war on
terror in the lead-up to the US presidential election in
November. It is proceeding with its characteristic mixture of
cynicism and short-sightedness. All that matters in Afghanistan
is a public relations victory, regardless of the completely catastrophic
reality.
Many parts of the country are no longer safe for allied troops,
or for that matter, UN officials, aid workers and ordinary civilians.
Mounting guerilla attacks have forced international aid agencies
to withdraw to Kabul, halting even elementary welfare efforts.
On December 18, the World Food Program admitted that its food
distribution program had been severely affected by the breakdown
in security.
The deteriorating situation was highlighted on January 6, when
a truck bomb blast near a military base in the southern city of
Kandahar killed at least 16 people and wounded 52, many of them
school children. Despite the indiscriminate terror employed by
the insurgents, the methods being employed by the US seem to be
simply increasing support for the Taliban fundamentalists.
Heavy-handed repression by US troops is intensifying popular
opposition and resistance to the occupation, particularly in the
southern and eastern Pashtun regions. Last month, the US military
launched its largest operations in Afghanistan since the overthrow
of the Taliban, aimed at tracking down anti-government forces
and quelling wider unrest in the lead-up to the loya jirga.
Karzais fiefdom is largely confined to Kabul, where US
troops guard him around the clock. Elsewhere, private armies roam,
with a total of half a million men under arms, some linked to
drug barons and others to members of Karzais government.
There is no prospect that even the semblance of a democratic
regime will emerge in Afghanistan under these hellish and neo-colonial
conditions. Democracy is only possible through a genuine popular
revolution, spearheaded by the working class, throughout the Middle
East and Central Asia. Only such a movement could liberate the
region from decades of great power domination and overcome its
legacy of economic backwardness, warlordism and theocratic oppression.
See Also:
Afghanistans
loya jirga convened to rubber-stamp an anti-democratic constitution
[18 December 2003]
A war criminal visits
the scene of the crime
[10 December 2003]
US planned war in
Afghanistan long before September 11
[20 November 2001]
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