News (Media Awareness Project) - Afghanistan: Who Rules Afghanistan |
Title: | Afghanistan: Who Rules Afghanistan |
Published On: | 2004-11-15 |
Source: | Nation, The (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 19:04:25 |
WHO RULES AFGHANISTAN
It is noon in northern Afghanistan, Balkh province. The autumn sky is
empty and bright. A tough 60-year-old farmer named Mamood sits for an
interview in the shade of a tree. Surrounding us in all directions are
fields of marijuana on the verge of harvest. The plants are tall,
thick and fragrant, their dark green flowers glistening with potent
oils.
Soon the crop will be cut, dried and beaten against linen in small
rooms to extract the resin that makes hashish. It's dirty work that
falls primarily to women and children. The rooms fill with dust;
asthma is a common occupational hazard. In a month the farmers will
sow these same fields with opium poppy. After each crop come the
marauding gunmen who collect "taxes" of 20 percent on the harvest.
"In the past few weeks they've taken money, some vehicles and
kidnapped a girl," says Mamood. "They work for the commanders. They
take whatever they want and they will kill you if you try and stop
them. When you hear 'commander' just think 'thief' or 'murderer.' That
is all they are."
Mamood is not talking about the Taliban or Al Qaeda but rather about
Afghanistan's mujahedeen warlords, or jangsalaran in Dari. These men
are America's allies, central players in the international effort to
rebuild a state in the world's third-poorest country.
These are the same men who killed 40,000-50,000 civilians during their
factional fighting in Kabul between 1992 and 1994. Under their rule
chaos reigned in much of the countryside: Militias raped, plundered
and destroyed the economy. At times there were between ten and
fourteen separate currencies circulating, each printed by a different
commander. Whole villages fled; trade and agriculture broke down. As
John Sifton of Human Rights Watch puts it, "What these guys did made
Sarajevo look like kindergarten."
Now, instead of being treated as part of the problem and hunted down,
the jangsalaran are being folded into government and given new power
and legitimacy by the UN and the US-backed government of Hamid Karzai.
The "commanders" now use titles like "security chief," "governor,"
"minister" or even "presidential candidate." International
administrators justify the political inclusion of these mujahedeen
commanders as "the price of peace."
Indeed, a return to the open factional warfare of the early 1990s is
unlikely. But neither is Afghanistan headed toward real peace and
prosperity. Instead, this country of 20-25 million inhabitants is an
embryonic narco-mafia state, where politics rely on paramilitary
networks engaged in everything from poppy farming, heroin processing
and vote rigging to extortion and the commercial smuggling of
commodities like electronics and auto parts. And while the Western
pundit class applauds the recent Afghan elections, the people here
suffer renewed exploitation at the hands of America's local partners.
Back under the tree in the marijuana fields, Mamood is joined by other
farmers, who recount a litany of depredations.
"A few weeks ago I had two motorcycles stolen," says Saja Hudin, who
also lives and farms in this rural community two hours from
Mazar-i-Sharif. "I had a guest and we were going to work some of my
land near Kudbarq. Two gunmen stopped us. I thought they were security
or I would have tried to escape. They took both motorcycles and all my
money. I was holding 12,000 afghani for a cousin. One of the men
wanted to kill us, the other stopped him. Now I am in debt." Hudin
says that one of the perpetrators was the nephew of a local commander,
Shafi Dewana.
"Dewana means crazy," says another man in English.
It is noon in northern Afghanistan, Balkh province. The autumn sky is
empty and bright. A tough 60-year-old farmer named Mamood sits for an
interview in the shade of a tree. Surrounding us in all directions are
fields of marijuana on the verge of harvest. The plants are tall,
thick and fragrant, their dark green flowers glistening with potent
oils.
Soon the crop will be cut, dried and beaten against linen in small
rooms to extract the resin that makes hashish. It's dirty work that
falls primarily to women and children. The rooms fill with dust;
asthma is a common occupational hazard. In a month the farmers will
sow these same fields with opium poppy. After each crop come the
marauding gunmen who collect "taxes" of 20 percent on the harvest.
"In the past few weeks they've taken money, some vehicles and
kidnapped a girl," says Mamood. "They work for the commanders. They
take whatever they want and they will kill you if you try and stop
them. When you hear 'commander' just think 'thief' or 'murderer.' That
is all they are."
Mamood is not talking about the Taliban or Al Qaeda but rather about
Afghanistan's mujahedeen warlords, or jangsalaran in Dari. These men
are America's allies, central players in the international effort to
rebuild a state in the world's third-poorest country.
These are the same men who killed 40,000-50,000 civilians during their
factional fighting in Kabul between 1992 and 1994. Under their rule
chaos reigned in much of the countryside: Militias raped, plundered
and destroyed the economy. At times there were between ten and
fourteen separate currencies circulating, each printed by a different
commander. Whole villages fled; trade and agriculture broke down. As
John Sifton of Human Rights Watch puts it, "What these guys did made
Sarajevo look like kindergarten."
Now, instead of being treated as part of the problem and hunted down,
the jangsalaran are being folded into government and given new power
and legitimacy by the UN and the US-backed government of Hamid Karzai.
The "commanders" now use titles like "security chief," "governor,"
"minister" or even "presidential candidate." International
administrators justify the political inclusion of these mujahedeen
commanders as "the price of peace."
Indeed, a return to the open factional warfare of the early 1990s is
unlikely. But neither is Afghanistan headed toward real peace and
prosperity. Instead, this country of 20-25 million inhabitants is an
embryonic narco-mafia state, where politics rely on paramilitary
networks engaged in everything from poppy farming, heroin processing
and vote rigging to extortion and the commercial smuggling of
commodities like electronics and auto parts. And while the Western
pundit class applauds the recent Afghan elections, the people here
suffer renewed exploitation at the hands of America's local partners.
Back under the tree in the marijuana fields, Mamood is joined by other
farmers, who recount a litany of depredations.
"A few weeks ago I had two motorcycles stolen," says Saja Hudin, who
also lives and farms in this rural community two hours from
Mazar-i-Sharif. "I had a guest and we were going to work some of my
land near Kudbarq. Two gunmen stopped us. I thought they were security
or I would have tried to escape. They took both motorcycles and all my
money. I was holding 12,000 afghani for a cousin. One of the men
wanted to kill us, the other stopped him. Now I am in debt." Hudin
says that one of the perpetrators was the nephew of a local commander,
Shafi Dewana.
"Dewana means crazy," says another man in English.
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