The Invisible Afghanistan...
[Sayyid
Rahmatullah Hashemi is the roving Ambassador from Afghanistan who recently
visited the US. The following is the edited version of the transcription of a
lecture given by him at the University Of Southern California in
Los Angeles, on March 10, 2001]
"
I was just coming from a meeting with a group of scholars, and the first thing
we started talking about there was the statues. And the first thing we started
talking about here was also the statues. It is very unfortunate how little we
see and how little we know. Nobody has seen the problems of Afghanistan; nobody
saw their problems before. And the only thing that represents Afghanistan today
is the statues. Afghanistan is called the Crossroads of Asia. So, we are
suffering because of our geo-strategic location. We have suffered in the
18th century, 19th century, and we are still suffering in this century. We have
not attacked the British. We have not attacked the Russians. It was them who
attacked us. So the problems in Afghanistan you see are not our creation”.
The Soviet Invasion
The recent problems in Afghanistan
started in 1979. Afghanistan was a peaceful country. The Russians, along with
their 140,000 troops attacked Afghanistan in the December of 1979, just 21
years ago, stayed there for a decade, killed one and a half million people,
maimed one million more people, and six million out of the eighteen million
people migrated because of the Russian brutalities. Even today, our children
are dying because of the landmines that they planted for us. And nobody knows
about this. After the Russians left during the Russian occupation, on the other
side, the American government, the British government, the French, the Chinese,
and all of the rest, supported the counter-revolutionaries called the
Mujahideen; There were seven parties only in Pakistan and eight parties in Iran
who fought the Russian occupation. And after
the Russians left, these parties went into Afghanistan. All of them had
different ideologies, and a lot of weapons. And instead of having a
single administration, they fought in Afghanistan. The destruction that they
brought was worse than the destruction the Russians brought. 63,000
people were only killed in the capitol, Kabul. Another million people migrated
because of this lawlessness.
The Beginning of Taliban
Seeing this destruction and lawlessness,
a group of students called the Taliban, i.e. a group of students (Taliban is
the plural of student in our language; it may be two students in Arabic, but in
our language it means students) started a movement called the Movement of
Students. It first started in a village in the southern province of
Afghanistan, called Kandahar. It happened when a war-lord, or a commander
abducted two minor girls and violated them. The parents of those girls went to
a school and asked the teacher of the school to help them. The teacher of that
school, along with his 53 students, finding only 16 guns, went and attacked the
base of that commander. After releasing those two girls, they hanged that
commander, and so many of his people were also hanged. This story was
told everywhere BBC also quoted this story. Hearing this story, many other
students joined this movement and started disarming the rest of the warlords.
This same students movement now controls 95% of the country including its
capital. Only a bunch of those warlords are remaining in the northern corridor
of Afghanistan.
Our Achievements
We have been in government for only five
years, and the following things that we have done, and many of you may not
know:
The first thing we have done is
reunifying the fragmented country Afghanistan was formerly fragmented into five
parts. We unified it when nobody else could do it.
Second thing we have done, which
everybody failed to do, was disarming the population. After the war every
Afghan got a Kalashnikov, and even sophisticated weapons such as stinger
missiles, and they even got fighter planes and fighter helicopters. Disarming
these people seemed to be impossible. The United Nations in 1992 made an appeal
asking for 3 billion dollars to re-purchase those arms. And because of its
impracticality, that plan never materialized, and everybody forgot about
Afghanistan. So the second thing we have done is to disarm 95% of that
country.
The third thing that we have done is to
establish a single administration in Afghanistan, which did not exist for 10
years.
The fourth achievement that we have that
is surprising to everybody is that we have eradicated 75% of world's opium
cultivation. Afghanistan produced 75% of worlds opium. And last year we issued
an edict asking the people to stop growing opium, and this year, the United
Nations Drug Control Program, UNDCP, and their head, Mr. Barnard F. proudly
announced that there was 0% of opium cultivation. Zero, zilch, none at
all. Incidentally this was not good news for UN itself because many of them
lost their jobs. In the UNDCP, 700 so called experts were working there and
they got their salaries and they never went into Afghanistan. So when we issued
this edict, I know that they were not happy. And this year they lost their
jobs.
The fifth achievement that we have, is
the restoration of Human rights. Now, you may think that we are involved in
violation of Human Rights. The reality is exactly the opposite. Among the
fundamental rights of a human being is the right to live. Before us, nobody
could live peacefully in Afghanistan. The first thing we have done, is to give
to the people a secure and peaceful life. The second major thing that we have
restored is to give them free and fair justice; you don't have to buy justice,
unlike here. In Afghanistan justice is free and readily available.
Women's Rights
We have been criticized for violating
women's rights. Do you know what happened before us? I can see some
Afghans living here, and they will agree with me, that in the rural areas of
Afghanistan, women were used as animals. They were sold actually. We stopped
this abominable practice. They didn't use to have any say in the selection of
their husbands. First thing we have done is to let them choose their
future.
Another thing that used to happen in
Afghanistan was women were exchanged as gifts. Of course, this was not
something religious; this was something cultural. When two fighting tribes
wanted reconciliation, they would exchange women. And this has been stopped.
Unlike what is generally said, women do work in Afghanistan. True that until
1996 when we captured the capital Kabul, we did ask women to stay home.
It didn't mean that we wanted them to stay at home forever. We said that there
is no law, and there is no order, and you have to stay at home.
We disarmed the people, and we
established law and order, and now women are working. True, that women are not
working in the ministry of defense, like here. We don't want our women to be
fighter pilots, or to be used as objects of decoration for advertisements. But
they do work. They work in the Ministry of Health, Interior, Ministry of
Education, Ministry of Social Affairs, and so on. Similarly we don't have
any problem with women's education. We have said that we want education, and we
will have education whether or not we are under anybody's pressure, because
that is part of our belief. We are ordered to do that. When we say that there
should be segregated schools, it does not mean that we don't want our women to
be educated. It is true that we are against co-education; but it is not true
that we are against women's education.
We do have schools even now, but the
problem is the resources. We cannot expand these programs. Before, our
government numerous curriculums were going on. There were curriculums that
preached for the kings, curriculums that preached for the communists, and
curriculums from all the seven parties. So, the students were confused as to
what to study. We have started to unify the curriculum and that is going
on.
Recently we reopened the faculty of
medical science in all major cities of Afghanistan and in Kandahar. There are
more girls students studying in the faculty of medical sciences than boys are.
But they are segregated. And the Swedish committees have also established
schools for girls. I know they are not enough, but that is what we have been
able to do.
Osama bin Laden
We are also accused of sponsoring
terrorism. And for Americans terrorism or terrorist means only bin Laden. Now
you >will not know that Afghanistan, or bin Laden was in Afghanistan
for 17 years before we even existed. Bin Laden was in Afghanistan, fought the
Soviet Union, and Mr. Ronald Reagan, the president of America at that time, and
Mr. Dick Cheney called such people freedom fighters or the Heroes of
Independence, because they were fighting for their cause. And now when the
Soviet Union is fragmented, such people were not needed anymore, and they were
transformed into terrorists. From heroes to terrorists. This is exactly like
Mr. Yasser Arafat who was transformed from a terrorist to a hero.
What is the difference between those acts
that bin Laden is blamed for and the 1998 cruise missile attacks on
Afghanistan. Neither of the two were declared and both of them killed
civilians. If it means killing civilians blindly, both of them killed civilians
blindly. The United States government tried to kill a man without even giving
him a fair trial. In 1998, they just sent cruise missiles into Afghanistan and
they announced that they were trying to kill Osama bin Laden. We didn't know
Osama bin Laden then. I didn't know him; he was just a simple man. So we were
all shocked. I was one of those men who was sitting at home at night, I was
called for an immediate council meeting and we all were told the United States
had attacked Afghanistan. With 75 cruise missiles they tried to kill one man.
And they missed that man; killed 19 other students and never apologized
for those killings. What would you do if you were in our situation? If we were
to go and send 75
cruise missiles into the United States and say that we were going to kill
a man that we thought was responsible for our embassy, and we missed that man,
and we killed 19 other Americans what would the United States do? An instant
declaration of war.
But we are polite. We did not declare
war.
Our Proposals
Rather we have been very open-minded on
this issue. We have said, that if really this man is involved in the
Kenya/Tanzania acts, if anybody can give us proof or evidence about his
involvement in these horrific acts, we will punish him. Nobody gave us
evidence. We put him on trial for 45 days and nobody gave us any kind of
evidence.
The United States told us they did not
believe in our judicial system. We were surprised as to what kind of judicial
system they have? They just tried to kill a man without even giving him a fair
trial. Even if one of us is a
criminal here, the police are not going to blow his house; he must go to a
court first. So our first proposal was rejected. They said they do not believe
in our judicial system, and we must extradite him to New York. After the
rejection of this first proposal was we said we were ready to accept an
international monitoring group to come into Afghanistan and monitor this man's
activities in Afghanistan. So that he does nothing. Even that he has no
telecommunications. That proposal was also rejected.
The third proposal we gave, six months
ago, was that we were ready to try or accept the trial of Osama bin Laden in a
third Islamic country, with the consent of Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan. That
was also rejected.
We are still very open-minded. And
for the fourth time, I am here, with a letter from my leadership that I am
going to submit to the state department hoping that they will resolve the
problem. But I don't think that they will. Because we think, and I personally
think now that maybe the United States is looking for a bogey man always.
Remember what Gorbachev said? He said, that he's going to do the worst thing
ever to the United States. And everybody thought that he's going to blow the
United States with nuclear weapons. But he said, I m going to remove their
enemy. And then he fragmented Soviet Union. And he was right. After he
fragmented Soviet Union, a lot of people lost their jobs in the Pentagon, in
the CIA, and the FBI, because hey were not needed anymore. So we think that
maybe these guys are looking for a bogey man now. Maybe they want to justify
their annual budget, maybe they want to make their citizens feel that they are
still needed to defend them.
Afghanistan is not a terrorist state; we
cannot even make a needle. How are we going to be a terrorist state? How are we
going to be a threat to the world? If the world terrorism is really derived
from the word terror, then there are countries making weapons of mass
destruction, countries making nuclear weapons, they are terrorist states;
we are not.
Sanctions
Now, we are under sanctions. And
the sanctions have caused a lot of problems. Despite that we already had been
going through so many problems--- the 23 years of continuous war, the total
destruction of our infrastructure, and the problem of refugees, and the problem
of land mines in our agricultural lands --- all of a sudden the United Nations,
with the provocation of Russia, is imposing sanctions on Afghanistan. And the
sanctions have been approved; we are under sanctions. Several hundred children
died a month ago. Several hundred children died because of malnutrition and the
severe cold weather. Nobody even talked about that. Everybody knows about the
statues.
Renovating Statues as People Die
When the world is destroying our future
with economic sanctions, then they have no right to worry about our past. I
called my headquarters, I asked them, why are they going to blow the statues,
and I talked to the head of the council of scholars of people, who had
actually decided this, he told me that UNESCO and an NGO from Sweden, or
from one of these Scandinavian countries Norway, Sweden, one of these they had
actually come, with a project of rebuilding the face of these statues,
which have worn by rain. The council of people told them to spend that money in
saving the lives of these children, instead of spending it to restore these
statues. And these guys said, "No, this money is only for the
statues." And the people were really pissed off. They said that, If you
don t care about our children, we are going to blow those statues.
If you were in such a situation what
would you do? If your children are dying in front of your eyes, and you are
under sanctions, and then the same people who have imposed sanctions and are
coming and building statues here? What would you do?
Kofi Annan
And there is Kofi Annan. You know Kofi
Annan, the Secretary General of United Nations? He went to Pakistan, and he
said he is going to meet our representative there. This man never bothered to
come, to talk about these children, he never bothered himself to talk about six
million refugees, and he never talked about the poverty of Afghanistan. He only
goes to that region because of these statues.
It is really, really ridiculous. These
people do not care about children, about people who are dying there, about the
foreign interference that still exists; they only care about the statues.
And I am sure they don't care about our heritage. They only care about
their picnic site one time. Maybe they'll have a good picnic site there, seeing
those statues.
And I'm sure these sanctions which are
imposed on our government will never change us, because for us, our ideology is
everything. To try to change our ideology with economic sanctions will never
work. It may work in the United States, where the economy is everything, but
for us, our ideology is everything. And we believe that it is better to die for
something than to live.