From Yahoo/USA Today:
“I felt
helpless: A year after the fall of Kabul, the world can still help Afghanistan”
(Mohammad
Farid Hamidi)
I didn't feel
anything but numb. I watched the news as young Afghans held onto planes to
escape the Taliban. I watched as young Afghan women were robbed of their
freedom, education and lives. I could do nothing but call my family and
colleagues as I sat in the United States, preparing to complete a graduate
program at Harvard.
Aug. 15, 2021,
was the first time I felt helpless. It was the day I realized that I would no
longer have a home in a country that had been my sanctuary for 53 years. Kabul,
the capital of Afghanistan, was almost the last province to fall in the hands
of the Taliban. It was the final province that was still hopeful of holding and
surviving.
Throughout my
life in Afghanistan, I witnessed the fall of many governments. I know how long
it takes for a government to collapse, for the people to panic and for chaos to
ensue, but this collapse was the most painful and surprising of all. All I
wanted to do was go back, but as a former attorney general during the country's
desperate attempt for democracy, that was not an option. Not with the Taliban
back in power. As young Afghans fell off planes, their fall did signify not
only the fall of the Afghan government but also the fall of America from grace
in a country it had invested 20 years in struggling to liberate.
Fall of Kabul,
fall of Saigon: Their horror was our horror. Anguished, we pray for a miracle. I
knew that the Afghan people would suffer more. The Taliban believed in a
military solution. They expected the Afghan people to accept them. They
expected the world to ratify them as they unlawfully fought and took the
nation, spilling the blood of hundreds of thousands of Afghans over the past 20
years.
The people of
Afghanistan want peace, not another oppressive totalitarian government. This
need will only grow – it will grow until there is no more vast space for it to
grow and that's when the vase will break. The Taliban miscalculated as they
brutally killed thousands last year during their return to power. The world
witnessed the Taliban and their work toward the recession of all the progress
made in the country. But now, Afghanistan has become a haven for terrorists and
terrorist organizations. Watching the Taliban undo all the progress that
Afghanistan and its people made it very difficult because Afghanistan had
finally become a country that preserved women's rights and human rights and
pushed for education. Afghanistan was advancing forward, but now the Taliban
have reversed the 20 years of progress.
The Taliban
are not capable of running a modern government. They do not have the resources
or the capacity to regulate Afghanistan's economy or incorporate the rule of
law into their government. The Taliban
only know how to fight. This will lead to more severe conflict in Afghanistan,
which will be disastrous for the region and for the world. The Taliban
incorporated discriminative laws into their rule – from discrimination against
religion, to discrimination based on ethnicity and gender, and discrimination
against millions of people who were working and living under the previous
government. My fear is this will lead to the collapse of Afghanistan as a
nation.
What can UN
do to help Afghanistan? There still can be a concerted push for peace in
Afghanistan and prosperity for future generations. But that means the
Taliban must be pressured to change. The United Nations can help by
establishing an inclusive committee to monitor the implementation of the 2020
"Doha deal," which among other things requires the Taliban to sever
ties with al-Qaida and terrorist organizations. U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken said the Taliban "grossly" violated the deal by
harboring al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri
in Kabul, where a U.S. drone killed al-Zawahri on July 30. Even
so, the Taliban might emerge as a legitimate party to the political process if
they accept the reality of the need to refer to people’s will. They cannot rule
Afghanistan like they have been doing. After 42 years of civil and
international wars in Afghanistan, there are still opportunities for peace and
the chance to resolve chronic problems of failed state and conflict. The
Taliban should also face diplomatic pressure to allow people to return to
public life and create a constitution that ensures political, civil, cultural
and economic rights.
Establishing
an inclusive body to draft a constitution will ensure equal rights for men and
women to distribute power, wealth, resources and democratic institutions. The
Taliban need to conduct a fair and accessible election to restore the rights of
the people in their nation. The United Nations should be the leading
organization for a still hopeful Afghanistan's mission for peace.
Mohammad Farid
Hamidi served as attorney general of Afghanistan from 2016 to 2021. He is a
graduate of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
^ One year on
and the World needs to do more to both keep its promises and to keep the world
safe. So far we have all failed on both. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/felt-helpless-fall-kabul-world-120036465.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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