AFGHANISTAN
Sham assembly installs warlord coalition
BY NORM DIXON
The much-hyped loya jirga — or grand assembly — was supposed
to be post-Taliban Afghanistan's first step towards the creation of a representative
democratic government. However, even before the delegates had begun to
gather in Kabul for the meeting's scheduled start on June 10, it was obvious
that the loya jirga would be neither democratic nor representative.
It did not take long for delegates to realise that the main purpose
of the stage-managed extravaganza was to formalise and legitimise the cynical
ruling coalition between Afghanistan's most powerful warlords and the US-backed
central regime of Hamid Karzai — all with Washington's blessing.
As far as the US rulers and the Karzai regime were concerned, the loya
jirga would be a mere formality. The May 25 New York Times reported:
“Karzai is expected to win an easy victory and lead the new government,
Afghan officials and Western diplomats said… He is being strongly backed
by the former king, Mohammad Zahir Shah … and he has solidified his ties
with several powerful former leaders of the Northern Alliance [NA]… The
king has kept his promise not to push for the restoration of the monarchy…
“Karzai's strength reflects the enormous influence of the country that
is backing him — the United States. From warlords on the country's fringes
to ministers jockeying for position in Kabul, many leaders see American
money and military clout as the ultimate source of power here.”
Warlords return
Washington has acquiesced in the return of the warlords on the proviso
that they pledge allegiance to Karzai's “interim” administration and cooperate
militarily with US forces.
Post-Taliban Afghanistan is divided into three major cantons — the west
is dominated by the forces of Ismail Khan, a Farsi-speaking Tajik warlord
with strong ties to Iran; the north is mainly controlled by General Abdul
Rashid Dostum, the ethnic Uzbek leader of Junbish-i-Milli; and central
Afghanistan, including the capital Kabul, is the turf of the mainly ethnic
Tajik Jamiat-i-Islami commanders from the Panjshir Valley, the most prominent
being defence minister Mohammad Fahim.
The Panjshiri faction, Washington's main military ally in the toppling
of the Taliban regime, was given a central role in the interim administration
that was cobbled together in Bonn six months ago, being given the key ministries
of defence, the interior (which runs the police) and foreign affairs.
However, in Afghanistan's south and east, no single warlord is paramount.
The Pashtun ethnic majority in these areas — now politically marginalised
because it was a base for the Taliban — is hostile to the NA-dominated
Karzai government and is increasingly wary of the US. Even though Karzai
is a Pashtun, many southern and eastern Pashtun tribal leaders consider
him an agent of the Panjshiris. Pashtun civilians continue to bear the
brunt of US military massacres.
In the Pashtun majority areas there are continuing stand-offs between
a number of weak governors appointed by Karzai and local contenders for
power — the best-known being Bacha (sometimes referred to as Padsha Zadran)
Khan Zardran — who have strong military forces and support from Pashtun
tribal chiefs.
While the US maintains an opportunistic military relationship with Pacha
Khan and other anti-Karzai Pashtun warlords, Washington clearly fears that
they may politically challenge Karzai's tenuous claim to be the representative
of the Pashtun people.
US steps in
These political dynamics explain the sour notes that rose above the carefully
orchestrated loya jirga.
The June 3 British Guardian reported that “many of the most important
decisions for the loya jirga are being made in private before the 1501
[official] delegates meet… For days the Afghan cabinet and warlords from
across the country have been haggling over the make-up of the government
which will emerge after next week's loya jirga… All have backed Mr Karzai
to stay on…
“Fortunately, there is this general understanding about the continuation
of the current political system', [the Afghan foreign ministry said].”
However, on the eve of the gathering, the deal began to unravel. The
87-year-old former monarch, Zahir Shah, seemed to renege on his promise
not to seek high government office.
Zahir's brief candidacy provided a rallying point for the disgruntled
and disenfranchised southern and eastern Pashtun delegates, as well as
some independent delegates and others from minority ethnic and religious
communities also concerned at the dominance of the NA warlords. Some 800
delegates signed a petition calling for the king to be made president.
To head off the looming crisis sparked by Zahir's departure from the
script, US special envoy to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad stepped in on
June 10 with a heavy-handed intervention that exposed the loya jirga process
as a sham.
Khalilzad summoned Zahir for “consultations”, delaying the start of
the loya jirga for 24 hours. Later that day, he called a press conference
at which he “clarified” Zahir's remarks, claiming Zahir had been “misinterpreted”
by the press. He declared that Zahir was not a candidate for any government
position. Khalilzad stated that Zahir “fully supports” Karzai's leadership.
Several hours later, Zahir sullenly appeared at a press conference at
which his spokesperson repeated Khalilzad's words. As if to make sure Zahir
carried out Washington's orders, Khalilzad sat by his side.
When the loya jirga finally convened on June 11, it opened with a string
of set-piece speeches by the warlords, Zahir and former rival candidates
in which Karzai's sole candidacy was endorsed, ensuring that Karzai would
become Afghanistan's transitional president.
The June 12 Washington Post reported: “The endorsements, partly
the result of US pressure on key figures to guarantee a smooth political
transition, appeared to leave Karzai in such a strong political position
that the loya jirga … could become little more than a rubber stamp.”
Throughout the rest of the loya jirga, the US meddling and Karzai's
refusal to allow debate disillusioned the few delegates who did not represent
the most powerful Afghans. The domination of the proceedings by reactionary
pro-government Islamic warlords also caused tension.
“We were told that this loya jirga would not include all the people
who had blood on their hands. But we see these people everywhere… I don't
know whether this is a loya jirga or a commanders' council”, declared one
delegate to the cheers and applause of others.
Karzai caused uproar when he cavalierly declared himself president by
acclaim on the first day, ignoring provisions requiring a secret ballot.
He was formally elected transitional president on June 13. Pro-government
delegates filibustered throughout the meeting, preventing the loya jirga
from discussing the composition of the transitional cabinet and the 160-member
parliament.
Coalition strengthened
In fact, a slate of candidates for the cabinet had been drawn up before
the meeting by Karzai, Khalilzad and the top warlords. With minor variations,
that was the cabinet that was finally announced by Karzai on June 19. Karzai
refused to allow discussion on the slate, calling for it to be “passed”
with a quick show of hands.
The cabinet, sworn in on June 24, strengthened the Panjshiri-Karzai
coalition's hold over the transitional government that is now tasked with
preparing a new constitution and holding a general election in 2004. Fahim
remains defence minister and the NA's Abdullah retained foreign affairs.
Fahim was also promoted to vice-president, along with Hazara gang leader
Karim Khalili and Haji Abdul Qadir, the Pashtun governor of Nangarhar and
brother of the notoriously brutal warlord, the late Abdul Haq. All are
NA commanders.
The Panjshiris agreed to hand the key interior ministry to a Karzai
ally, the elderly Pashtun provincial governor of Paktia, Taj Mohammed Wardek.
However, former interior minister Yunus Qanooni — now education minister
— will continue to pull the strings as Karzai's “advisor” on internal security.
Karzai also formalised the exclusion of the southern and eastern Pashtuns.
Four of the five Pashtun ministers in the interim administration considered
close to the former king were sacked, including Amanullah Khan, Bacha Khan's
brother.
The Pashtun ministers brought into the government are all close Karzai
allies. Zahir Shah has no formal position beyond the ceremonial title of
“Father of the Nation”.
The outspoken interim minister of women's affairs, Sima Samar, was not
reappointed. The number of women in the cabinet has been reduced from two
to one.
Karzai also reappointed Fazul Hadi Shinwari as chief justice of the
supreme court. Shinwari made international headlines in January when he
said that the Islamic punishments that were rife under the Taliban, such
as stonings and amputations, would be retained.
While Rashid Dostum and Ismail Khan are not directly represented in
the new government, they have vowed their support. Khan's son was named
minister of aviation and tourism.
“Afghanistan's warlords are stronger today than they were … before the
loya jirga started”, concluded Human Rights Watch's Saman Zia-Zarifi on
June 19.
“The gang leaders of Afghanistan have agreed to let Mr Karzai remain
leader of the next interim government”, wrote respected British Independent
journalist Robert Fisk.
The loya jirga process was far from democratic, contrary to the glowing
reports in most of the mainstream media.
In the weeks before the loya jirga, at least eight candidates were murdered
and others were intimidated. In the regions controlled by Dostum and Ismail
Khan, sustained and severe repression was directed at the Pashtun minority
in an effort to reduce the overall Pashtun representation.
In a report issued on June 6, Human Rights Watch (HRW) warned that warlords
were “brazenly manipulating the loya jirga selection process… independent
candidates [are] being detained or beaten by local commanders intent on
sending their own delegates to the loya jirga. More often, warlords simply
drew up their own lists of delegates and insisted that the local populace
approve them.”
HRW noted that the UN and the Special Independent Commission for the
Emergency Loya Jirga, which was charged with overseeing the selection of
delegates, “often did not have the resources to adequately monitor and
enforce the selection criteria … which were supposed to exclude delegates
who had engaged in human rights abuses, criminal activity and the drug
trade”.
According to a loya jirga commission official who spoke to the June
9 Washington Post, only half the delegates were “real representatives
of the people”. Just 200 of the 1501 official delegates were women.
When the loya jirga finally got underway, virtually every warlord in
the country was seated in the giant tent in the grounds of the Kabul university
football field.
According to Ahmed Rashid, writing in the June 27 Far Eastern Economic
Review, the warlords' presence was facilitated by a last-minute decision,
made under pressure from Karzai and “Western diplomats”, to admit all 32
provincial governors and “an undisclosed number of major and minor warlords,
all of whom had been kept out of elections according to the rules”.
The meeting was also flooded with around 200 extra “delegates”, including
warlord stooges and security police beholden to the powerful Panjshiri
faction. Critical delegates, especially the women, were intimidated. Sima
Samar was threatened with death by reactionary Islamists who declared her
“Afghanistan's Salman Rushdie”.
“Who are these other people? Why are they here? The [loya jirga] commissioner
has not explained who they are. All the governors are here, the warlords
are here. Who chose them?”, asked one exasperated delegate.
From Green Left Weekly, July 3, 2002.
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