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Any
discussion of Afghanistan often evokes contrasting images. Travels
in the rugged country reveals an ancient and diverse land, the understanding
of which will remain elusive for many, despite the media focus the
country has attracted over the past three years.
As
our small UN plane started its descent to the Kabul airport, things
on the ground started to acquire a tangible shape. Signs of life
began to appear as vehicular traffic became visible on the roads
and the glass panes of grey concrete buildings towering above clusters
of mud houses reflected the bright sunlight of that wintry day in
February 2002, one month after the collapse of the Taliban.
The building of Kabul's international airport, called Khwaja
Rawash, had no windowpanes, and the cold wind from the snow-capped
peaks of the Koh-e Baba Mountains made a whistling sound as it passed
through its corridors. Inside the arrival lounge strutted the newly
victorious soldiers of the Northern Alliance, visibly brimming with
confidence. After filling out a short arrival form, all passengers
on our plane were allowed into the 'new Afghanistan.' Interestingly,
none of us had visas - none were being issued at the time.
What
struck me instantly were the people: writ large on the face of each
Afghan was a story of misery and suffering. Although this city of
one-and-a-half million inhabitants had suffered one of the most
devastating conflicts of modern times and most of western Kabul
lay in ruins as only pock-marked ruins remained of block after block
of the once modern suburbs, during the daylight hours Kabul had
the semblance of a normal city - life went on just like anywhere
else, in offices, restaurants, bazaars and homes. But a night-time
curfew, from 9 pm onwards, turned it into a ghost town. That winter
the Afghan capital smelt of diesel as the fuel provided the only
protection against the bitter winter cold for those who could afford
the costs.
A
few days after we got there, the newly installed administration
of President Hamid Karzai received its first major blow: its aviation
minister, Abdul Rehman was stabbed to death, allegedly by a mob
of angry prospective Hajj pilgrims agitating because of delays in
their flights. That evening in a press conference Karzai named a
few high-ranking Panjshiri officials for their alleged involvement
in Rehman's murder. However, no arrests were ever made and the assassination
still remains unsolved. The next evening Kabul television showed
pictures of a gloomy Karzai surrounded by his cabinet at Rehman's
funeral. It was a wet February day. A close-up of Karzai's face
showed a man aware of the heavy responsibility he now shouldered,
but determined to overcome. "We are all waiting for our turn.
Who is next is a guessing game," one sombre minister from the
Rome group loyal to the former King Zahir Shah that shared power
with the Northern Alliance told me.
A
month later we were in Kandahar, Afghanistan's spiritual epicentre
and home to Taliban Supreme Commander Mullah Omar. A dust storm
greeted us on landing. Here too were destroyed buildings, widespread
devastation - signs of an intense US bombing campaign that eventually
forced the hardline Taliban to abandon their erstwhile administrative
and military capital.
Although
Kandahar was the first city to lift the night-time curfew, the situation
was far from stable. The Taliban had been replaced by countless
gunmen whose presence terrified the ordinary people as much as their
predecessors. Nonetheless, in a turn of events that would have been
unheard of just a few months earlier, numerous shops had sprung
up, selling long banned music cassettes and movie CDs. A few video
game shops had also started operating, but Kandahar's local radio
and television stations seemed to be forums solely aimed at projecting
the image of local strongman and governor, Gul Agha Sherzai. A welcome
observation was that before the school year had begun in most of
Afghanistan, uniformed schoolchildren, most of them carrying UNICEF
bags, had started going to school in the dusty city.
The southwestern region surrounding Kandahar was home to an acute
humanitarian crisis. Thousands of displaced people, most of them
nomads or kuchis and farmers who had fled their villages after losing
their livelihoods due to a three-year regional drought or because
of the fear of American bombs, were gathered in numerous camps in
Spin Boldak close to the Pakistan-Afghanistan border crossing of
Chaman. The squalor was heart-wrenching. To compound the problem,
daily the already over-crowded camps were receiving fresh arrivals,
most of these ethnic Pashtuns fleeing marauding anti-Taliban militias
in northern Afghanistan bent on vengeance for past Taliban atrocities.
I
interviewed an elderly nomad woman from Ghazni. When I positioned
my camera to take her photograph, she said archly, "Where were
you when I was young?" A remarkable sense of humour given the
distressing circumstances. I will never forget her toothless smile.
The summer of 2002 was
humming with political activity in Kabul as 1,500 Afghan men and
women gathered in a white Bavarian beer tent to hold the historic
Emergency Loya Jirga or grand council. The site had more security
than I had ever witnessed anywhere. Inside the huge air-conditioned
tent Central Asia mingled with South Asia as turbanned Pashtun tribesman
from southeastern Afghanistan sat next to ethnic Uzbeks wearing
colourful cloaks called 'chopan.' Most of the sessions I attended
were chaotic, with each speaker trying to get a word in edgeways
and communicate his/her sentiments to fellow countrymen with whom
they had never before communicated. In fact, most of them had seen
each other only through the barrel of a gun for the preceding two
decades.
For most Afghans the event set the pattern for Afghan politics for
the immediate future. Many warlords retained their fiefdoms and
once again the newly elected Afghan President, Hamid Karzai had
to lead a warlord cabinet. Hopes for re-establishing a Muhammadzai
monarchy were dashed when the US vetoed the ascent to the throne
of Zahir Shah, who was awarded a symbolic "father of the nation"
status. In the course of the exercise, it became increasingly clear
that the American quench for hunting "terrorists" surpassed
their desire to help Afghanistan gain stability and get down to
serious nation-building.
In August of that year I went to the western Afghan city of Herat.
At least 3,000 years old, the city is one of the most historic places
in the entire region. The historic Masjid-i-Jamia (Friday Mosque),
the fort of Ikhtiar Baig, the four minarets of a madrassa and numerous
mausoleums dotting the desert city are diminishing souvenirs of
the Taimurid period of the 14th and 15th centuries.
This historic city was now home to a large number of displaced persons
from across the country. Maslakh, literally meaning a slaughterhouse,
was the largest among the five displacement camps and was housing
between 65,000 to 200,000 people, the estimate depending on which
aid agency you talked to. The most common lament heard in the camp
was of hunger: everybody complained about the meagre amount of bread
they were receiving. One elderly herdsman told me about how he had
sold his last two goats to pay for the journey to Maslakh, only
to find more misery.
The most remarkable road journey I ever made in Afghanistan was
from Kabul to the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif across the Salang
Pass in the spring of 2003. This 350 km long road was one of the
major infrastructure projects the Soviets undertook in the 1960s.
Just the tunnels and galleries and the road across the Salang Pass
cost 638 million USD. The longest tunnel is three kilometres long,
and at a height of 11,100 feet above sea level is one of the world's
highest. Surprisingly, although the late Afghan resistance leader,
Ahmed Shah Massoud blew up its northern entrance in 1996 to halt
the advancing Taliban, and despite years of profound devastation,
the tunnel remains largely intact.
Mazar-e Sharif's skyline is defined by the blue tiled tomb of Hazrat
Ali's shrine, which virtually lies in the centre of the city. It
is home to thousands of white pigeons fed by visiting pilgrims.
Every spring the place hosts a special festival when a flag is raised
to mark the beginning of the new Afghan year. Ever since the fall
of the Taliban, the city has witnessed bitter rivalry between ethnic
Uzbek warlord, General Rashid Dostum, and Ustad Muhammad Atta. The
city was virtually divided into rival zones of influence as warring
groups controlled different departments and manned two fully armed
military corps. Several visits to the Dostum-controlled "foreign
office directorate" for an interview did not bear any fruit,
despite repeated promises by his spokesman, Faizullah Zaki. On the
other hand, Atta's political deputy, Zalmay Yunusi, politely answered
all the questions I shot at him, including the hard ones about mass
graves and human rights abuses.
In the winter of 2003, I finally ventured into Gardez, the capital
of the southeastern Paktia province. In the past all such attempts
had to be aborted because of a deteriorating security situation.
To my surprise, Gardez was a calm town where life was made difficult
more by sub zero temperatures than insecurity. With a new police
chief and a forthright governor who displayed stickers in his office
denouncing bribery, the town was one of the first success stories
where warlord rule had been firmly put to an end.
That same winter political jockeying during the Constitutional Loya
Jirga in Kabul engendered passionate debates about the country's
future shape. Again diverse Afghan ethnic groups, tribes and political
ideologues agreed and differed over key social, political and economic
issues. After three weeks of heated debates, 500 Loya Jirga delegates
reached a historical consensus giving Afghanistan one of the most
progressive constitutions in the Muslim world.
Nobody can truly claim to have seen Afghanistan unless they have
visited the magnificent Bamiyan in the central Afghan highlands.
Now inhabited by mostly poor ethnic Hazara farmers, the town straddled
the ancient route from Balkh to Taxila. The two spectacular sandstone
Buddha statues that defined Bamiyan for nearly 16 centuries were
destroyed by the Taliban in 2001, but the empty nichés that
housed them still attract attention.
Afghanistan has changed significantly over the past three years.
During visits to Kandahar and Herat last summer, I discovered that
finally some reconstruction was being carried out. With carpeted
roads, round-the-clock electricity, booming regional trade, functioning
health and education facilities, Herat is the most liveable town
in Afghanistan today. Although during my last visit the ancient
city was ruled by Ismail Khan who had banned all female singers
on radio and television, the international media had been reporting
on the return of freedom to the region after Khan was replaced by
a Karzai-appointed governor.
Afghan resilience is legendary and I discovered it everywhere.
Dr Naz Dana Paktiawala who ran the lone maternity clinic in Gardez
survived through two decades of turmoil, revolutions and invasions.
"We are a strange people, if pushed to violence we can make
the world wail. However, if our energies are harnessed into something
positive we can work wonders," she said. I hope the world listens
to her message.
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