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War is omnipresent. An intrinsic thread running through the
fabric of Afghan life for a quarter century, it is manifest in ravaged
urban landscapes, in the ubiquitous Kalashnikovs weilded by man
and child alike, in the seemingly indifferent shrug of shoulders
as another deafening explosion rents the quiet of a juma namaaz.
In the country's spiritual epicentre, Kandahar, the history of Afghanistan's
endless wars is written not in textbooks, but etched in rock faces
and splattered on the walls of the few structures that have survived
the successive holocausts visited upon the blighted nation.
It is the eve of King Zahir Shah's return to the country he unceremoniously
exited 29 years ago. We are guests of Pir Sayed Ismail Gailani,
a scion of the Gailani family of Sufi mystics who claim descent
from Prophet Mohammed (PBUH).
In post-Taliban Kandahar, where the here and now is an infinitely
more pressing concern than the hereafter, it helps that Ismail's
temporal credentials are as distinguished as his spiritual ones.
A former commander of the mujahideen forces battling the Soviet
Invaders in the '80s, he is now the chief of the peacekeeping force
of South West Afghanistan.
Ismail receives us at Quetta airport and we proceed to Kandahar
early the following day. For the uninitiated, the trip is, from
inception, a surreal experience, not least because of the area's
topography - a study in contrasts.
The drive from Quetta to Kandahar is a roller coaster ride. From
the plains (Quetta is ringed by hills, but flat itself) we suddenly
ascend to craggy, barren mountains, negotiating the steep climbs,
descents and hairpin curves of which would be a test of mettle in
any circumstance, but becomes an act of courage when driving on
a crowded, narrow road, perilously slippery after a day's downpour,
and terrifying because of the 'anything goes' driving ethics of
those plying the track.
From the border at Chaman, we travel in relative ease for a while
on a carpeted road built by the Americans over 50 years ago, which
has withstood the test of time. Suddenly, with no warning, the road
ends - a legacy of allied bombs - and we are careening on unimaginably
rough terrain. The landscape provides a diversion. Every few hundred
yards brings a changing vista. Seemingly out of nowhere, fringing
our track, appear small clusters of hills. There are mounds of red
earth one moment, smooth mushroom-shaped rocks fused into hillocks
a hundred yards later, and barely a few miles down, soft mud hills
intersected at regular intervals by neat, concentric lines. Moonscape
gives way to Mckenna's Gold as another range of grey forbidding
stone hills suddenly appear further up, only to descend just as
quickly into flat terrain once again. Nature here it seems, is as
quirky as the vacillating fortunes of this land.
After a gruelling six-hour journey, we arrive in Kandahar, and venture
forth almost immediately - a fierce-looking band of armed war veterans,
our "peacekeeping" bodyguards, following at close quarters.
I am prepared for devastation, but perhaps nothing quite readies
one for what appears to be the systematic obliteration of a civilisation.
A drive through the city, once a commercial hub, is a chronicle
of Afghanistan's endless war. In a playing field in the centre of
what must once have been an affluent neighbourhood, nestles a Soviet
tank, left where it was abandoned two decades ago, not as a relic
of war, but an irrelevant detail to be attended to in the absence
of more urgent preoccupations.
Another tank captured by the mujahideen sits alongside a main road
by the airport. We stop to photograph it - even as two huge explosions
jolt the area. We scramble for cover and speculate about the nature
of the blasts. "Probably mines going off," says Ismail
casually, a reasonable surmise given the thousands that lie like
ticking time bombs across the length and breadth of the country.
Later we learn there has been an "incident" involving
some members of the Taliban resistance and American forces - some
2500 of whom are now encamped at the Kandahar airport, a no-go area
for locals and foreigners.
Along the same road lies a downed Soviet aircraft, a symbol of another
mujahideen victory. It too remains at the original site of the crash,
almost like a sculptural installation dedicated to that conflict.
As we wind our way through the dusty streets of Kandahar, the story
of another war unfolds - the war within. In the anarchy that followed
the Soviet withdrawal and Najib's ouster, Kandahar like the rest
of the country became the stage for one of the bloodiest civil wars
of modern history. The fratricidal conflict is recorded in every
brick.
There is not one structure in the city that remains unscarred. Concrete
is pocked with shrapnel and bullet marks. Entire neighbourhoods
of traditional adobe-style homes have crumbled into little more
than heaps of mud and debris, their remnants looking much like the
ruins of some ancient civilisation.
In some ways the analogy is tragically apt. The country now exists
largely in a harsh medieval past. Once metalled roads have been
reduced to rubble, electricity is not everyman's lot, and education
is a distant memory. And into this time-warp have descended the
US-led forces in their stealth bombers and B-52s with their smart
bombs and daisy cutters, their high-tech combat machinery.
Kandahar has been a major target of the allied offensive: it was
home to the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, and one of his regime's
most important bases.
The allies' arrival took care of the precious little that was left
in the city. The multi-storeyed Hotel Kandahar, its only four star
hotel, was just one of the allied air blitzs' casualties. Targeted
and random bombing has reduced residential and office buildings
along the city's main thoroughfare to piles of rubble strewn with
shards of glass; bridges said to have been sheltering Taliban forces
have been destroyed beyond repair, and craters have transformed
areas that were once flat into into an undulating landscape.
Yet, even amid this wide-scale devastation, there is an apparent
calm. We stroll through the bazaars of the city, three women, minus
burqas or hijaabs, with merely dupattas covering our heads. We attract
crowds which are sometimes unnerving, but I detect only curiosity,
not hostility.
The cloth bazaar, located behind the governor's house, separated
by a street and endless sandbags piled around the boundary wall
of the official residence - a token attempt at security - is small
and cheerful, its few shops well stocked, manned by eager salesman.
But there are no buyers. I pause to take photographs. I am instantly
surrounded by children asking to have their pictures taken. A flash
goes off somewhere. I find I too am being photographed by a shopkeeper,
who whips out a small instamatic when he sees mine.
The wares at the gold bazaar - a long row of tiny cubbyholes - comprise
identical signet rings and earrings made from Persian coins hailing
back to the Shah's era. I buy a ring despite misgivings about the
emperor's countenance engraved on the coin - only to discover from
the unsightly green band around my finger a few hours later that
the gold is actually brass!
A few shops still stock Afghanistan's pride: carpets. Sifting through
piles of kilims - of which Karachi and Islamabad's itwar bazaar
have no dearth and more variety - we unearth a few treasures. The
rest, like the industry itself, are long gone.
In the open, oblivious to any consideration for hygiene, are stacked
or hung the traditional naans that are the Afghans' staple for breakfast,
lunch and dinner. And on stalls and carts are heaped mounds of saffron
and chilli powder - their vibrant colours breaking the monotony
of the grey and brown tones that make up Kandahar's colour palette
today.
Most thriving perhaps, is the city's electronics market; row upon
row of shops selling cassette recorders and tapes of Indian and
local Afghan music from before the Talibans' advent, blenders, juicers,
etc. Clearly, music is back again, even if we hear none on the streets.
And then there are the auto showrooms, most of them essentially
open-air car lots. Everyone who isn't a pedestrian in Kandahar drives
a vehicle, and the vehicles of choice are Twin Cabins, Land Cruisers,
Pajeros, or Toyotas and Hondas. On Kandahar's battered streets the
state-of the-art autos strike an incongruous note.
In a shattered economy I wonder where the money is coming from to
purchase what are essentially luxury items and where they are brought
in from. Could these be the thousands of vehicles regularly stolen
from assorted cities of Pakistan which, given the virtually nonexistent
recovery rate, seem to disappear into a black hole? Certainly, most
other items in local bazaars, including fruit, are brought in from
Pakistan. Perhaps fittingly then, all transactions are conducted
in Pak rupees - the currency commonly in use in Afghanistan.
Although the marketplaces appear crowded, Kandahar's population,
like the rest of the country's, is sparse. While the current Afghan
population is estimated at 25 million, only seven to eight million
are actually in Afghanistan - surely one of history's largest diasporas.
We see gaggles of beautiful children, boys and a few girls, out
on the streets, and endless men, virtually all exceptionally handsome
specimens who appear to have stepped out of a Kipling novel. By
contrast, women are conspicuous by their absence.
Apart from a few Kuchis (gypsies) who are traditionally not purdah-observing,
the handful of women visible on the streets don the Taliban uniform
designated for females: the blue shuttlecock burqa. Only the fleeting
glimpse of a beringed hand with manicured, painted nails that escapes
the confines of the burqa as a woman reaches out for her child in
the bazaar, indicates a life behind the veil.
Clearly, the Taliban legacy lingers. While Pashtun society is traditionally
conservative, with large sections of women observing purdah long
before the ascent of the Taliban, the veil was not mandatory attire
imposed by official fiat. One of the first steps the Taliban took
when they assumed power was to make the burqa compulsory, and in
the years since, it has become part of the national dress, almost
embedded, it seems, in the nation's psyche. Perhaps it stems from
fear - and with good reason: the day we left Kandahar, a female,
teacher in one of the newly reopened girls schools sustained severe
burns when she had acid thrown on her by a disgruntled supporter
of the Taliban ideology. It was a chilling reminder that the danger
is far from of over for both, proponents and practitioners of female
education and women in the workplace.
In fact, there are few educational institutions in the city. The
literacy level, even among males, is abysmal, since most educated
Afghans have long fled the country, and academia, if not altogether
disdained as in the Taliban years, remained low on the priority
chart of even the governments' preceding it.
We see a few primary schools, a 'women's welfare centre,' and there
is talk of the Kandahar University being reopened. But talk comes
cheap. While restoration work is underway at the mausoleums of long
past Afghan kings which have miraculously survived the country's
repeated cycles of violence, there are no overt signs that work
has been initiated to repair the city's collapsed infrastructure.
Everything, it seems, is on hold until the loya jirga scheduled
for June 20, which is to determine the country's future.
Certainly, it is a historic moment: the homecoming of a man after
three decades on whom the hopes of a nation are said to be pinned.
One would expect that almost exclusively Pashtun Kandahar would
be jubilant at the prospect of the return to the political foreground
of one of their kin in a land riven as much by ethnic factionalism
as by foreign invasion.
But there is no euphoria. In fact, not even anticipation, less expectations.
"'Peace is elusive; we pray the king will restore harmony,
but no one is holding their breath," says a young shopkeeper
to whom the king is an unknown commodity. Some express outright
cynicism. An old man scoffs at the talk now in currency of the 'good
old days.' "The king remained in his ivory tower, his subjects
struggled to survive. Thirty years in a foreign country later, is
he better equipped to deal with a land as ravaged as this, a people
as divided as we?" he asks.
But there are enough royalists - or maybe just Pashtuns (75 per
cent of the population) who hope the king's presence and the proposed
loya jirga will restore some ethnic balance in the corridors of
power.
For most Kandaharis, the current set-up is untenable. While the
Taliban are clearly their chief nemesis - "those were our darkest
days," says a vendor; a refrain echoed by many - the Northern
Alliance also features high on their hate-list.
In fact, the alliance has actually been whittled down to the Panjsheri
group, at the helm of which is the triumverate of Abdullah, Qanooni
and Fahim, who have divided between them the key ministries: defence,
interior and foreign affairs. They are viewed with suspicion, if
not outright hostility. While Karzai is generally tolerated (even
said to be a "decent man"), no one is under any illusion
about his independence. He is seen as the "Americans' man,"
and simultaneously, as "under the Panjsheris' influence."
While the former equation appears acceptable for the time being,
the latter is not.
There are dichotomous views about the United States - sometimes
harboured by the same people. While in Kandahar there appears to
be a consensus that by virtue of ridding them of the Taliban the
Americans have done the Afghans a yeoman service - and the promise
of American greenbacks is not an unwelcome prospect either - there
is unspoken anger about the indiscriminate bombing by the allied
forces, and a growing skepticism about the US' staying power, not
altogether unjustified given the history.
Among the virtually homogenously Pashtun populace of Kandahar, Pakistan
is viewed with less animus than in other parts of the country. There
is tacit recognition of the sanctuary Pakistan has provided to the
more than three million largely Pashtun Afghan refugees for more
than two decades. Additionally, with the porus Chaman border and
a business community entirely dependent on Pakistan for goods to
trade, cross border traffic is routine. Sentiments about the ISI
are an altogether different story. The agency is reviled as the
root cause of many of Afghanistan's travails.
While a semblance of normality has crept into life in Kandahar,
there is not an all-pervasive sense of peace. Ostensibly the recent
deweaponisation drive has succeeded in disarming the majority, but
a permanent farewell to arms seems unlikely. As an American soldier
of the 101st Airborne division who was recently transferred to the
Bagram air base from Kandahar put it: "You can't move in Kandahar
without something being shot at you. This is a lot more relaxing."
In fact, implicit is the feeling that below the surface lie dangerous
undercurrents, that could if disturbed, result in dramatic, even
violent changes. But change is an integral part of life in the shifting
sands of Kandahar's turbulent socio-political landscape.
The citizens of Kandahar are prepared for any eventuality. Their
resilience is as remarkable as their fatalism. It is perhaps the
latter that accounts for their unstinting generosity of spirit,
their amazing dignity in the face of adversity, and that which allows
them to savour the moment. And for the present, given their uncertain
future, the moment is all they have.
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