8 Years Later, No Democracy in Afghanistan

By Elizabeth DiNovella, October 7, 2009

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It has now been eight years since the U.S. invaded Afghanistan with the promise of building a democratic state and liberating women. The invasion has failed on both counts.

Malalai Joya is one of Afghanistan’s leading democracy activists. Joya, the youngest person ever elected to its parliament, was suspended in 2007 for her denunciation of warlords and their cronies in government.

“Rather than democracy, what we have in Afghanistan are backroom deals among discredited warlords who are sworn enemies of democracy and justice,” she writes on her website.

Joya became an international figure in 2003 after she fearlessly confronted the Grand Council of tribal leaders in a constitutional assembly.

“Why would you allow criminals to be present at this Loya Jirga?” she said. “They are warlords responsible for our country’s situation. They oppress women and have ruined our country. They should be prosecuted.”

The Progressive had the opportunity to interview Joya for our radio show back in 2006. Her quiet resolve in the face of death threats touched us deeply.

We profiled her courage in a June 2007 article by Matt Pascarella, “The Bravest Woman in Afghanistan.”

Here’s an excerpt:

“Ironically, Joya’s mission to take on the warlords and the drug lords, to promote democracy and women’s rights, appears to echo the rhetoric of the Bush Administration. And yet, according to Joya, rather than live up to that rhetoric, the U.S. government is actively supporting high-ranking officials who have been accused of corruption, drug trafficking, and war crimes, including mass murders. Several of these are in the cabinet of Hamid Karzai.”

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Joya let us publish an adaption of her speech she gave at the Global Forum on Freedom of Expression, held in Oslo, Norway, June 1-6, 2009.

She predicted that the Afghan elections, held in August, would be a joke.

“Afghanistan has a presidential election scheduled soon, but everyone knows that the election is a show that is throwing dust in the eyes of our people. The actual choice is with the White House to select its next puppet in Afghanistan and give him legitimacy through this show,” she said two months before the fraudulent elections.

“But we Afghans know that despite international condemnation by human rights organizations and protests by Afghan people, Karzai will be the next president with the two criminals as his vice presidents.”

President Barack Obama, who ran on an anti-Iraq War platform, needs to stop this war, too. He needs to listen to people such as Joya.

“It is due to the wrong and devastating policies of the U.S. government and NATO countries,” she said, “that unfortunately today Afghanistan is a mafia state and ranked at the top of the most unstable and corrupt countries in the world.”

Comments

Viewing the information on the recent elections in Afghanistan, it seems a cruel joke. What are the guarantees of transparency and cleanliness? What assurances do we have that Afghan citizens understand and are aware of their vote? Where the money goes to aid, why in the electoral lists and in government, there is supposed to DEMOCRATIC warlords?

I had planned this entry when I come across this post by Mikel Buesa, quoting Paul Collier and his book War in the club of misery, which apparently demonstrates that implantation of democracy in these countries is very poor lead to more violence, insecurity and poverty for its inhabitants. Just the opposite of the doctrine of the Alliance of Civilizations ....

I do not think it is just an effect related to poverty. You'll have to see also the existence of a state prior vertebrate (which does not occur in any of the current outbreaks of war), with the rate of literacy and culture itself. The conclusion is the same: Is this why we send our young soldiers to die?

I think the UN should take the government seriously consider these areas, and at least take the reins directly with education and health in those countries. Until you take command posts a new generation raised on other principles is not possible change in these countries.

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Submitted by jack34 on Thu, 10/08/2009 - 10:35pm.

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