WOMEN'S RIGHTS activist and former member of Afghanistan's parliament
Malalai Joya is fearless. She has stopped at nothing to raise her voice
against the dual enemies of freedom and women's equality in her country: the
misogyny of Afghan warlords and the brutal U.S./NATO occupation.

She has been suspended from the Afghan parliament after using her position
there to campaign for women's rights. Joya's life is threatened because of
her work, and she has survived five assassination attempts.

But now that Joya is scheduled to speak about the state of Afghanistan and
call for the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO forces from her country in a
speaking tour across the U.S., there is only one thing stopping her. It's
not Afghan warlords, the Taliban or Hamid Karzai's government--it's the
Obama administration.

Joya's visa for entry to the U.S. was denied on March 15, a week before her
speaking tour was to begin. Officials at the U.S. Embassy claim they turned
down Joya's visa because she is "unemployed" and "underground."

That any former member of parliament would be treated with such disrespect
is striking. But there is a particular injustice in using such labels
against Joya. For what it's worth, Joya is a renowned author whose
publisher, Simon and Schuster, is involved with the tour as a means of
promoting her book. In other words, Joya is not unemployed.

Moreover, "[t]he reason Joya lives underground is because she faces the
constant threat of death for having had the courage to speak up for women's
rights," says Sonali Kolhatkar of the Afghan Women's Mission, a U.S.-based
organization that has hosted Joya for speaking tours in the past and is a
sponsor of this year's tour. "It's obscene that the U.S. government would
deny her entry."

The denial of a visa for Malalai Joya is meant to prevent her views from
being heard. Hers is a case of what the American Civil Liberties Union calls
"ideological exclusion," the prevention of perspectives that are critical of
the U.S. government, from reaching audiences in the U.S.

The hypocrisy of the supposedly liberal Obama administration taking the
draconian action of preventing a women's rights activist from Afghanistan
from voicing her opinion on the state of women in her country today is not
lost on many observers.

"I understand why Afghan rulers--both Taliban and Karzai government
leaders--are afraid of Malalai Joya," wrote *Boston Globe* blogger Carol
Rose in a March 20 op-ed. "She is an outspoken and fearless defender of
human rights and has been critical of both sides in that civil war. She
established and ran secret schools dedicated to educating and empowering
girls...But why would Secretary of State Clinton, herself an outspoken
defender of women's rights, refuse to let Ms. Joya meet and talk with
Americans?"

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

UNFORTUNATELY, JOYA'S is not the only voice that the Obama administration is
trying to silence. "In less than a year we've seen the increasingly inhumane
treatment of Bradley Manning, which Obama deemed 'appropriate,'" points out
Sarah Macareg of the left-wing publisher Haymarket Books, one of the
sponsors of Joya's tour.

Macareg is referring to the U.S. Army soldier accused of leaking classified
documents to the whistle-blowing organization WikiLeaks.

"The FBI raiding homes and issuing subpoenas to Palestine solidarity
activists, and three cases of inexplicable visa delays for Palestinian
photojournalist Mohammed Omer, BDS leader Omar Barghouti and now Malalai
Joya. It's difficult to not view all of this cumulatively, as a policy of
attempting to silence these voices and thereby some of our most important
forms of solidarity and dissent," said Macareg.

In other words, the government is cracking down on anyone who challenges
what the U.S. does abroad--especially those with first-hand experience of
U.S. crimes. The squelching of dissent is reminiscent of the Bush years, and
in some ways worse.

As Anthony Arnove, an editor for Haymarket, points out, "Joya was able to
travel to the U.S. and speak here under President Bush, but now faces
ideological exclusion under President Obama, who campaigned on changing
Bush-era policies that antagonized the world."

A week after Malalai Joya's visa was denied, the German publication *Der
Spiegel* published damning and disturbing new evidence of U.S. war crimes in
Afghanistan. The magazine released photos of an Army "kill team" from the
5th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division posing with the bodies of Afghans
whom they had killed.

In the photos, the soldiers make light of the killings. They face
court-martial, not only for desecrating Afghan civilians in their deaths,
but also allegedly faking combat situations to justify their actions. A
soldier in the unit exposed the crimes.

A spokesperson for the Army called the actions of the soldiers "repugnant to
us as human beings and contrary to the standards and values of the United
States Army." But far from being aberrations, the murder of civilians and
torture of people the world over are very much in line with the "standards
of the United States Army."

*Der Spiegel's* revelations are the latest in a line of exposes of war
crimes throughout the "war on terror." These include the notorious photos of
U.S. personnel torturing Iraqis in Abu Ghraib prison and the recent waves of
WikiLeaks releases.

This reality--that crimes against humanity are part of the daily practices
of U.S. imperialism--is exactly what the U.S. government is afraid of people
learning domestically.

This is especially the case for the Obama administration right now, as it
escalates its war with NATO on Afghanistan, maintains a massive military
presence in Iraq despite its rhetoric about withdrawal, bombs Libya in the
name of humanitarian intervention and gives U.S.-backed dictatorships like
Bahrain the green light to slaughter protesters in order to crush the spirit
of revolution sweeping the Middle East and North Africa.

But no matter how many visas it denies, the administration can neither
silence the truth, nor Malalai Joya. Joya is speaking to American audiences
at venues arranged through the tour via Internet video communication. There
is a growing audience of people who want to hear her ideas and discuss how
to end the U.S. imperial adventures abroad, and those discussions are the
urgent ones that we need to have in this country.
http://socialistworker.org/2011/03/24/afraid-of-malalai-joya

-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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