Subject: Afghanistan's Coming Humanitarian Disaster


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Afghanistan's Coming Humanitarian Disaster
Tamara Straus,  <http://www.alternet.org/> AlterNet
October 12, 2001

As the U.S. bombing campaign of Afghanistan enters its first week, the
humanitarian crisis that aid groups have been warning against seems
inevitable. According to Russia's Interfax News Agency, which was among
the few news organizations to report actual numbers of refugees on
Thursday night, 350,000 people have amassed in the northern Panjsher
Gorge and over 150,000 in the provinces of Tahor and Badakhshan. There
was no information available about the likely larger number of refugees
on the Afghan-Pakistan border.



"People are fleeing their homes, while the humanitarian organizations
have ceased activities everywhere but the northern parts of the country
because of the air strikes," said the Northern Alliance's Public
Relations Minister Dr. Kanuni.



Since Oct. 9, the U.N. refugee agency has been forced to halt work at
six planned refugee camps on the Pakistan border because of opposition
from Afghan tribal groups. U.N. officials have said that more than a
million Afghans may flee their country in the coming weeks if the U.S.
attacks continue and serious fighting breaks out, with 1.5 million
risking death by starvation this winter. Pakistan already shelters more
than 2 million Afghan refugees and Pakistani officials have stated they
do not want refugees in their urban areas.



On Oct. 10 members of the U.S. Senate foreign relations committee heard
testimonies from representatives of humanitarian groups, who questioned
the effectiveness of the daily air drops of 37,000 food packets,
especially given that they will be used by tribal groups, now struggling
for prominence in the political vacuum caused by the war, to manipulate
civilians' alliances rather than to prevent hunger.



The food drops "appear to be intended more to send a political message
to the Afghan people and to the Muslim world than to reach large numbers
of people at risk of starvation," said Kenneth Bacon, a former Pentagon
spokesman who now heads up Refugees International. Other aid workers
have pointed out that 37,000 food packets are an incredibly small number
considering the masses of people going hungry in Afghanistan.



However government aid groups have stated the deliveries may grow and
are aimed at saving lives. "When you're feeding people, you're making a
statement," said Andrew Natsios, an administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development. "I don't think that's bad, I think that's
good ... We want to send a message."



One of the questions humanitarian aid workers are asking is, should mass
starvation come, and should Afghanistan be depleted of almost all
resources as a result of the war, will the U.S. spend the billions of
dollars necessary to prevent a long-term humanitarian crisis. Delaware
Senator Joseph Biden, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, has argued the U.S. should, and has criticized the Bush
administration's previous pledge of $320 million in humanitarian aid as
insufficient. British Prime Minister Tony Blair has been urging the Bush
administration to rethink its statement that it "will not be involved in
nation building" in Afghanistan.



And indeed, in an Oct. 11 news conference President Bush retreated from
his previous position, stating the U.S. would be involved in Afghanistan
after the ousting of the Taliban and would work with the U.N. "to take
over the 'nation building'" for the "stabilization of a future
government." Bush even urged American children to send a dollar to the
White House to help rebuild Afghanistan.



Zieba Shorish-Shamley, director of the Women's Alliance for Peace and
Human Rights in Afghanistan, praised Bush's promise to help rebuild
Afghanistan and work with the U.N, though she said she has heard such
promises before. "No government should be imposed on the Afghan people,"
said Shorish-Shamley. "If the nation of Afghanistan is ever to extricate
itself from the current chaos, an interim government must be formed that
includes representatives from all 23 tribal groups, the participation of
women and bona fide oversight from the United Nations, followed by
democratic elections."



Given the U.S government's policy record in Afghanistan, Shorish-Shamley
is certain a democracy cannot be formed only with U.S. assistance. "What
the U.S. government created during the Cold War and afterwards in
Afghanistan was the seeds for permanent violence. It spent billions of
dollars on arms and training of the very soldiers who have become
terrorists."



Shorish-Shamley adds that the greatest challenge for peace and democracy
in Afghanistan is to remove the influence of governments that have
created warring factions in the post-civil war era. "After 1989, the
U.S. totally dropped Afghanistan, providing no help for reconstruction,"
she said. "That's when Iran, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and
practically all Afghanistan's neighboring countries moved in, making it
impossible for a coalition government to come about and securing the
rise of the ruthless Taliban."



Shorish-Shamley also believes that the Afghan people will not accept a
puppet regime forced into power by any diplomatic initiative. "People in
Afghanistan may not be educated in the formal sense, but after over two
dozen years of war and rule by fear they will not abide another
foreign-imposed government." Shorish-Shamley argues that the
participation of Afghan women in a coalition government should be
primary in any U.S. or U.N. diplomacy. "Women are the majority
population in Afghanistan," she said. "They have been living in terror
and the protection of their rights must be part the deal."



It is impossible to know the outcome of the current bombing campaign in
Afghanistan. Taliban military targets are running out. The U.S.
government, for the moment, is reluctant to put air strikes behind the
Northern Alliance forces outside Kabul to allow them to overrun the
city. The Taliban may never be able to deliver Osama bin Laden to the
U.S. government, a stipulation of ending the war.



What is clear is that millions of Afghan civilians may die over the next
few months. Shorish-Shamley reports there are 300,000 pregnant women in
Afghanistan with no access to medical care. One out of four children
born in Afghanistan today die within the first few days of their life.
"If you could think of a worst nightmare, this is it," said
Shorish-Shamley. "Food drops don't hurt, but they don't really help."



Tamara Straus is senior editor of AlterNet.org.  AlterNet
<http://www.alternet.org/images/a_tiny.gif>


 <http://www.alternet.org/print.html?StoryID=11704>


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