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http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/nov/02/hope-ballot-box-afghanistan-gone

Any hope I had in the ballot box bringing change in Afghanistan is gone

If Karzai's re-election was a fraud, Obama's surge of troops brought 
just more violence. For Afghans he's the 'second Bush'

by Malalai Joya in Kabul

One year ago Hamid Karzai was declared re-elected as president of 
Afghanistan, ending an election that had no legitimacy in the eyes of 
ordinary Afghans. The presidential election last year was a fraud, with 
ballot stuffing, vote buying and massive corruption reported by the 
world's media. Even if the independent election commission had not 
cancelled the planned run-off between Karzai and his main challenger, 
Abdullah Abdullah, it would have represented only a choice of the "same 
donkey with a new saddle". People had no incentive to participate as 
they knew that both main candidates would bring nothing positive for 
Afghan people.

Karzai had lost his popularity way before the 2009 election. This was 
due to the ever increasing corruption of the government, the 
never-ending crimes of the many fundamentalists and warlords in his 
regime, and the financial scandals and corruption of his brothers. In 
Kandahar people even started calling Ahmed Wali Karzai the "little 
Bush", after the hated US president.

The vast majority of Afghans have lost all hope in Karzai. For us his 
words and actions have no value, and that includes his latest "peace 
negotiations" and other measures. Including killers like Mullah Omar and 
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in the government is not about negotiating for 
peace, but completing the decades-old circle of warlordism and 
fundamentalism.

It's important to say that these so-called elections haven't damaged 
Afghanistan as much as the US and its Nato allies have, with their 
bombing and occupation. Wikileaks has exposed some of the truth about 
the civilian toll of this war against the Afghan and Iraqi peoples. 
Afghans hold the US and Nato, and their puppet Karzai, responsible for 
these war crimes. They claim to fight terrorism, but in fact they are 
the biggest terrorists in the eyes of our people because of their crimes 
and brutalities.

Unfortunately the Afghan people are not yet strong enough to drive out 
the US, overthrow the mafia government of Karzai and bring an end to the 
crimes of the Taliban and other fundamentalists. Our history proves that 
this resistance to occupation will continue until we have won our 
freedom. Until both the US and the fundamentalists – of both the 
Northern Alliance and Taliban brands – are driven out of power in 
Afghanistan, we cannot see a bright future. It is now more than five 
years since I was elected to the Afghan parliament. My experience of 
this "democratic process" was to see my microphone cut off, and to be 
threatened with death by other MPs – many of whom teamed up to remove me 
illegally from my seat. My case alone is enough to prove that women's 
rights in Afghanistan have not truly been safeguarded – our situation 
was just invoked to justify the war.

In fact, it's important to remember another document that Wikileaks 
exposed earlier this year: a CIA paper assessing western public opinion 
on the war that recommended using "testimonials by Afghan women" 
expressing fear about a Taliban takeover in the event of Nato pulling 
out. A Time cover story featuring the disfigured Bibi Aisha was a clear 
example of using the plight of women as war propaganda. The headline – 
"What happens if we leave Afghanistan" – could have, or should have, 
been "What happens while we are in Afghanistan", because crimes of 
mutilation, rape and murder against women are commonplace today.

Many warlords and commanders aligned with Nato and Karzai carry out 
their sexist, misogynist crimes with impunity. Time could, for example, 
have done a cover story condemning the law signed by Karzai in 2009 that 
legalised crimes against Shia women, or about the shocking levels of 
women committing suicide by self-immolation.

We had another so-called parliamentary election in September, but I 
chose not to run. Any hope I had for using the ballot box to achieve 
change in Afghanistan is gone. Like last year's presidential vote, 
September's election was full of the buying and selling of votes – one 
province, Paktika, reported a turnout of 626%. This sort of thing is the 
reason elections in Afghanistan long ago became a bad joke.

Tomorrow there is an election in the US, and it is now two years since 
Barack Obama was elected president. His surge of troops has brought only 
a surge of violence, and his expansion of the war into Pakistan has 
claimed many innocent lives. Obama promised "hope" and "change", but 
Afghans have seen only change for the worse. Here he is now seen as a 
"second Bush".

The only change that can make us hopeful about the future is the 
strengthening and expansion of a national anti-fundamentalist and 
democracy-loving movement. Such a movement can be built only by Afghans. 
And while we want the world's support and solidarity, we neither need 
nor want Nato's occupying forces.

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