
Malalai Joya - Afghanistan
Interview with Afghan Feminist
and MP Malalai Joya - part 2
Democracy Now, July 24, 2007
Afghanistan's most outspoken female
lawmaker has been suspended for the rest of her term after she
publicly criticized the Afghan parliament. For years Malalai Joya
has been a leading critic of her government and the U.S. role
in her country. She's faced constant harassment and attempts on
her life for her views.
AMY GOODMAN: Our interview with Afghanistan's
most outspoken female lawmaker. Malalai Joya has been suspended
for the rest of her term after she publicly criticized the Afghan
parliament. For years she's been a leading critic of her government
and the U.S. role in her country. She has faced constant harassment
for her views. The BBC once described her as "the bravest
woman of Afghanistan." She recently joined us in our firehouse
studio and talked about why she came to the United States.
0. MALALAI JOYA: I'm here to leave the
main message for people to the freedom-loving, democratic people
and parties of the US and also human rights defenders here that
place pressure on those policymakers of US, that they have wrong
policies playing in Afghanistan to stop the support of fundamentalist
warlords in Afghanistan, this Northern Alliance who are more risky
than Taliban and they're brother in creed of Taliban.
0.
0. And another main message of our people is this, that please
try to support freedom-loving, democrat people and parties, men
and women in Afghanistan who have no kind of support. And nowadays,
right now, all my life, day by day become more risky. Even one
MP inside of parliament recently said I will put bomb with myself
and kill her and do bomb suicide.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: You mean he would do a suicide bomb inside the
parliament just to kill you?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah. And also I'm changing the houses under
burka. I'm moving, and I can't have [inaudible] --
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: You go from house to house wearing a burka.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah. I can't be only in one house, and even
I can't have office. And four times they did assassination against
me and many more threats like that. Then right now that I'm returning,
I don't know how many more threats I will receive and how many
more assassination they will do, because they are counting day
to kill me. And this is the voice of the voiceless people of Afghanistan.
I'm here to tell you if something happen with me, please do not
-- please try to make -- give up this voice -- do not say nobody
will make it silent, you know, so [inaudible] if they kill me
it's easy for them because they are killing lots of democrat,
freedom-loving, innocent people of Afghanistan. Especially I am
woman, they are against me, but they never can make silence this
voice. This is a powerful voice, because this is the voice of
the suffering men and women of Afghanistan, and they cannot hide
the truth. I am here to telling you please do not forget the men
and women of Afghanistan. Try to support them more in this situation.
We have no kind of support.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: What gives you this strength? Tell me about your
parents?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Right now, I can't live with my parents, even
with my husband and family, because of security reasons, but they
support me, because I am telling the truth, like many other Afghanistan
freedom-loving people around the world. They also support me and
worried about my life, but I understand about the risk, about
the hardships, about all of these problems, and I accept because
of my people, especially women of Afghanistan, who right now even
they don't have human rights and a human life there in Afghanistan.
So if something happen with me, once again, I'm telling you the
responsible will be these Northern Alliance killers. And try to
help us and one day will face them to the national and international
courts, because right now every day for our people it's 11 September,
if they will continue to their policy to support them more.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: You're saying every day for you is a September
11th?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Not for me. I'm a person. For me and for my people.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: For Afghanistan.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, 11 September. And I have many more examples
that a little bit earlier I shared with you, the suffering, the
tragedy in Afghanistan that's going on. But if they continue the
strong policy to support these fundamentalist warlords in Afghanistan,
another 11 September will happen in the world.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: What should the United States do right now?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, for example, right now, our people, they
need moral and material support. First of all, they should stop
the support of these fundamentalist Northern Alliance killers
who are brother in creed of Taliban, and they are in power right
now and they have high positions in Afghanistan. For example,
every crimes that happening, they are saying Taliban did, but
right now in the north of Afghanistan there is no Talib. In Jowzjan
Province, Rashid Dostum is one of the wanted criminal, and also
the governor of this province is Joma Khan Hamdard, a person who
is one of the commander and one of the person of [inaudible] one
of the Northern Alliance killers, a party that leader is Rabani,
who's enjoying in parliament. They're fighting against each other
because of their personal issues, because these black parties,
they are against each other, but they shed the blood of innocent
people in the situation that now they're talking about democracy.
And many more examples that these fundamentalist warlords, they
are more risky than Taliban, because they are in power. And that's
why our people do not support that government and they are getting
distanced from this government and they do something against foreign
troops in Afghanistan, because they become hopeless from the foreign
troops. They support Northern Alliance killers who are friend
of US and enemies of our people, and they are saying we are fighting
against Taliban, who are anti-US, but both of them are enemies
of the people of Afghanistan.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: How will you go back into Afghanistan? Can you
just fly in?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: No, I can't go by airplane. Right now, I can't
come by airplane from Kabul here, because of security reasons.
I came by car to Pakistan under burka, and even I can't talk during
the car. And right now I'm going back to Pakistan from there.
Under burka, I'm going to Afghanistan, because of security reasons.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: Do you travel with armed guards?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: In Afghanistan, yeah, I have six bodyguards,
and the most problem is this: I can't have house and office, that
not only far people, around Afghanistan, they support me, they
are giving me documents. These warlords now they want to face
me to the court. Which kind of court? As you know, there is no
justice in Afghanistan in the court of Afghanistan, and three-fourths
is in the hands of these warlords, but I am happy at least they
don't want to face me to the court as a criminal, as a warlord,
as a person who is anti-woman like [inaudible], Jihadi and Talib.
0.
0. But I am ready to face to a court that will be fair court,
natural court, and there will be international officers and also
human rights defenders, and as a woman I challenge them that I
will face them to the courts, because I trust in my people, and
most of them, they are with me, giving me documents of the crimes
of these criminals. And also freedom-loving people around the
world and the human rights organizations, for example, now Human
Rights Watch supported and they invited me here. They are with
me, and this is the voice of the people and the only voice of
them.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: What are the greatest challenges women face in
Afghanistan now?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: The biggest challenge is this right now security.
Men and women of Afghanistan, both of them, do not have security,
and when we don't have security, how we can talk about democracy,
women rights, human rights? And also another biggest challenges
that non-government -- non-democratic government, because these
Northern Alliance killers, they are in power with the mask of
democracy, and they do crimes against women and men in Afghanistan.
0.
0. And another biggest challenge is education. This is the most
important factor, because women and girls, they wants to go to
school. In this situation, they are going in school and they are
killing. Recently in Logar Province, they killed two students
in a day in a school, and six of them has been in jail. And they
are burning these schools. If women get education, they play their
role very well. For example, now in every parts of Afghanistan,
women under burka, they are going outside that most of them don't
have education, they are doing demonstration in support of me.
For example, if they get education, they will play their role
better and defend their rights, because women rights is not something
that someone gave them. And many more examples like that, that
another important factor in [inaudible] education.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: The effect of the air strikes? The Red Cross just
criticized NATO last week, saying they're not taking enough precautions
to protect civilians. I think on Monday there were seven children
who were bombed.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, yeah. Yeah, recently. Many more examples
like that and many more will happening after that, 'til they do
not change the strong policy. That's why people of Afghanistan
do not support foreign troops. Enemies like Northern Alliance
killers and also Taliban and other al-Qaeda terrorists, even other
countries who are playing a wrong role in Afghanistan, like Iran,
like Pakistan, they have bloody and black hands in Afghanistan,
the posts also they have, so they use from the situation.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: Do you think the US should withdraw?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Here is two ways for the people of Afghanistan
and for US. For example, they -- OK, they destroyed Taliban government,
but unfortunately they brought in power brother in creed of Taliban,
and they in situation tragedy of Afghanistan you are looking that
day by day getting worse for men and women right now. And if they
continue this wrong policy, the situation will be more worse and
even another 11 September will happen, I mention, more.
0.
0. And also here is another way also. If they go, for example,
these troops from Afghanistan, the situation that people of Afghanistan,
they have nothing, and therefore most of monies went in the pockets
of these warlords. And many more problems that they have. Even
Mr. Karzai recently in a meeting --
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: President Karzai.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, President Karzai. He said to people when
had meeting in Shindand Province with them, said that if foreign
troops go out from Afghanistan, once again civil war will start
and fundamentalism will improve. Who are the fundamentalism? They
are those fundamentalism that they made amnesty them. The criminals
forgive themselves inside of parliament. And also there are those
fundamentalism that they made national front that right now Mr.
Karzai have lots of problem with them. Even he is saying in the
back of this national front that these Northern Alliance killers,
they become together as in the hands of foreign countries, means
they are puppet of foreign countries. So why Mr. Karzai do not
make powerless these puppets who are even some of them are advisors
of Mr. Karzai and assistants of Mr. Karzai, like Zia Masood, like
Ismail Khan, like Sarwar Danesh, like Karim Khalili, and many
more other of them. They are enjoying in parliament. Why he do
not make them powerless? Why he has compromise with them? Why
when Human Rights Watch published the name of the criminals that
about 9% of them who are very dangerous and they are in power,
they are Northern Alliance killers, that I said earlier their
names? Why Mr. Karzai refuse this list that people of Afghanistan
want to face them to the court?
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: Will you run for President of Afghanistan?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Right now, I am even not sure about my life,
and I just want to serve our people, especially women of Afghanistan,
who have no kind of life right now, even human life right now.
I am not struggling because of chair, because of position right
now. You are looking -- even they kicked me out from parliament,
and just while I am telling the truth, they threaten me to death
there. If my people they want one day, of course, because of them,
I will be president, but right now, for example, they asked me
to be member of parliament. I'm a member of the parliament because
I was sure when the entire nation is living under the shadow of
gun and warlords, and how we will have democratic election? I'm
there to expose the mask of these fundamentalist warlords in parliament.
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: Do women parliamentarians support you?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Right now, 68 members of the parliament, they
are women, but unfortunately most of them they are like [inaudible],
because even some women, some of these women, they threaten me
to death. And one of them shouted, "Prostitute! I will do
something against you" --
0.
0. AMY GOODMAN: They shouted "prostitute" at you.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: Yeah. "I will do something against you that
no man dare to do." And many more examples like that, they
threaten me to death. They are fundamentalist women, most of them.
These warlords that campaign for them, as they wish they do. Even
they beated me on 7th of May. Also these woman, in my opinion,
they are victims, but we have some democrat women also in parliament,
but, as I said, democrat men and women are very less, that I support
them. They also support me. There together we wanted to work,
and even they beated them also, these fundamentalist warlords,
but they are very less, unfortunately.
0.
AMY GOODMAN: Malalai Joya, suspended by the Afghan parliament
for criticizing the body. She returned to Afghanistan.
***************
Interview with Afghan Feminist
and MP Malalai Joya - part 1
Democracy Now, July 19, 2007
Afghanistan's most outspoken female
lawmaker has been suspended for the rest of her term after she
publicly criticized the Afghan parliament. For years Malalai Joya
has been a leading critic of her government and the U.S. role
in her country. She's faced constant harassment and attempts on
her life for her views.
We turn now to Afghanistan. Afghanistan's
most outspoken female lawmaker has been suspended for the rest
of her term after she publicly criticized the Afghan parliament.
For years Malalai Joya has been a leading critic of her government
and the U.S. role in her country. She's faced constant harassment
for her views.
Malalai has come to the United States
for a screening of a new documentary about her struggle. The film
is called "Enemies of Happiness", premiering at the
Human Rights Watch film festival here in New York. We'll speak
with Malalai in a minute, but first an excerpt. The film begins
in December 2003 at a meeting of Afghanistan's newly elected constitutional
assembly, the loya jirga. A then-unknown twenty-four year old
woman steps to the microphone to deliver a speech that will make
international headlines and draw threats on her life.
0. Enemies of Happiness
0.
That was an excerpt of "Enemies of Happiness", about
the Afghan parliamentarian Malalai Joya. Malalai joins me now
in the firehouse studio.
0. Malalai Joya, suspended Afghan MP
0.
AMY GOODMAN: Afghanistan's most outspoken
female lawmaker has been suspended for the rest of her term after
she publicly criticized the Afghan government. For years, Malalai
Joya has been a leading critic of her parliament and the US role
in her country. She has faced constant harassment for her views.
Malalai has come to the United States
for a screening of a new documentary about her struggle. It's
called Enemies of Happiness, premiering at the Human Rights
Watch Film Festival here in New York. We'll speak with Malalai
Joya in a minute, but first an excerpt. The film begins in December
2003 in a meeting of Afghanistan's newly elected constitutional
assembly, the Loya Jirga. A then-unknown twenty-four-year-old
woman steps to the microphone to deliver a speech that will make
international headlines and draw threats on her life.
0. CHAIRMAN: [translated] What are you
saying?
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: [translated] We kids can't get a word in. I would
like to say a few words, Mr. Chairman.
0.
0. CHAIRMAN: [translated] Wait a minute. Stay in your seats. One
sister says that she has traveled far. She insists that we haven't
given the kids enough speaking time. You have three minutes, please.
0.
0. MALALAI JOYA: [translated] My name is Malalai Joya from the
Farah province. With the permission of all those present and in
respect of the martyrs who were killed, I would like to speak.
I wish to criticize my compatriots in this room. Why would you
allow criminals to be present at this Loya Jirga, warlords responsible
for our country's situation? Afghanistan is the center for national
and international conflicts. They oppressed women and have ruined
our country. They should be prosecuted. They might be forgiven
by the Afghan people, but not by history.
0.
0. CHAIRMAN: [translated] Sit down! Sit down! The sister has crossed
the line of what is considered common courtesy. She is banished
from this assembly and cannot return. Send her out! Guards, throw
her out! She doesn't deserve to be here.
0.
AMY GOODMAN: An excerpt of Enemies of Happiness, about
the Afghan parliamentarian Malalai Joya. She joins me now in our
firehouse studio. If she needs help with translation, Shaded Diani
is with us. Though we listen to you being translated, Malalai
Joya, you also speak English.
MALALAI JOYA: Yeah. Thank you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: It's very good to have you
with us. The BBC called you "the bravest woman of Afghanistan."
That was 2003. What caused you to speak out then?
MALALAI JOYA: First of all, thanks a lot
that on behalf of suffering men and women of Afghanistan, you
want to have interview with me, who do not have liberation at
all right now. And the reason that I stand up against these fundamentalist
warlords and I expose their mask, because, unfortunately, they
were in power and they control Loya Jirga, and they are those
people that after 9/11, they -- mentally they are same like Taliban,
but physically they changed. By mask of democracy and support
of US and its allies, they come in power.
They were those criminals that from '92
to '96, when they were in power, they killed only, in the capital
of Afghanistan, 65,000 innocent people, just because of power
in the civil war. And also they raped even a seventy-year-old
grandmother and also a seven-year-old baby, and many more violence
against women. And also they are those criminals that they destroyed
completely our country, and they were a puppet of foreign countries.
And they fought against each other just because of power. Even
they destroyed our national unity.
And many more crimes they did, that right
now you're looking at the crisis in Afghanistan. The main reason
is this, because brother and creed of Taliban, they are in power,
means these Northern Alliance killers, who they were in Loya Jirga,
like Sayyaf, Rabbani, Mohaqiq, Fahim, Dostum, Khalili, also [inaudible],
Golabzoi, Olumi, and this list should be prolonged, that right
now most of them they are enjoying in the parliament of Afghanistan.
AMY GOODMAN: You are not afraid to name
names.
MALALAI JOYA: I am telling the truth,
so why afraid? And right now that they have mask of democracy,
they learn how to talk about democracy, women rights, human rights,
and just they deceive people around the world, but they do not
believe in. And our history know about them. Our people know about
them. And even they are world-known killers in the world. Even
Human Rights Watch published the name of these criminals recently,
that they must face to the national and international courts.
But, unfortunately, right now they control Afghanistan. Some of
them are MP, minister, governor, commanders, chief district, ambassador.
And they control Afghanistan. Our people are like hostage in the
hands of them.
AMY GOODMAN: You were thrown out of the
Loya Jirga in 2003. You were reelected to the Afghanistan parliament.
You got the second-highest number of votes in your province in
Farah. Now you've been thrown out again. Why?
MALALAI JOYA: This action of the parliament
for a thousand times, more, showed that this is -- showed to the
world that this is non-democratic parliament -- warlords and drug
lords in parliament -- because I said more than 70% members of
the parliament are drug lords, warlords, criminals, that they
--
AMY GOODMAN: You say more than 70% of
the parliament is drug lords, warlords, criminals?
MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, even I compared with
some nice animals. I said that they are even worse than animal
stables. They are like zoo -- some of them like dangerous criminals
in the -- sorry, animals in the zoo. But --
AMY GOODMAN: You called the parliament
a zoo.
MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, I said most of member,
not some democrat member we have, that there are few men and women
that they are real representatives, because most of these fundamentalist
warlords, they did cheating, they used guns, they were in power
and they had foreign support. When the entire nation is living
under the shadow of gun and warlords, then how we will have democratic
election?
And even inside of parliament, there's
completely non-democratic parliament. For example, this act that
recently they did, this is completely an illegal act, first of
all, and it's completely against freedom of speech and also because
I am a woman. And also, even last year --
AMY GOODMAN: This act of throwing you
out?
MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, of course, because
I am an elected member, and also they can't -- under the name
of suspension, they kicked me out from the parliament, since the
end of the parliament. I can't go, for example, right now. But
you are looking -- most of the people of Afghanistan, they are
doing demonstration, for example, around Afghanistan, in Kabul,
in Jalalabad, [inaudible], and many more support.
AMY GOODMAN: What is the role of the United
States in Afghanistan?
MALALAI JOYA: Unfortunately, under the
nose of US and eyes of troops right now, you are looking, and
the most problem that people of Afghanistan they have is a security,
more important than food and water. And also, for example, they
are throwing bombs aside in a place that we are killing Taliban;
most of innocent people has been killing. Even right now, one
member of the parliament is Talib. Another is spokesman of Taliban
right now enjoying in the Yale University, who his name was Rahmatullah
Hashemi. He was a spokesman of Taliban when they destroyed our
Buddha statues.
Right now, more than 90% people are poor,
and more than 40% are jobless. And also under the nose of US and
eyes of troops, Afghanistan is one of the biggest producer of
the opium right now. And many more violence against women.
And under the nose of US and eyes of troops,
five-year-old baby, few months before, has been kidnapped and
raped. Same like these criminal jihadis who are always doing crimes
under the name of Islam and jihad, and right now is with the mask
of democracy. They are in power. They did in the past from '92
to '96. And this situation nowadays they are talking about women
right, democracy. Eleven-year-old Sanober, she has been kidnapped
by these local warlords, Northern Alliance, in Kunduz province,
then raped, then exchanged with a dog.
And also in this situation, they are talking
about women rights. Two activist women recently, they has been
killed in their houses. They were journalists: Shakiba Amaj and
also Zakia Zaki. And most of people they have education problem,
health problem. That how much education is important. Billions
dollars the government of Afghanistan that corrupt warlords and
drug lords received, but most of money is going in the pockets
of these warlords. And most are examples like that.
AMY GOODMAN: Malalai Joya, you are returning
now to Afghanistan. You have been threatened with death time and
time again. What gives you the courage to go back?
MALALAI JOYA: Yeah, I want to go back
in Afghanistan. I want to struggle inside Afghanistan and outside.
The support of the innocent people of Afghanistan who do not have
power, who do not have money, who are very suffering people, this
gives me courage, determination. And I understand how much I am
right, day by day. And also the support of freedom-loving democrat
people and human rights organizations gives me hope, courage.
And also, in another hint, inside of parliament, they threatened
me to rape from.
AMY GOODMAN: They threatened to rape you?
MALALAI JOYA: To rape. And even they are
saying, "Prostitute! Take and rape her!" on 7th of May.
Physically they beat me by throwing bottles of water. And this
parliament --
AMY GOODMAN: They threw bottles of water
at you in the parliament?
MALALAI JOYA: On 7th of May you can see
on my website. And also, this parliament completely was like torture
for me. But I was there just to use from the tribune of the parliament
to clear their mask, because many times they stand up against
constitution inside of parliament. Especially they are anti-women.
Three times they beat the journalists inside of the parliament.
And recently, media is telling that five
member of parliament they are thieves, that before they were minister,
and right now one is Qanooni, who is head of the parliament, and
he stole $25 million when he was minister of education.
AMY GOODMAN: We're going to have to leave
it there. Malalai's website is malalaijoya.com.
***************
The U.S. Has Returned Fundamentalism
To Afghanistan
by Malalai Joya
www.zmag.org, April 13,2007
[The following is a transcript
of the speech given by Malalai Joya, member of the Afghan Parliament,
given at the University of Los Angeles on April, 10th, 2007]
In the name of Democracy and Peace -
Dear friends, first of all I extend my
deep regards and thanks to the friends in the University of California
to provide the opportunity for me to be here and share my point
of view with you and inform you about the ongoing tragedy in my
crying Afghanistan.
While the pro-democracy and anti-fundamentalists
groups and individuals of Afghanistan are being marginalized,
suppressed and silenced, you give a helping hand to me as a small
voice of my suffering people to speak about the crisis in Afghanistan
and terrible conditions of its people. You in fact play your role
in raising awareness on what is going on in my devastated country.
Respected friends, over five years passed
since the US-led attack on Afghanistan. Probably many of you are
not well aware of the current conditions of my country and expect
me to list the positive outcomes of the past years since the US
invasion. But I am sorry to tell you that Afghanistan is still
chained in the fetters of the fundamentalist warlords and is like
an unconscious body taking its last breath.
The US government removed the ultra-reactionary
and brutal regime of Taliban, but instead of relying on Afghan
people, pushed us from the frying pan into the fire and selected
its friends from among the most dirty and infamous criminals of
the "Northern Alliance", which is made up of the sworn
enemies of democracy and human rights, and are as dark-minded,
evil, and cruel as the Taliban.
The Western media talks about democracy
and the liberation of Afghanistan, but the US and its allies are
engaged in the warlordization, criminalization and drug-lordization
of our wounded land.
Today the Northern alliance leaders are
the key power holders and our people are hostage in the hands
of these ruthless gangs of killers. Many of them are responsible
for butchering tens of thousands of innocent people in the past
2 decades but are in power and hold key positions in the government.
Let me list few of the key power-holders
of Afghanistan:
- Karim Khalili, the vice-president, is
leader of a pro-Iran party called Wahdat, responsible for killing
thousands of innocent people, and named by Human Rights Watch
as a war criminal.
- Ismael Khan, another killer warlord
and lackey of the Iranian regime is the minister of water and
power.
- Izzatullah Wasifi, Afghanistan's anti-corruption
chief has been a convicted drug trafficker who has spent around
4 years in a Nevada state prison in the US.
- General Mohammed Daoud, Afghanistan's
deputy interior minister in charge of the anti-drug effort, is
a former warlord and famous drug-trafficker.
- Rashid Dostum, the chief of staff of
the Afghan army, is a heartless killer and warlord, named by Human
Rights Watch as a war criminal.
- Qasim Fahim, former defense minister
and now a Senator and adviser to Mr. Karzai is the most powerful
warlord of the Northern Alliance, and accused of war crimes.
And this list has hundreds of men on it,
including Sayyaf, Ulomi, Golabzoi, Rabbani, Qanooni, Mohaqiq,
Mullah Rocketi, etc. They should all be removed from power and
put on trial for war crimes. In fact all the major institutions
in Afghanistan are occupied by warlords and drug-lords. How can
we talk about democracy when our legislative, judicial and executive
bodies are infected with the viruses of fundamentalism and drug
mafia?
Many freedom-loving individuals and groups
in Afghanistan had long ago warned that bringing the criminal
"Northern Alliance" back into power by the US government
will pose a danger to Afghanistan. But today, most governments
and world institutions accept that Afghanistan is a failed state
which is heading toward disaster.
Afghans are deeply fed-up with the current
situation and every day that passes they turn against the government,
the foreign troops and the warlords. And the Taliban make use
of it to increase their influence and acts of terror. Countries
like Pakistan, Iran, Russia etc. are also meddling in Afghanistan
for their own interests.
The U.S.-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies wrote in a recent report: "Afghans
are frustrated with their economic situation They suffer from
unsteady employment and economic insecurity, and are turning to
illicit and illegal activity, such as corruption and opium productionthe
Taliban has become an alternative source of employment, recruiting
the jobless as foot soldiers in the insurgency."
In such a situation when a bunch of killers
are in power, life cannot be easy for our unfortunate people.
I would like to describe the tip of the iceberg on the reality
of life in my bleeding Afghanistan:
Seven hundred children and 50-70 women
die on a daily basis because of a lack of health services. Infant
and maternal mortality rates are still very high - 1,600 to 1,900
women among each 100,000 die during childbirth. Life expectancy
is less than 45 years.
The number of suicide cases by Afghan
women was never as high as it is today: A month ago eighteen year
old Samiya, hung herself by a rope because she was to be sold
to a sixty year old man. Another woman called Bibi Gul locked
herself up in the animals' stable and burned herself to death.
Later her family found nothing except her bones.
The study by the governmental agency Afghanistan
Independent Human Rights Commission shows a marked increase in
reported cases: Two years ago in Farah province, there were 15
cases of women burning themselves reported, but the number jumped
to 36 in the first six months of 2006. Kandahar province had 74
cases two years ago and 77 cases in the first six months of the
past year. But the real numbers are much higher.
According to a UNIFEM survey, 65% of the
50,000 widows in Kabul see suicide as the only option to get rid
of their misery. UNIFEM estimates that at least one out of three
Afghan women has been beaten, forced into sex or otherwise abused.
The gang-rape of young girls and women
by warlords belonging to the "Northern Alliance" still
continues especially in the northern provinces of Afghanistan.
People have staged mass protests a number of times but no one
cares about their sorrow and tears. Only a few of the rape cases
find their way into the media. One shocking case was that of 11
year old Sanobar, the only daughter of an unfortunate widow who
was abducted, raped and then exchanged for a dog by a warlord.
In a land where human dignity has no price, the vicious rapist
of a poor girl still acts as district chief.
The Taliban continue their fascism in
the eastern parts of Afghanistan where the government has no control.
They carry out public executions and kidnappings. When some days
ago an Italian journalist and his Afghan translator and driver
were kidnapped, the Afghan government made a deal with them and
released five Taliban leaders from prison so the Italian journalist
was freed. But no one cared for the fate of the two innocent Afghans
and both of them were beheaded by the Taliban.
A report by Human Rights Watch about war
criminals in Afghanistan and the hanging of Saddam Hussein scared
many Afghan criminals and now they are trying to block any efforts
for their prosecution. Last month the warlord MPs, under the name
of "national reconciliation" passed a bill in the parliament
based on which no one can file a case or prosecute anyone for
committing war crimes in the past 25 years.
I and a few other MPs raised our voices
against it but as the fundamentalist warlords hold over 80% of
the seats, the bill was easily approved. This bill will now provide
amnesty to all criminals.
But Afghan people who have suffered terribly
in the past 3 decades consider this bill an abuse against them.
According to a survey conducted by the Afghanistan Independent
Human Rights Commission over 80% of Afghan people want to prosecute
those responsible for past crimes and brutalities and see it as
the only way to experience a bright future in Afghanistan.
Even Mr. Karzai signed this disgusting
bill which is regarded as a joke and abuse to the millions of
Afghans who have suffered and lost their loved ones and were waiting
for the day of justice. Meanwhile the killers forgave their own
crimes and live without fear. Such bills officially sanction further
brutalities and human rights violations against our defenseless
people.
The story of Afghanistan's reconstruction
is painful: After 5 years you cannot see any serious reconstruction
projects. Billions of dollars of aid has been looted by the warlords,
corrupt NGOs, the UN and government officials. Afghanistan still
stands 175th out of 177 countries in the UN Human Development
Index and the rate of unemployment is over 40%.
The so-called "freedom of speech"
in Afghanistan is another joke with our people. Let me describe
my own recent experience: In early February this year, during
the passage of the infamous bill of amnesty for war criminals
in the parliament, I had an interview with a local TV channel;
they had interviewed some other people including Sayyaf, who is
a wanted criminal and member of the parliament.
The TV station broadcast an advertisement
for the program a number of times in which they showed some parts
of my interview. After this Sayyaf himself called the TV station
and threatened them that if Joya's interview was broadcast the
consequences would be dangerous for the director. So they resorted
to censorship and excluded me from the program. And this is not
the first time that I have been censored in the media. Many journalists
are too afraid to report my comments.
Last year the UN announced that Afghanistan
under US troops could become a narco-state but today no one has
any doubt that it has been changed into a mafia-state when Afghanistan
produces 92 per cent of the world's supply of opium. High-ranking
officials like ministers and deputy ministers etc. have links
to the drugs mafia. And all of it happens under the very noses
of the thousands of foreign troops.
A mafia system is in place in Afghanistan.
The US backed president Karzai and his westernized intellectuals
have joined hands with fundamentalists of all brands to impose
this mafia system on our people. This is the main reason for today's
problems in the deadlocked Afghanistan. Those who speak for justice
are threatened with death.
My voice is always being silenced even
inside the parliament and once I was physically attacked by pro-warlord
and drug-lord MPs in the parliament just for speaking the truth.
One of them even shouted "prostitute, take her and rape her!"
Despite hating guns, I need to live under the protection of armed
bodyguards to survive.
President Hamid Karzai, instead of relying
on people to bring the criminal warlords to trial, appoints these
criminals to higher posts. Due to his criminal-fostering policies,
the people of Afghanistan hate him as someone equally responsible
for the current catastrophe. Even the CIA admitted in its report
recently that he has lost the people's support and has no control
outside of Kabul.
The Afghan government is the most corrupt
and unpopular in the world. In a March 2007 survey conducted by
Integrity Watch Afghanistan, it was revealed that about 60 percent
of Afghans think the current administration is more corrupt than
any other in the past two decades.
It is due to this tragic situation that
returning to Afghanistan is still an unattractive option for the
4 million Afghan refugees living in Iran and Pakistan and many
more still trying to flee the country.
Dear friends, in 2001 the US government
announced that it has learned from its past mistakes of supporting
the fundamentalists in Afghanistan and will not repeat them. But
the agonizing truth is that the US is committing the same mistakes.
It is generously supporting the fundamentalists more than ever.
Besides supporting the bands of the Northern
Alliance, underground efforts are going on to include some elements
of the Taliban and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in the government. The
US included Gulbuddin Hekmatyar on its list of most wanted terrorists,
yet his party was allowed to have 34 members in the Afghan parliament,
which was elected in an un-democratic and fraudulent election.
I have announced a number of times that the US administration
has no problem working with pro-American terrorists, but oppose
only anti-American terrorists. This is the reason that our people
make a mockery of the "war on terror".
I fully agree with Kathy Gannon, an expert
in Afghanistan, that "the US is not interested in peace in
Afghanistan. The people who killed thousands, who patronized the
drug business are in charge of the country."
Dear friends, the US is not concerned
with the suffering and disastrous conditions of our people; it
is in the US's strategic and economic interests to put our people
in danger as long as its own regional interests are met. That
is why our people do not consider the US a "liberator"
of our country. The US invaded Afghanistan under the name of human
rights and democracy but today we are as far from these values
as were 5 years ago. However, since 2001 the death toll of innocent
civilians as a result of the so-called "war on terror"
is five times the number killed in the 9/11 tragedy.
I hope you have realized from the small
taste of the problems that I just shared, that my country is still
in the chains of bloody and terrorist fundamentalists. The situation
in Afghanistan and the conditions of its ill-fated women will
never change positively, as long as the warlords are not disarmed
and both the pro-US and anti-US terrorists are not removed from
the political scene of Afghanistan.
It is a clear and proven fact that no
nation can donate liberation to another nation. Liberation is
not money to be donated; it should be achieved in a country by
the people themselves. The ongoing developments in Afghanistan
and Iraq prove this claim. People of other countries only can
give us a helping hand and support.
I think that the people of the US can
play a great role to put pressure on their policy-makers to stop
its wrong policies in Afghanistan and value the wishes of our
people. I should say that unlike its government, the people of
the US are great, caring and peace-loving, so the democratic-minded
elements of Afghanistan can count on your support and solidarity.
The people of the US must help poor Afghan
people and its democratic-minded individuals and groups, who are
currently defeated and under much pressure. This is the only correct
policy that can help Afghan people and guarantee a bright future
for us. Unlike the US administration, the true friends of Afghan
people must care about the voices of our men and women for justice;
they should realize that the existence of fundamentalist groups
of any brand as political and military forces, is the main cause
of all the problems in Afghanistan. They should know that bringing
the Northern Alliance to power was the key to all the disasters
that we are experiencing today.
I am well aware of the hardships, challenges,
and prospects of death from anti-democratic forces. But I trust
my people and enjoy their full support and encouragement. The
enemies of my people have weapons, political power and the support
of the US government to suppress me. But they can never silence
my voice and hide the truth. I am proud to be a beacon of hope
for my people and enjoy strong support from them in my mission
for democracy and freedom.
Your show of solidarity and support gives
me more power and determination to fight the enemies of democracy
and humanity in my devastated Afghanistan. You can give me a helping
hand by providing moral support and your generous donations so
that I can continue and expand my work for the benefit of the
desperate and sorrowful women of Afghanistan.
The fundamentalists are counting their
days to kill me, but I believe in and follow the noble saying
of the freedom-loving Iranian writer Samad Behrangi:
"Death could very easily come now,
but I should not be the one to seek it. Of course if I should
meet it and that is inevitable, it would not matter. What matters
is whether my living or dying has had any effect on the lives
of others"
Thank you. ---
Malalai Joya is Afghanistan's youngest
and most out-spoken parliamentarian. She has openly criticized
the US-backed warlords that dominate the Afghan parliament. In
return, she has received a continuous stream of death threats.
At the age of 28, Malalai has survived 4 assassination attempts.
Recently a documentary profiling her, Enemies of Happiness, won
the Grand Jury Prize at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Malalai
Joya is on a brief US speaking tour. For more information about
Malalai Joya, please visit www.malalaijoya.com.
Heroes
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