Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

In Afghanistan, Who Has the Guns Gets the Land – The New York Times

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan For decades, roughly a thousand families called the low-slung mud-walled neighborhood of Firqa home. Some moved in during the 1990s civil war, while others were provided housing under the previous government.

Soon after the Taliban takeover on Aug. 15, the new government told them all to get out.

Ghullam Farooq, 40, sat in the darkness of his shop in Firqa last month, describing how armed Taliban fighters came at night, expelling him at gunpoint from his home in the community, a neighborhood of Kandahar city in southern Afghanistan.

All the Taliban said was: Take your stuff and go, he said.

Those who fled or were forcibly removed were quickly replaced with Taliban commanders and fighters.

Thousands of Afghans are facing such traumatic dislocations as the new Taliban government uses property to compensate its fighters for years of military service, amid a crumbling economy and a lack of cash.

Over decades, after every period of upheaval in Afghanistan, property becomes a crucial form of wealth for those in power to reward followers. But this arbitrary redistribution also leaves thousands displaced and fuels endless disputes in a country where the land ownership system is so informal that few people hold any documentation for the ground they call their own.

Just as during past changes in government, distributing property to Taliban disciples in swaths of rural farmland and in desirable urban neighborhoods has turned into at least a short-term recourse to keep stability within the Taliban ranks.

Who has the guns gets the land, said Patricia Gossman, the associate Asia director for Human Rights Watch. Its an old, long continuing story.

In a largely pastoral nation split by rugged mountain ranges, dotted with deserts and little forest, land is one of the most important assets and a flashpoint, fueling blood feuds between neighbors, ethnic groups and warlords as power has changed hands. Conflicting legal systems dictating land ownership and a lack of documentation have further destabilized the property market through the generations.

Afghanistan Under Taliban Rule

With the departure of the U.S. military on Aug. 30, Afghanistan quickly fell back under control of the Taliban. Across the country, there is widespread anxiety about the future.

The country is slightly smaller in land area than Texas, with a population that has grown in past decades to around 39 million people. Yet, only one-eighth of Afghanistans land is farmable and shrinking under a crippling drought and changes wrought from climate change.

Todays land disputes in Afghanistan can be largely traced to the Soviet-backed regime that came to power in the late 1970s, which redistributed property across the country. This quickly fueled tensions as land was confiscated and given to the poor and landless under the banner of socialism.

Land redistribution continued to play out, first during the civil war in the early 1990s, and then under the rise of the Taliban. After the U.S. invasion in 2001, those same commanders who were once defeated by the Taliban went about distributing and stealing land once more, this time with the backing of the newly installed U.S.-supported government. American and NATO military forces contributed to the problem by seizing property for bases and doing little to compensate landowners.

Attempts by the Western-backed government over the past two decades to formalize land ownership and property rights ultimately proved futile as the incentives to take advantage of the system overwhelmed efforts to regularize it.

Now more than three months after the Talibans rise to power, its administrators are in a similar position, but with no official policy regarding land ownership.

We are still analyzing and investigating how to honor land deeds and titles for people, Bilal Karimi, a Taliban spokesman, said.

Local Taliban leaders have been seizing and reallocating property for years in districts they captured to reward fighters and the families of their dead with land to farm or sell for profit.

In 2019, when the Taliban arrived at Mullah Abdul Salams modest poppy farm in Musa Qala, in Helmand Province, he faced an impossible choice. Like many poor farmers in rural Afghanistan, he had no legal deed to prove he owned the ground he had cultivated for years.

So the Taliban gave him an ultimatum: Either pay a lump sum to keep his land or give it up.

We came early and we had the right to the land, Mr. Salam recalled, standing on the edge of his poppy field in Musa Qala, shovel in hand. It had to be ours.

For some time, the land in Musa Qala was unclaimed, undocumented and written off as unfarmable, except by a few farmers such as Mr. Salam. Then the ground became more fertile with the widespread growth of solar power that enabled farmers to run well pumps, at far lower expense than use of conventional fuel. The Taliban tried to strike a balance by allowing the poor farmers to remain at relatively small cost, while allocating unclaimed plots to its fighters.

Khoi, a brother of a Taliban fighter who goes by one name, was among the family members of the militants who received land in Musa Qala two years ago. Since then, he said, fellow Taliban veterans had profited by selling portions of the property gifted to them.

There is no more land for the Taliban to distribute here, if they could, they would, he said.

With no official guidance, Taliban officials have now resorted to the same practices throughout the country that carved up the area around Mr. Salams farm.

But as the Taliban distribute property, parts of the population have been left confused and angered by the actions of their new government, which suspiciously resemble the behavior of its predecessors.

In Takhar Province, a historically anti-Taliban stronghold in Afghanistans north, Taliban fighters have evicted people including some who had lived there for more than 40 years in several districts, saying the land was unfairly distributed by previous governments, said a former Afghan lawmaker on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation against her family.

Takhar residents, the former lawmaker said, have started to question whether Taliban administrators can run the country any more effectively than their predecessor, given how they are following the same practices as past governments.

The greatest issue for the Taliban going forward will be to deal with land documentation and legalization, said Fazal Muzhary, a former researcher at Afghanistan Analysts Network, a policy research group, who focused on land ownership in Afghanistan. So when the Taliban want to legalize or demarcate lands, they will also need to take back the lands from people who grabbed them in any period, in the 70s, 80s, 90s, 2000s and so on. This will be very challenging for them.

In central Afghanistan, property disputes of another nature are playing out: the marginalization and displacement of ethnic minorities in order to seize their arable land. Taliban leaders have long persecuted and antagonized the Hazaras, a mostly Shiite minority, and in recent months, the new government has watched as local strongmen evicted hundreds of families.

In September, Nasrullah, 27, and his family fled their village in Daikundi Province, along with around 200 families who left nearly everything, he said.

Such displacements have upended more than a dozen villages in central Afghanistan, affecting more than 2,800 Hazaras, according to a Human Rights Watch report.

In recent weeks, local courts have overturned some seizures, allowing some families to return. But for most, the evictions have been traumatic.

In each village the Taliban put a checkpoint, and the people arent allowed to take anything but our clothes and some flour, said Nasrullah, who goes by one name, during an interview in September. But I brought only my clothes.

Taimoor Shah contributed reporting from Kandahar; Victor J. Blue from Kabul; Jim Huylebroek from Musa Qala; and Sami Sahakfrom Los Angeles.

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In Afghanistan, Who Has the Guns Gets the Land - The New York Times

Afghanistan: Survivors of gender-based violence abandoned following Taliban takeover new research – Amnesty International

Essential services for women and girl survivors of gender-based violence in Afghanistan have been decimated following the Talibans takeover of the country, Amnesty International said today.

In 26 new interviews, survivors and service providers told Amnesty International that the Taliban closed shelters and released detainees from prison, including many convicted of gender-based violence offences.

Many survivors as well as shelter staff, lawyers, judges, government officials, and others involved in protective services are now at risk of violence and death.

Women and girl survivors of gender-based violence have essentially been abandoned in Afghanistan

Women and girl survivors of gender-based violence have essentially been abandoned in Afghanistan. Their network of support has been dismantled, and their places of refuge have all but disappeared, said Agns Callamard, Amnesty Internationals Secretary General.

It defies belief that the Taliban threw open prison doors across the country, with no thought of the risks that convicted perpetrators pose to the women and girls they victimized, and to those who worked on survivors behalf.

To protect women and girls from further violence, the Taliban must allow and support the reopening of shelters and the restoration of other protective services for survivors, reinstate the Ministry of Womens Affairs, and ensure that service providers can work freely and without fear of retaliation.

Amnesty International is calling on the international community to provide immediate and long-term funding for such protective services, evacuate survivors and service providers facing imminent danger, and urge the Taliban to uphold their obligations to women and girls, particularly those who survive or are at risk of gender-based violence.

On 26 and 29 November, Taliban spokesperson Suhail Shaheen told Amnesty International via telephone: There is no place for violence against women and girls, according to the rules of Islam The women facing domestic violence can be referred to the courts, and the courts will hear their cases and their grievances will be addressed.

Amnesty International interviewed survivors and individuals involved in protective services in the provinces of Badghis, Bamiyan, Daikundi, Herat, Kabul, Kunduz, Nangarhar, Paktika, Sar-e Pul, and Takhar.

Before the Talibans takeover, many women and girl survivors had access to a nationwide network of shelters and services, including pro-bono legal representation, medical treatment, and psychosocial support.

Survivors were referred into the system from provincial and capital offices of the Ministry of Womens Affairs and the Human Rights Commission, as well as from shelters, hospitals, and police stations across the country.

The system wasfar from perfect, but served thousands of women each year in Afghanistan, where nine out of 10 women experience at least one form of intimate partner violence in their lifetime,according to UNAMA.

According to service providers, the most common cases of gender-based violence involved beating, rape, other forms of physical and sexual violence, and forced marriage. Survivors often needed urgent medical treatment.

One service provider who was based in Nangargar said: [The cases] were very extreme. We had a case where a man took the nails off his wifes fingers [One] man took a crowbar and peeled off his wifes skin There was one woman who faced a lot of abuse from her family. She couldnt even use the bathroom anymore.

As the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, the system of protective services collapsed. Shelters were closed, and many were looted and appropriated by members of the Taliban. In some cases, Taliban members harassed or threatened staff.

My brother is my enemy, and my husband is my enemy

As shelters closed, staff were forced to send many women and girl survivors back to their families, and other survivors were forcibly removed by family members. Other survivors were forced to live with shelter staff members, on the street, or in other unsustainable situations.

Zeenat* was regularly beaten by her husband and brother before she took refuge in a shelter. When the Taliban arrived, she and several other women fled. They are now in hiding. She said: We came only with the clothes we were wearing. We dont have a heater, and we go to sleep hungry My brother is my enemy, and my husband is my enemy. If he sees me and my children, hell kill us I am sure they are looking for me because they know the shelter has closed.

One shelter director, currently in hiding with some survivors from her shelter, told Amnesty International: We dont have a proper place. We cant go out. We are so scared Please bring us out of here. If not, then you can wait for us to be killed.

As the Taliban advanced, they also systematically released detainees from prisons, many of whom had been convicted of gender-based violence offenses. Testimony from witnesses and others with first-hand knowledge, as well ascrediblemediareporting, indicate that members of the Taliban were responsible. A Taliban spokesperson denied this to Amnesty International, insisting the previous government had opened prisons.

A legal professional who specializes in gender-based violence said she had been involved in the conviction of more than 3,000 perpetrators of gender-based violence in the year preceding the Talibans takeover.

She said: Wherever [the Taliban] went, they freed the prisoners Can you imagine? More than 3,000 released, in all the provinces of Afghanistan, in one month.

Amnesty International also received credible reports that survivors have also been transferred by the Taliban into the detention system, including to Pul-e-Charkhi prison, near Kabul.

Many working within the system of protective services said that although they faced significant risks before the Talibans takeover, their lives are now in greater danger, and they are in desperate need of protection.

One service provider who was based in Badghis explained: All of these women who worked on this [the support system] now we need a shelter We live each day in anxiety and fear.

A service provider who was based in Nangarhar said: I am getting threats from the Taliban, ISIS, perpetrators and the family members on a daily basis.

Another service provider who was based in Bamiyan said: I was getting three calls each day from men who had escaped the prison. After I received a call from the Taliban as well, I switched to a new number.

These women were devastated to see the system they had painstakingly built collapse. A former judge told Amnesty International: For 20 years, I was working to build everything from scratch pushing, running, from this office to that office. I was trying to convince everyone, so that we have a framework in place to protect women It takes a lot of courage, a lot of sacrifice and energy to build something from nothing and then it becomes nothing again.

There is nowhere to turn for women and girls who have faced violence since the Talibans takeover. One psychologist who worked with gender-based violence survivors in Kabul told Amnesty International: The Taliban doesnt have any procedure of how to deal with these cases.

A prosecutor for cases involving gender-based violence explained: In the past, women could go to the Ministry of Womens Affairs. They could go alone and report their case. But now that women are not allowed to go anywhere without amahram[male guardian], this will make it really complicated.

Fariha* was regularly beaten by her husband and his relatives. She said: [My husband] would pick up whatever he could find, and he would hit me with it Whenever he beat me, his family would get together and watch It happened almost every day The first time he beat me with a wire I had bruises all over my body. My hands and my nails were scratched, all of them. After that, he beat me from my waist down only. Hed tell me, I will hit you in these places [your genitals and buttocks] that wont be seen.

Fariha was nine months pregnant when she spoke to Amnesty International, and desperately seeking a safe place to live. She added: Before, there was a shelter, and I went to that place. I requested that they take me in. They said its not running now, and we cant accept any new cases There are no options for me.

Adilia* was forced to marry an 80-year-old man at age seven. She said: I spent a year living with him, and he beat me every single day, saying, Why are you not getting pregnant?

Adilia fled, but was remarried and regularly subjected to beating and other forms of violence and abuse by her second husband and his relatives. When she spoke with Amnesty International, she had recently been transferred to one of the few shelters still in operation in Afghanistan.

She said: We are very scared now For how long are we going to stay? The Taliban came to the shelter at 12am, at 1am, and many times during the day. We told [them] this is a safe place for us, but they wouldnt believe us We are not safe anywhere anymore.

From 26 October to 24 November 2021, Amnesty International conducted telephone interviews with six survivors and 20 individuals involved in the system of protective services, including shelter directors and staff, prosecutors, judges, psychologists, doctors, and representatives of the Ministry of Womens Affairs.

Amnesty International also interviewed 18 local activists, journalists, representatives of NGOs and the United Nations, and other experts on gender-based violence in Afghanistan.

Note: *Names have been changed to protect identities.

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Afghanistan: Survivors of gender-based violence abandoned following Taliban takeover new research - Amnesty International

We must learn from the Afghanistan experience starting with the withdrawal | TheHill – The Hill

The 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), currently stalled in the Senate,callsforan independentbipartisancongressionalcommission toconduct acomprehensiveexaminationofAmericas involvement in Afghanistan from 1996 to our withdrawal this summer.

That provision,introducedby Sen.Tammy DuckworthLadda (Tammy) Tammy DuckworthOvernight Defense & National Security Austin mandates vaccine for Guardsmen Biden signs four bills aimed at helping veterans Wisconsin senators ask outsiders not to exploit parade attack 'for their own political purposes' MORE (D-Ill.),Rep. Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyKevin McCarthy is hostage to the GOP's 'exotic wing' Jan. 6 panel faces new test as first witness pleads the Fifth Prosecutors say North Carolina woman deserves prison for bringing 14-year-old to Capitol riot MORE (R-Wyo.)and others,isa good one.No doubt we can glean valuable lessons by lookingat the totality of ourAfghanistan experience, includingourdiplomatic,militaryand intelligence activities inthat countryfrom the early 1990s to today.

Butthatsort ofthoughtful,exhaustive undertakingwould certainlytake months, probablyyears, to collect, analyzeandreport on.And we need some answers sooner than that. Specifically, we need to answer questions about our deeply troubling pullout in August.

Congressional commissions dont spring up overnight. TheRepublican and Democratic Party leadership andthechairs of thearmed services, intelligenceand foreign affairs/relationscommitteeswill need tofind andpick12 to 16qualifiedcommissioners,arrange fora suitablestaffdirectoror directors,find office spaceandstaffupwithcompetentresearchers. That alonewill takemonths and only then can the real work start.

Even asthiscommissiongetssituated andprepares to goabout itsimportanthistorical review,there is an urgentneed for another,shorter studyfocused solelyon what happenedin Afghanistanthis year.

Such anindependent,unclassifiedstudy (forbothpublic and private consumption) could be donein six monthsandwouldactuallyhave somethingusefulto say.

Despite the herculean work and heroism of our service members and other U.S. government professionals on the ground and in the air in Afghanistan and beyond, few would argue that the August withdrawal was an unqualifiedsuccess. Most would call it chaotic, at best,if not downright disastrous.

There are many questions that need to be answeredsoon. Among the most important:

How did theinteragencyprocess to quit Afghanistan unfold within theBidenadministration?Were there flaws in this process that could be improved uponto inform future contingencies?

Why did we decide to withdraw all U.S. forces, leavingus and our allies blind to potential counterterror threats?Were other options discussed in the interagencyand, if so,why werent they chosen?

Whatwas the intelligence communitysassessment of the situation andthe potentialfallout from the precipitouswithdrawal?

Why did we surrender Bagram Airfield, leaving U.S. forcesto rely on Hamid Karzai International Airportas the sole point of departure?Whatwas learnedfromthehastyevacuation?

And so on.

Both a long-term study ofU.S. involvement in Afghanistanfrom 1996 to 2021and a short-term study of our 2021 withdrawalhave merit. Theyshould be undertakenas soon as practicablewith the goal of improving our performance in future diplomatic and military contingencies.

Theseafter-actionstudiesarecriticaltouncovering anddiscerning the important, sometimes bitterlessons from Americas now-longest warfor not only reflectionbut implementationas needed across the challenging foreign policy landscape we face today.

The results will be vital to informingcurrent and future policymakers in Congress and the executivebranch so that better outcomes in the future are within grasp.

Equally important,the American people,who shouldered so much of the burden of this conflict,deserve answersto these questionsabout Afghanistan. Itstime for bipartisancongressionalaction torequire botha short-termand a long-termstudyof Americas involvement in Afghanistan.

PeterBrookesis a Heritage Foundation senior fellow,a former deputy assistant secretary of defense and aformercongressional commission member.

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We must learn from the Afghanistan experience starting with the withdrawal | TheHill - The Hill

Qatar, Turkey to work together on stabilising Afghanistan – Aljazeera.com

Qatari, Turkish FMs reiterate strong ties and urge international community to engage with Taliban to facilitate aid to Afghans.

Doha, Qatar Qatars foreign minister has reiterated his countrys position on addressing the situation in Afghanistan, saying Doha will continue to work towards enhancing humanitarian and economic efforts in the war-torn country.

In a joint press conference with his Turkish counterpart in Qatars capital Doha on Monday, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said Qatar will work with ally Turkey and Taliban officials to ensure that Kabuls international airport, the site of chaotic scenes after the Taliban takeover, continues to function.

Sheikh Mohammed was speaking to reporters alongside Turkeys FM Mevlut Cavusoglu after the pair met as part of the seventh annual Qatar-Turkey Strategic Dialogue.

The two-day meeting, co-chaired by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Qatars Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, is expected to end with the signing of at least 12 MoUs on Tuesday across various fields including the military, health, tourism, and education sectors, among others.

Cavusoglu said Turkey was seeking to work for peace and stability in Afghanistan as he urged the international community to engage in dialogue with the Taliban and called on them to differentiate between the political and humanitarian side of things.

This is what we have done as Afghans are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance, he said, adding that Turkey is cooperating with Qatar on offering humanitarian assistance and on ensuring Kabuls airport remains open.

Qatar and Turkey have a strong and strategic relationship at political, economic and military levels.

The Supreme Strategic Committee was established in 2014 to enhance relations between the two countries.

On Monday, the two ministers reaffirmed their strong ties, telling reporters that they had reviewed various regional and international issues and discussed steps that would further cement relations.

Among the regional issues discussed was the ongoing conflict in Libya where Qatar and Turkey backed the UN-recognised government in the west of the country.

The two officials also discussed the war in Syria, saying a political solution is urgently needed before Syrian President Bashar al-Assads government can be invited to rejoin the Arab League.

There is no sense in normalising ties with Syria without it first taking serious steps towards a political solution, Sheikh Mohammed said.

I dont think we are in a position to offer him [Assad] a free pass to come to the Arab League, he said, a statement that Cavusoglu agreed with.

The absence of a political solution will embolden this regime to continue its aggression on Idlib, he said, referring to the last rebel-held enclave in northwestern Syria on the border with Turkey which backs several opposition groups.

A key example of the two countries strong ties is the presence of a Turkish military base in Qatar, which houses some 5,000 troops.

In June 2017, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt imposed a land, air and sea blockade against Qatar. At the time, Erdogan dubbed the military base the symbol of brotherhood, friendship, solidarity and sincerity.

Turkey stepped up the export of essential goods to Qatar throughout the blockade to replace products that used to come through the land border with Saudi Arabia or through UAEs Jebel Ali Port.

The seventh annual meeting comes at a time when Turkey is attempting to bolster its role in the region, and amid an economic crisis that has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.

Erdogan is expected to visit the UAE in February next year and has said in recent weeks that Ankara is planning to rekindle ties with Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

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Qatar, Turkey to work together on stabilising Afghanistan - Aljazeera.com

What my 20 years in Afghanistan taught me about the Taliban and how the west consistently underestimates them – The Conversation UK

It was April 1995, and I was preparing to travel to Afghanistan for my first volunteer post with a UK charity. I had travelled to London to meet the Afghanistan director for the non-governmental organisation (NGO) I was going to be working for and now sat in their tiny office facing him. My father had travelled to Afghanistan in the 1970s and loved it. His stories had mesmerised me. After years of dreaming about going to Afghanistan, I would finally be on my way.

I was nervous and had no idea what to expect. Would I find the war-torn nation I had read about in the newspapers or the beautiful country photographed by Roland and Sabrina Michaud photographers who roamed Afghanistan in the 1970s and captured a wealth of faces and landscapes in their incredible photobooks? I asked the director about the threat of the Taliban. He said: Sippi, by the time the Taliban take Afghanistan, Ill be dead and youll be an old lady.

How wrong he was.

Back then, the Taliban were generally considered to be just another faction of the Mujahideen, the Muslim fighters who rose up to push the invading Soviet army out of Afghanistan. Many thought they were so extreme that their early successes would be short-lived and of little consequence. I put them out of my head.

I was 25 at the time. But by the time I was 27, towards the end of 1996 and still living in Afghanistan the Taliban had taken most of the country. After the events of September 11, 2001, however, Afghanistan was invaded by US, UK and NATO forces, which displaced the Taliban and installed a new government. But the Taliban never went away and the new regime didnt last. And in August this year, what I had long expected finally came to pass once again, the Taliban were in power. Towns, checkpoints and any form of resistance had just toppled like so many dominoes before them.

I had been studying Afghanistan for some time before I landed on a dusty airfield in 1995 and began work in Faizabad, Badakhshan, a remote, conservative backwater in the remote and mountainous northeast of the country. It was inhabited mostly by Tajiks with a mix of other ethnic groups, including Pashtuns and Uzbeks. The country was poor before the war against the Soviet army. But after the war, what little infrastructure had been built was destroyed and there was no budget to restore it or even to employ civil servants.

Throughout my years in Afghanistan, I have always been taken aback by the number of communities where there has never been a school, clinic or government building. In Badakhshan, I watched children with empty oil cans on their backs collecting every animal dropping on the road to burn as fuel at home. In Kabul, I watched adults and children pick through the rubbish heaps looking for food to eat and material to recycle.

The small town of Faizabad, cut in half by the furious and noisy Kokcha river, was full of men with big beards and semi-automatic rifles. Women, meanwhile, all walked around in burqas in public places. I quickly made friends among them, being the only foreigner there at the time. When hailed by one of them in the local bazaar, I couldnt always recognise the voice, so I would clamber in under their burqas to see who they were and we would have a chat in our private blue tent.

But the differences between the smaller villages and the capital, Kabul, could be stark. Once, during a visit to Kabul before the Taliban took power, I was shocked to see men in suits in offices and women working in the ministries. I wasnt even allowed female visitors in my office in Faizabad, and had never seen a man in a suit there. So in 1996, when the Taliban arrived in Kabul, where I was living, they brought to the capital a way of life I had already experienced in Badakhshan.

After my initial volunteer stint, I went on to work for a range of NGOs in Taliban-controlled areas. From early 1997, alone with one Afghan driver, I travelled all over the country, doing work on rural development and often focused on helping women.

This was all very unusual. When I started working in Afghanistan, the atmosphere was often tense and fearful because of the actions of some local commanders murder, rape and looting were rife. Id never travel alone for fear of rape and Id be stopped at checkpoints where militants would ask for money or try to steal things out of my luggage. But things started slowly to change under the Taliban. The Taliban were fine with me accompanying female staff to work in villages and they supported limited activities for women.

Of course, women had to wear burqas and the activities had to be within the bounds of Islam, as the Taliban interpreted it. But before the Taliban when much of Afghanistan was run by an array of Mujahideen warlords it was dangerous taking any female staff on journeys because of the likelihood of rape, and at times we faced a lot of restrictions. People who ran projects in the 1980s I spoke with, for example, had great difficulties accessing women in communities and some struggled to get parents to accept that girls should be educated, even in home schools. But this, too, gradually began to change. Some NGOs were requested by communities to build schools for girls. I worked for one of them and we continued building girls schools after the Taliban took power.

At the height of Taliban power in the late 1990s, I was often in Kabul working on womens issues and was once again able to negotiate womens presence in projects. Throughout this period, I met Taliban ministers, governors, commanders, foot soldiers and the dreaded vice and virtue police.

I faced all sorts of attitudes and it was not an easy time for my Afghan colleagues. But we manoeuvred through it somehow. After the fall of the Taliban in 2001 I continued my work with NGOs, the UN, donors, NATO, the World Bank and the Afghan government. I continued my travels and my interest in the Taliban grew, especially thinking back to what I had witnessed from 1996 to 2001.

I began to think more deeply about how the Taliban was portrayed and how the situation wasnt as black and white as many in the international community tried to paint it. I realised that my experiences were very different to the official narrative about the Taliban and I began to wonder why. I pondered whether framing the Taliban differently would have led to different outcomes for Afghanistan.

This story is part of Conversation InsightsThe Insights team generates long-form journalism and is working with academics from different backgrounds who have been engaged in projects to tackle societal and scientific challenges.

Questions started to form in my mind about the Talibans identity and how it differed from other Mujahideen factions. For example, Ahmad Shah Massoud, the photogenic leader of Jamiat-I Islami, one of the most powerful of the Afghan Mujahideen groups, was a typical Mujahideen warlord a charismatic orator who was larger than life.

In contrast, Mullah Omar, the founder and original leader of the Taliban, who died in 2013, was a recluse. He had lost an eye during the war against the Soviets. In this sense, he reminded me of other, mystical figures from the regions past, such as Al-Muqanna (the veiled one). Born in Afghanistan in the eighth century and deformed when a chemical explosion went wrong, he led to a popular rebellion against the ruling Abbasid dynasty.

The followers of Al-Muqanna, like the Taliban in those early years, wore white. Was this a coincidence? History repeating itself? For the masses, all this added to the strangeness and, for some, allure of the Taliban.

I started researching the Talibans use of events usually violent ones to enact a performance demonstrating their power. I realised that this was not simply violence for violences sake. It was crafted to have an impact on a specific audience, conveying a message that was usually about projecting their power and legitimacy.

I realised that this kind of violent performance was their language. If we look at their actions as simplistic, savage, backward or misogynistic, as many do, we miss the opportunity to learn how to face them on this particular battlefield. And it is a battlefield on which they never really faced a sustainable challenge, as their return to power this year suggested.

It is worth remembering that the Taliban emerged during a hugely violent period in Afghan history. All of the major factions were involved in killing, raping and looting on an alarming scale.

The Talibans origin story tells how Mullah Omar was approached for help after local warlords raped some young girls at a checkpoint. The Taliban, then, emerged from vigilantism against local commanders whose depravity and violence against people had become intolerable in the southern province of Kandahar. For westerners who were shielded from the daily violence of life under the Mujahideen, the Taliban were only different in revealing their violence publicly. Other factions kidnapped, raped, tortured and executed but often away from the western gaze.

I remember troops arriving in Kabul from the Junbish faction, a Turkic political group, in 1996, shortly before Kabul fell. They had come to support Jamiat forces from the oldest Muslim political party in Afghanistan as they stood to lose Kabul. There was tangible fear throughout the population, especially among women. People remembered the disappearances, the rapes and the mutilated bodies from previous periods when Junbish had ravaged Kabuls suburbs. Violence was always a grim background soundtrack to peoples lives at the time.

When I look back, it is clear that the Taliban were very visual and performative in their presence in the public space and this is what gave them power. They did not, for example, simply tell people to keep their hair short; they would grab people and give them haircuts by force. They also had a stick specifically for checking whether men were shaving their genital area as instructed. Their actions spoke of domination and authority. They had a deep impact on Afghan society through fear. Every story told by Afghans since then links back to something which happened to them under the Taliban. They got inside peoples heads.

The Taliban movement developed out of a long-term process of Afghan state formation, transformation and collapse which left the Afghan people in poverty and a bloody civil war raging. What has become clear to me, with the benefit of hindsight, is that through violent performances around power, rule and justice, the Taliban created a political space which belonged only to them. In many ways, the behaviour of ISIS in Syria and Iraq, including the destruction of antiquities, mimicked the Taliban in this early period.

In my ongoing research, I am charting those early years. The sociologist Jeffrey Alexander, who has analysed power and performance during the Arab Spring and the turmoil during and after September 11, states that the ability to mobilise cultural elements to move audiences is the basis of political power.

The Taliban have mastered social performances of power using a language which is visual and visceral. They bring together shared narratives and beliefs from Afghan history and culture in the Muslim period to create new stories about who they are and the state they intend to create.

Three events in particular reveal the Talibans mastery of this kind of performance. They also mark major phases in how the Taliban identity developed.

One of Mullah Omars first such actions, in 1996, was extraordinary. He removed a holy relic from a shrine in the city of Kandahar itself a historic former capital where wars had been waged by mighty empires, as depicted in the Bollywood blockbuster, Panipat.

This relic was a cloak which Muslims believe belonged to Mohammed, the holy prophet of Islam, who wore it on the famous journey from Mecca to Jerusalem, completed in one night, around 621AD. The object was brought to Kandahar in the 18th century from Bukhara, in modern day Uzbekistan, by Ahmad Shah Durrani, founder of the Durrani empire and the modern state of Afghanistan. It is a relic to which miracles are attributed.

Mullah Omar was famously camera-shy. So shaky and grainy, secret camera footage showing him his arms inserted into the sleeves with the garment, which he was holding aloft to a large Kandahar crowd, is uncharacteristic and dramatic.

There was almost always a build-up to these events. In this case, religious leaders had come from across Afghanistan and beyond. The Taliban had to decide whether their fight would end in Kandahar or whether they would move on to claim Kabul. But Mullah Omar was declared Amir ul-Momenin (Commander of the Faithful), giving him the religious and political authority to lead the Taliban to Kabul and to establish the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.

By touching this venerated object before the gathered crowd, the leader of the Taliban was claiming Muslim and Afghan legitimacy by association with the Prophet Mohammad and Ahmad Shah Durrani. This action stated clearly that he had not arrived there solely by the power of the gun and that he was not an ordinary leader of a Mujahideen faction. He was putting himself in the line of descent from the Prophet of Islam and the Durrani kings of Afghanistan. He was claiming moral and religious authority to put his arms in the sleeves of this venerated object.

Although the Mujahideen had been branded holy warriors in their war against the Soviet army, and its leaders had claimed moral authority, none had stated it in such dramatic and symbolic terms before a crowd of thousands.

This relic had rarely been seen by the public it had last been removed from the shrine decades before, during a cholera outbreak so being confronted with it in this way was the closest thing to a miracle for those gathered. The crowd started chanting Allah-o akbar (God is great) and Amir al-Momenin (Commander of the Faithful).

In a photograph which exploded like a bomb the day after the Taliban first took Kabul in late September 1996, two young Taliban foot soldiers hug each other with joyful faces under the grotesquely deformed and bloodied figures of former President Najibullah and his brother, hanging from a traffic light pole in Aryana Square.

After establishing their religious credentials in Kandahar, the Taliban sought to convey anti-corruption and justice messages, especially in Kabul, which they considered a den of iniquity. Before arriving in Kabul, the Taliban had already started their acts of performative violence, indicating that they intended to dictate and dominate peoples private lives.

TVs, videos and music cassettes were banned and not simply by edict: smashed TVs dangled at Taliban checkpoints like blinded eyes, cassette ribbons flew in the wind like the entrails of eviscerated creatures executed and displayed like trophies.

Indeed, the execution of the former president was the Talibans brutal and very public message to the people of Kabul on the first morning of their rule in the city. No exceptions would be made and everyone who deserved punishment would receive it.

But why Aryana Square and why President Najibullah?

Aryana Square is at a crossroads at the heart of Kabuls historic centre. It is very close to the Arg, a fortress-palace built by Abdur Rahman, the Iron Amir, who consolidated Afghanistan and built the foundations of the modern Afghan state. The Arg was constructed after the Bala Hissar fortress was destroyed by British Indian troops during the second Anglo-Afghan War in 1880. Occupation of the Arg has played a symbolic role in modern Afghan history, with the centre of Afghan state power remaining within its walls, except for the period when Mullah Omar ruled from Kandahar.

Regime change in Afghanistan is almost always bloody. Mujahideen commanders before the Taliban had done a great deal of killing, but these deaths were in secret, in assassinations or in firefights. There had never been a public execution of a prominent public figure with the body displayed like a common criminal. But in the case of the Taliban, there was no hiding the killing and torture of the former president, beloved by many for his charisma and loathed in equal measure by the thousands who had disappeared into prisons never to emerge.

This was not a senseless, spur of the moment killing. Najibullah was ethnically Pashtun like the Taliban and was under the protection of the UN. When the Mujahideen leaders and commanders abandoned Kabul prior to the Taliban takeover, they had offered to take him. Yet he stayed, confident he could talk the Taliban around because they were fellow Pushtuns. The killing can be interpreted in many ways: that the Taliban were not going to make exceptions for a fellow Pushtun; that the authority of the UN meant nothing when the Taliban wanted to mete out justice for those killed by the Communists; or that the Soviet invasion ended here with the killing of their last protg. Some have accused Pakistan intelligence forces, ISI, of using the Taliban to dispose of one of their foes.

The bodies, castrated as a further expression of their powerlessness in the masculinised Taliban public sphere, were left to hang there for three days. Announcements had been made on the radio and thousands of people gathered to view the scene with shock and dismay. The spectacle of Najibullahs execution was the first of many. It was meant to cow the population of Kabul into submission and to set the Taliban up as Islamic arbiters of justice and morality.

These killings made a deep impression which lasted long after the Taliban were toppled. After this, in Kabul as elsewhere, the burqa was forced on women and beards, short hair and head covers on men. Through the personnel of the Office for the Prevention of Vice and Promotion of Virtue, the Taliban policed how people behaved and dressed. And womens presence in public had to be moderated by a mahram (a male relative).

One of the most dramatic actions of the Taliban was the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddha statues, located in the central highlands of Afghanistan in 2001. This event made the Taliban notorious globally.

One of the most celebrated tourist sites in Afghanistan before the war, the Buddhas were described as priceless artefacts the largest standing Buddha carvings in the world.

The first attempt to destroy the Buddhas came when the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb tried to use heavy artillery to destroy the statues in the 17th century. He only succeeded in damaging them during the attack. Another attempt was made by the 18th century Persian king, Nader Shah Afshar, who directed cannon fire at them.

It is also claimed that Afghan King Abdur Rahman Khan destroyed the face of one of the Buddhas during a military campaign against the Shia Hazara rebellion (1888-1893). And there were rumours about the British using the Buddhas for artillery practice in the 19th century. According to the ethnologist Professor Pierre Centlivres, 19th century travellers were already noting that the Buddhas lacked faces. The Taliban, however, in keeping with their violent power performances, went for something a bit more systematic and spectacular.

In 2000, the UN Security Council imposed an arms embargo on the Taliban to pressure them into breaking their ties with Osama Bin Laden and to close terrorist training camps in Afghanistan. In response, Mullah Omar issued a decree on February 26 ordering the elimination of all non-Islamic statues and sanctuaries from Afghanistan. The Taliban began smashing Buddhist statues in Kabul Museum from February 2001 onwards.

Inevitably, there was international outcry. In his memoirs, Taliban minister Abdul Salam Zaeef notes that UNESCO sent 36 letters of objection to the proposed destruction. The Chinese, Japanese and Sri Lankan delegates were the most vociferous advocates for the preservation of the Buddhas. The Japanese offered a number of solutions, including payment. UNESCO, New Yorks MET museum, Thailand, Sri Lanka and even Iran offered to buy the Buddhas, and 54 ambassadors of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference conducted a meeting and protested their destruction.

CNN reported that Egypt had preserved its ancient pre-Islamic monuments as a point of pride, and Egypts president, Hosni Mubarak, dispatched the mufti of the republic, the countrys most senior Islamic authority, to plead with the Taliban.

The 22 member Arab League condemned the destruction as a savage act. Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf sent his interior minister, Moinuddin Haider, to Kabul to argue against the destruction on the basis that it was unIslamic and unprecedented. The southeast Asian media reacted with deep shock. The Indian media blamed the US for putting its interests in oil and gas ahead of saving the Buddhas.

The substantial task of destroying the statues in the Bamiyan valley started on March 2, 2001 and took place in stages, over 20 days, using anti-aircraft guns, artillery and anti-tank mines. Eventually, men were lowered down the cliff face to place dynamite into cavities to destroy what was left.

To ensure an international audience and widespread media coverage, 20 journalists were flown to Bamiyan to witness the destruction and confirm that the two Buddhas had been destroyed. Footage of clouds of dust billowing out of the niches, where two giant Buddha statues had stood watch over the Silk Route winding through the Bamiyan valley for millennia, was transmitted all over the world, as the international community watched in horror and dismay.

The Taliban had sought unsuccessfully to obtain acceptance of their regime by the international community. The sacrifice of the Buddhas can be interpreted as a symbolic act announcing the end of any conciliatory gestures. This was an assertion of power by spectacle. The internet, relatively new at that time, intensified the impact of the destruction of the Buddhas.

Since 1994, the Talibans actions have all been part of a non-verbal soliloquy, responding to the ghosts of imperialism, colonialism, neo-imperialism and neoliberalism. The group uses public spaces in Afghanistan very much like a stage.

Violence is used as a kind of power performance to convey messages and responses to history. The performances are not random. They are thought through. They can be interpreted on many levels. They speak of discourses in worlds the western audience is not privy to.

The Taliban ushered in a new phase in a long discourse on Islam and the state in this region. Despite those initial dismissive analyses which saw the Taliban as madrasa-educated yahoos from Pushtun backwaters (and still do), it became clear that they had in fact been trying to communicate their world vision through these types of performances. If this had been understood, negotiations with the Taliban may have led to very different results and the long war, which has claimed so many lives, avoided.

This time round, the Taliban is tapping into other codes and symbols. In particular, their latest performances have involved their special forces, the Badri 313 unit. These soldiers are extremely well equipped and almost a mirror image of special forces units from other parts of the world. This simple act conveys messaging about the Talibans victory, and them being on an equal footing with the American soldiers in the same uniforms.

We have also seen shots of Taliban soldiers wearing clothes worn by southern Pushtun tribespeople. By wearing traditional clothes, outmoded hairstyles and flimsy sandals, they send a message about their claimed background and physical resilience. It also invokes hints of nostalgia, for a time of warriors past, when the Pushtuns were a formidable foe.

After entering Kabul, Taliban fighters and leaders posed for photos in the Presidential Palace, congregating at one point under a painting depicting the crowning of Ahmad Shah Durrani. Although some have commented that this is incongruous with the identity of the Taliban, I would argue that one has to look back to their previous rule. In my view, the Taliban symbolically established a political lineage reaching back to Ahmad Shah through Mullah Omars appearance with the cloak of the prophet in Kandahar. But the significance of many of the Talibans actions were missed at the time by commentators eager just to write them off.

Most interesting to me was when Sirajuddin Haqqani leader of the powerful and feared Haqqani faction in the Taliban and now interior minister met with the families of suicide bombers, praised their sacrifices and gave them gifts of land and money. Suicide bombing was a key part of the Talibans battle against the previous government. But the previous regime rarely publicly acknowledged the deaths of their ordinary soldiers and police they were literally cannon fodder. They certainly did not have public ceremonies to honour the sacrifices of the Afghan people. The government had even hid casualty figures for a while to avoid demoralising the nation.

Months before the Taliban arrived in Kabul in 2021, I watched as they closed girls schools in the north. This was also a power performance. It was a challenge, a gauntlet cast down for the Afghan government to pick up. It did not simply show that the Taliban objected to girls education. They were demonstrating their power by taking away one of the advances the Afghan government had consistently showcased to the international community as a major gain. Perhaps it was also a signal to outspoken Afghan women and their supporters that the Taliban were not interested in being conciliatory on womens rights.

I waited for an equivalent and in kind response from the Afghan government, womens rights activists or the international community. A team sent to negotiate; a military unit sent to retake the schools; the girls offered education elsewhere at the time, the Afghan and international military were present and could have made some sort of symbolic gesture in response.

But nothing happened. Nobody, it seems, understood the Talibans mode of power performance. The only response was the usual verbal condemnation on social media. The Afghan government showed itself as powerless and abandoned those school girls as it would eventually abandon the rest of the population. Once again, the world watched, frustrated and uncomprehending, as the Taliban rewound Afghanistan right back to the days before they were toppled in 2001.

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What my 20 years in Afghanistan taught me about the Taliban and how the west consistently underestimates them - The Conversation UK