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Page 53 of White Noise Keywords: "gain," "covered," "leaves," "sugarless"
From: evabrown24@hotmail.com (eva B)
Subject: taliban entertainment
Date: 24 Jan 2002
Newsgroups: aus.politics
thirty-thousand men and boys poured into the dilapidated Olympic
sports stadium in Kabul, capital of Afghanistan. Street hawkers
peddled nuts, biscuits and tea to the waiting crowd. The scheduled
entertainment? They were there to see a young woman, Sohaila, receive
100 lashes, and to watch two thieves have their right hands amputated.
Sohaila had been arrested walking with a man who was not a relative, a
sufficient crime for her to be found guilty of adultery. Since she was
single, it was punishable by flogging; had she been married, she would
have been publicly stoned to death.
As Sohaila, completely covered in the shroud-like burqa veil, was
forced to kneel and then flogged, Taliban "cheerleaders" had the
stadium ringing with the chants of onlookers. Among those present
there were just three women: the young Afghan, and two female
relatives who had accompanied her. The crowd fell silent only when the
luckless thieves were driven into the arena and pushed to the ground.
Physicians using surgical scalpels promptly carried out the
amputations. Holding the severed hands aloft by the index fingers, a
grinning Taliban fighter warned the huge crowd, "These are the
chopped-off hands of thieves, the punishment for any of you caught
stealing." Then, to restore the party atmosphere, the thieves were
driven in a jeep once around the stadium, a flourish that brought the
crowd to their feet, as was intended.
These Friday circuses, at which Rome's Caligula would doubtless have
felt at home, are to become weekly fixtures for the
entertainment-starved male residents of Kabul. Now that "weak
officials" have been purged from key ministries, says the city's
governor, Manan Niazi, who like many of the regime's officials is also
a mullah, the way has been cleared for such displays. "We have a lot
of such unpunished cases, but the previous civil servants didn't have
the courage to do what we are doing. These people have now been
replaced, and these events will continue." In fact, the next scheduled
program, as announced, would be one stoning to death and three
amputations.
Earlier that same week, three men accused of "buggery" had been
sentenced to death by being partially buried in the ground and then
having a wall pushed over on them by a bulldozer, a bizarre and
labor-intensive form of execution dreamed up by the supreme leader of
the Taliban, the 36-year-old Mullah Mohammad Omar. After another man,
a saboteur, was hanged, his corpse was driven around the city,
swinging from a crane. Clearly, there is nothing covert about the
regime's punitive measures. In fact, the Taliban insure they are as
widely publicized as possible. Last March, for example, the regime's
radio station, the only one permitted to operate, broadcast to the
nation that a young woman caught trying to flee Afghanistan with a man
who was not her relative had been stoned to death. On another
occasion, it was announced over the airwaves that 225 women had been
rounded up and sentenced to a lashing for violating the dress code.
One woman had the top of her thumb amputated for the crime of wearing
nail polish. And when the Taliban castrated and then hanged the former
communist president and his brother in 1996, they left their bloodied
bodies dangling from lampposts in busy downtown Kabul for three days.
Photographs of the corpses appeared in news magazines and newspapers
around the world.
The Taliban now control between 65 and 85 percent of Afghanistan, a
country where statistics are anyone's guess. (Even the population size
of Afghanistan is uncertain: possibly 15, maybe 22 million. The U.S.
Department of State's figure on war fatalities-1.5 million- has not
changed since 1985, although the armed conflict there is now in its
19th year.) For the last two years, the Taliban have been trying to
win both a seat at the United Nations and international recognition.
Thus far, only three countries have recognized the regime: Pakistan,
the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia. And even Pakistan is
becoming embarrassed by its neighbor.
Until the Taliban came to power, Saudi Arabia was the most oppressive
country on earth for women, and many of the Taliban's restrictions are
rooted in that hardline Gulf state's gender apartheid. Saudi Arabia
has also been financially supportive of the Taliban and the religious
schools in which they are indoctrinated. "We have long regarded the
Saudi kingdom as our right hand," says the head of the Taliban
governing council.
The Taliban regime claim they are restoring Afghanistan to the "purity
of Islam," and the Western press invariably parrots them. But
authorities in a number of Muslim countries insist that few of the
regime's dictates have a basis in Islam. And just as the U.N. has
denied the Taliban a seat in the General Assembly, so too, the
Organization of Islamic Conference, a 55-country body, has withheld
both a seat and recognition from the regime. "The Taliban is not the
image the Islamic world wants to project," says one Muslim diplomat.
And with good reason.
Now in its fourth year of existence, the pariah regime has expunged
all leisure activities. Their list of what is illegal grows daily:
music, movies and television, picnics, wedding parties, New Year
celebrations, any kind of mixed-sex gathering. They've also banned
children's toys, including dolls and kites; card and board games;
cameras; photographs and paintings of people and animals; pet
parakeets; cigarettes and alcohol; magazines and newspapers, and most
books. They've even forbidden applause -- a moot point, since there's
nothing left to applaud.
"Whatever we are doing in our country, it is not in order for the
world to be happy with us," Sher Abbas Stanakzai, who until recently
was the Taliban's 36-year-old deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, told
me during my visit. Explaining why his regime has banned virtually all
forms of entertainment, he says, "Time should be spent serving the
country and praying to God. Nothing else. Everything else is a waste
of time, and people are not allowed to waste their time."
For women, the restrictions are even harsher. Female education, from
kindergarten through graduate school, banned. Employment for women,
banned. It's now illegal to wear makeup, nail polish, jewelry, pluck
your eyebrows, cut your hair short, wear colorful or stylish clothes,
sheer stockings, white socks and shoes, high-heel shoes, walk loudly,
talk loudly or laugh in public. In fact, the government doesn't
believe women should go out at all: "Women, you should not step
outside your residence" reads one of the Taliban dictates.
If women do venture out, it must be for an essential,
government-sanctioned purpose, and they must wear the all-enveloping
burqa. Even then they risk their lives. Not so long ago, a young
mother, Torpeka, was shot repeatedly by the Taliban while rushing her
seriously ill toddler to a doctor. Veiled as the law requires, she was
spotted by a teenage Taliban guard, who tried to stop her because she
shouldn't have left her home. Afraid her child might die if she were
delayed, Torpeka kept going. The guard aimed his Kalashnikov
machine-gun and fired several rounds directly at her. She was hit, but
didn't die on the spot, as she could have. Instead, Afghans watching
the incident in the crowded marketplace intervened, and Torpeka and
her child received prompt medical attention. When her family later
complained to the Taliban authorities, they were informed that it was
the injured woman's fault. She had no right being out in public in the
first place.
The burqa is a garment that covers women from head to toe, the heavy
gauze patch across the eyes makes it hard to see, and completely
blocks peripheral vision. Since enforced veiling, a growing number of
women have been hit by vehicles because the burqa leaves them unable
to walk fast, or see where they are going. Recently in Kabul, a
Taliban tank rolled right over a veiled woman. Fortunately, she fell
between the tracks. Instead of being crushed to death, she was not
seriously hurt, but was severely traumatized.
To insure women are effaced as effectively as if they never existed,
the government ordered all exterior windows of homes to be painted
black. The only public transport permitted women are special buses,
which are rarely available, and have all windows, except the driver's,
covered with thick blankets.
It is now illegal for women to talk to any men except close relatives,
which precludes them from visiting male physicians, no matter how
sick. At the time of my recent visit, the evening curfew began at 7:30
p.m., after which no one, except government troops, was allowed out,
even for medical emergencies. Even women in labor and needing hospital
care must remain at home until morning.
It would probably be quicker to list what the Taliban haven't banned.
The regime has even outlawed paper bags. Like many of their edicts,
this would be laughable if the penalties for infractions weren't so
severe. Break the Taliban's law and you risk imprisonment, flogging,
or worse. And to insure their dictates are followed, religious police,
part of the "Department for the Propagation of Virtue and the
Suppression of Vice," constantly roam the streets. Often teenage boys
armed with automatic weapons, they also carry broken-off car aerials
or electrical cabling to whip women they decide are not properly
observing the regulations.
Despite its disastrous and very public record on human rights, when
the Taliban was petitioning the United Nations for a seat in the
General Assembly last May, its then New York representative, Abdul
Hakeem Mujahid, claimed his government was "protecting human rights
and liberties in Afghanistan." He also stated that, having put a stop
to the "miserable living conditions under which our women were
living," they had "restored women's safety, dignity and freedom." He
then went on to justify the Taliban's ban on women's education:
Afghanistan lacks the resources to educate them, he said, adding that
the Taliban also do not trust the values that became part of the
education system under previous governments. Those reservations,
however, only apply to women, since the regime continues to educate
boys.
Mujahid omitted to mention a personal detail-how he circumvents the
ban for his own daughter by sending her to an English-language school
in Pakistan. But this kind of hypocrisy is common in Afghanistan
today. Under the regime, cigarette smoking is severely punished, yet
in every Taliban office I entered in Kabul, even that of the head of
the department of Virtue and Vice, Mullah Qalam-ad-Din, from whom most
of the restrictions originate, used ashtrays were always in evidence.
A senior official in the foreign ministry chain-smoked throughout our
hour-long conversation. "Isn't that illegal?" I asked. "I can't help
it, I'm addicted," he replied with a smile.
While touting to the U.N. the Taliban's "improved" living conditions
for women, Mujahid didn't mention the regime's banning of women's
employment, or any of their myriad other restrictions, which have so
constrained women's lives that half the population of the country is
now effectively confined to house arrest.
Amnesty International calls Afghanistan under the Taliban "a human
rights catastrophe." Afghan women, struggling to survive in what has
become a police state claiming to be a theocracy, describe themselves
as the "living dead."
It is hardly surprising, then, that the U.N. has not seated the
Taliban delegation; or, indeed, that the credentials committee has
refused even to meet with the regime's representative in New York, and
most officials prefer to duck his phone calls. But the U.N. has seated
the representatives of some pretty brutal regimes in the past, and the
ostracism is unlikely to last forever-especially with lobbyists for
American oil concerns entering the picture.
Unocal, a California-based global energy company, heads up one of two
consortiums engaged in fierce competition to build gas and oil
pipelines from landlocked Turkmenistan to Pakistan through war-torn
Afghanistan. In testimony to the U.S. Congress this February, John
Maresca, vice-president in charge of Unocal's international relations,
referred to the $4.5 billion, some 790-mile project as the "new Silk
Road...a commercial corridor that can link Central Asia supply with
the demand, once again making Central Asia the crossroads between
Europe and Asia."
Iran offers an alternative pipeline route, but because of U.S.
sanctions legislation, American companies would not be able to
participate in its construction-or, as a result, gain any benefit from
what are considered the largest untapped oil and gas reserves outside
the Middle East. And while Unocal says it cannot sign any deal with
the Taliban until they are formally recognized, this hasn't stopped
them from wining and dining Taliban officials, and arranging shopping
trips for them to purchase luxury items on their visits to the oil
company in the U.S. Unocal already has a $900,000 training program
underway, in collaboration with the University of Nebraska at Omaha,
for pipeline construction personnel, a program limited to Afghan
males. Additionally, the duo has established two technician training
centers in Afghanistan, also benefitting men only.
Unocal's main partner in the consortium is Delta Oil Co., a
Saudi-owned company, in whose behalf former White House legislative
assistant Paul Behrends and Delta's American vice-president Charles
Santos, a recent U.N. peace negotiator in Afghanistan, are busy
lobbying in Washington.
The pipeline would bring the Taliban some $100 million annually in
transit fees, in addition to providing thousands of jobs and improving
infrastructure-building roads, supplying electricity, telephones,
etc.-in the war-devastated country. The Clinton administration
reportedly supports the Afghan pipeline, which would free the new
nations of Central Asia from dependence on Russia, avoid the Iranian
route, and bring needed energy to the Indian subcontinent.
Competing with Unocal to build the pipeline is Bridas International of
Argentina, whose managing director, Mario Lopez Olacireegui, has gone
on record saying he is not concerned about the Taliban's human rights
violations. "We are just an oil and gas company," he says. "We are not
bothered by human rights or politics." The Taliban, for their part,
say they will award the pipeline contract to the consortium that is
first able to start construction. Unocal's deadline to begin is this
coming December.
A number of American women's organizations, headed by the Feminist
Majority and the National Organization for Women, have mobilized to
prevent the Clinton administration from recognizing the Taliban
government unless it radically changes its treatment of women. They
are also campaigning for Unocal to include women in their training
programs. As we went to press, sources within Unocal admitted this
campaign is beginning to have an effect. A split has occurred within
the oil company-those who want to press ahead, and those who do not
want a politically embarrassing "rogue operation." As the U.S. women's
campaign gains momentum, Unocal is also finding foreign investors
suddenly unenthusiastic about being affiliated with a regime with such
a disastrous public relations record. None of which has affected the
Taliban, however, who have since clamped down harder on women, this
time ordering that all foreign Muslim women working with the U.N. or
NGOs be accompanied by male chaperones, which in effect will halt
their employment in Afghanistan.
While it may be some time before Taliban coffers are swollen by
petrodollars, one of the mainstays of the regime's economy is heroin
production, which they use in part to supply their war machine.
Afghanistan now produces more of the narcotic than any other
country-and much of it ends up on the streets of the U.S. Despite
promises by the Taliban to eradicate the industry, according to a
report released last February by the U.N. Inter- national Narcotics
Control Board, the harvest of opium poppy, from which heroin is
derived, increased by 25 percent in Afghanistan during 1997. The
Taliban control 96 percent of Afghanistan's total opium output, this
country's only real remaining cash crop.
Though it was always impoverished, before the Soviet invasion
Afghanistan was able to feed its people. Today, after almost 20 years
of war, this is no longer true. Afghan women, in the rural areas, have
always worked alongside men in the fields. In the capital, until the
Taliban took over, they often wore Western dress, served in
parliament, and worked in a variety of professions, including
medicine, engineering, architecture, the media and law. During the
long years of fighting, as men were killed, went missing, or became
disabled, the survival of many families came to depend on women's
income.
Before the Taliban ban on female employment, 70 percent of the
teachers in Kabul were women, as were 50 percent of the civil servants
and university students, and 40 percent of the doctors.
Why does the regime insist that women be confined at home? Reducing
women to mere objects, the minister of education says, "It's like
having a flower, or a rose. You water it and keep it at home for
yourself, to look at it and smell it. It [a woman] is not supposed to
be taken out of the house to be smelled." Another Taliban leader is
less poetic: "There are only two places for Afghan women-in her
husband's house, and in the graveyard."
I have been visiting and reporting on Afghanistan since 1984, and have
traveled extensively throughout the country, but it was only during my
visit last fall that I saw for the first time legions of women and
children reduced to beggary, the result of the Taliban's ban on
women's employment. Many families, having sold all their household
items, even blankets, are surviving on bread and sugarless tea.
Supplementary feeding centers, funded by foreign agencies, are dotted
across the capital. Here, malnourished children-four-year-olds
weighing 16 pounds, 18-month-old toddlers weighing 9 pounds-are fed.
Their mothers are not, even though they, too, are malnourished. Women
often eat once every two or three days, preferring instead to give
whatever food they have to their children. According to new U.N.
figures, some 40 percent of the Kabul population now exists on food
handouts, either from humanitarian agencies or from begging.
The legally mandated burqa has also become a severe financial
hardship. The veil now costs the equivalent of five months salary-if
any women were still receiving one. Most cannot afford to buy the
garment, and whole neighborhoods must share one. It can take several
days for a woman's turn to come round; even if she has money to shop
for food, she can't go out until then.
In Kabul, the number of street children has risen from an estimated
28,000 to 60,000 in the last year. This city, once a symbol of
modernity for Afghanistan, is now in ruins-the most bomb-damaged
capital in the world. It is also the most land-mined. Mines maim
and/or kill an average of 25 people a day in Afghanistan. Two-thirds
of them are children. It is predominantly children who herd animals,
or search for fuel or for scrap metal to sell to help support their
families. Scrap metal merchants will only purchase unexploded bombs or
shells if the children disarm them first. Kids doing this highly risky
work earn on average enough to buy just two or three pieces of bread
per day.
Despite the terrible toll mines are taking, the Taliban have
interfered with programs to teach women and children how to locate and
stay clear of mines. Board games used by foreign humanitarian agencies
to instruct a mostly illiterate population in mine-awareness have been
disallowed because they use now-banned pictures of humans or animals
coming too close to a mine; an alternative, flash cards, has also been
outlawed-as gambling.
Conditions are so deplorable for women under the Taliban that many are
now severely depressed. Without the resources to leave the country, an
increasing number are now choosing suicide, once rare there, as a
means of escape. A European physician working in the city told me,
"Doctors are seeing a lot of esophageal burns. Women are swallowing
battery acid, or poisonous household cleansers, because they are easy
to find. But it's a very painful way to die."
Spoghmai, a 24-year-old former teacher, refers to herself as being
"buried alive." The young woman lost her right arm up to the shoulder,
and her right leg to the thigh, in a shelling attack three years ago.
After her injury, when she spent weeks in a poorly equipped hospital,
Spoghmai was, not surprisingly, so depressed she wanted to die. A
lifesaver, literally, was a job she found with a Western relief agency
that enabled her to work with the disabled. But four months later,
when the Taliban took Kabul in September 1996, she was forced to stop
working.
Today, she wears a badly fitted, and painful, prosthesis-badly fitted
because, in Afghanistan now, false limbs come in only three sizes.
Disabled as she is, walking is difficult, and is impossible if she is
wearing a burqa veil. Since she cannot go out without one, she hasn't
left the house in two years. "There are so many days when I am too
depressed to get out of bed. Why should I? There is nothing for me to
do. So many times I ask, Why didn't I die when I was injured?"
I offered to take Spoghmai out for a short excursion in my jeep. She
refused. "I am afraid. It is too dangerous, for you and me. Afghans
are not allowed to be with foreigners, or talk with journalists. If we
are caught, the Taliban will beat us, maybe worse. And anyway, to go
out briefly would be too painful. It will remind me of what I have
lost. One day of freedom will make this prison so much worse."
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