14) THE "WOMAN AMONG
WARLORDS" TOURS NORTH
AMERICA
(The following
article is from the December 1-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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Afghan MP Malalai Joya, an outspoken
critic of the NATO occupation of her country, has been touring North
America this fall to help build opposition to the war. She has just
published her autobiography, A Woman Among Warlords, co-written with
Derrick O'Keefe, longtime activist in Vancouver's StopWar coalition.
Joya was interviewed by Blake Sifton of the TheTyee.ca website shortly
before the Canadian leg of her tour began in Vancouver, where nearly
1,000 people packed a hall to hear her speak. Here are excerpts from
that interview.
On the Afghan presidential election
mess:
"An election held under occupation
and the influence of corruption and warlordism has no legitimacy at
all. It is impossible for there to be a democratic election in
Afghanistan right now. Hamid Karzai is a corrupt puppet who is
betraying our people and Abdullah Abdullah was the preferred candidate
of the warlords. Both of their policies are similar - they are both
called the Taliban `brothers.' They are both traitors."
On what most Afghans think about the
election:
"Ordinary Afghans don't have security
or even food to eat. They don't trust the candidates and often they
hate them. It's hard for true Afghan democrats because elections are
supposed to be a hallmark of democracy and we want to believe in them.
In the lead up to the election Afghans had a saying. They said that
whatever the result we would have, [it was] `the same donkey with a new
saddle.'"
On U.S. President Obama's Afghan
policies:
"I was hopeful when Obama was elected
but unfortunately when he came to power his message to my people was
that there will be more war. He increased troop levels and wants to
send even more soldiers to Afghanistan. This will only bring more
conflict. It is impossible to bring democracy through military
occupation and the barrel of a gun. His policies are quite similar to
that of the Bush administration. His drone attacks in the border area
with Pakistan are killing innocent civilians and they have killed
hundreds of Afghan civilians with cluster bombs and white phosphorous.
They even bomb our wedding parties. Despite all of this, somehow he
received the Nobel Peace Prize. I don't understand how they could give
it to a president who is pursuing wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and
Pakistan."
On what would happen if NATO pulled
out of Afghanistan:
"We are stuck between two enemies -
the occupation forces killing innocent civilians, and the Taliban and
warlords. Many people say that if the troops leave Afghanistan, civil
war will happen. But we have a civil war now. As long as the U.S. and
NATO are here, the civil war will continue because they are supporting
the government and the warlords. If they end the occupation of my
country then we, the true democrats of Afghanistan, will be fighting
one enemy instead of two."
On the sacrifice of Canadian soldiers
in Afghanistan:
"The United States, Canada and the
other NATO countries are wasting their taxpayers' money and the blood
of their soldiers to support a completely corrupt and illegitimate
system. I am sorry for the Canadian families who have lost their sons
in Afghanistan. The soldiers are themselves victims of their
government's policies, just as our civilians are. Their families should
raise their voices against the misguided policies of their
governments... they must turn their sorrow into strength."
On how she would define global
support for the people of Afghanistan:
"When I say that we don't want your
soldiers I don't mean that we don't want your help. We are honoured to
have the support and solidarity of democratic people in Canada and
around the world... Please put pressure on your governments to
change
their policies and demonstrate in your cities to help end our
occupation. No one's drones will bomb you and no one will shoot you.
"Moral support and humanitarian
support will help us in the difficult and long struggle against the
Taliban and the warlords. Support intellectuals and democratic-minded
people of my country and support education in Afghanistan. Education,
and especially women's education, is a key to democracy and our
emancipation."
On the failure to effectively combat
the Afghan opium trade and its impact on North American society:
"After eight years, the U.S. and NATO
have failed so badly that now Afghanistan exports 93 per cent of the
world's opium. In 2001, the Taliban almost destroyed the opium trade in
Afghanistan. The Taliban! These uneducated, ignorant misogynists. It's
unbelievable that a superpower along with 40 other countries cannot
stop the opium trade but a medieval organization like the Taliban
nearly succeeds.
"How many poor people do you have on
your own streets? Yet the U.S. and Canada send millions to help
warlords and drug dealers in Afghanistan. Support for corrupt warlords
not only affects the people of my country - it also allows more and
more drugs to make their way onto the streets of Vancouver and destroy
your youth as well."
On Pakistani involvement in
Afghanistan and the repercussions for Pakistani civilians:
"Throughout our long years of war,
the Pakistanis have had puppets in Afghanistan and they still do. The
Pakistani intelligence supports the Afghan Taliban, and the madrasas
along the border are essentially 'Taliban factories' where people are
brainwashed to commit suicide bombings in Afghanistan. The U.S. works
with the ISI [Inter-Services Intelligence], and the ISI supports the
Afghan Taliban. They are playing cat-and-mouse with the terrorists.
"Now Obama fights a war with drones
in the Pakistani border areas. It is the civilians of Pakistan who
suffer. They are bombing the poorest and most backward cities of
Pakistan."
On going into exile and fearing
death:
"I am a woman and I refuse to stay
silent. I document the crimes of the warlords, so they want to kill me.
My life is always at risk. Even with bodyguards, I am not safe in the
country NATO occupies under the banner of women's rights and democracy.
My supporters abroad are worried, and many people tell me to leave
Afghanistan. But I'm not any better than the other democratic people in
my country who are dying. My blood is not more red then the blood of my
people. Faced with so many assassination attempts, I have to imagine
that one day they will succeed. But I do not fear death. I fear silence
in the face of injustice. That is my message to democratic people
around the world."