As Afghans go hungry, the West contends with the Taliban's broken promises - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 11:55 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PoliticsAnalysis

As Afghans go hungry, the West contends with the Taliban's broken promises

One year after the victorious Taliban rolled into Kabul, Afghanistan's economy is in freefall, its people are going hungry and its government remains an isolated, international pariah.

Western governments struggle for a diplomatic approach to a regime bent on isolation

A Taliban fighter stands guard as people receive food rations distributed by a South Korean humanitarian aid group in Kabul, Afghanistan on May 10, 2022. (Ebrahim Noroozi/The Associated Press)

A year ago today, as rifle-toting Taliban were rollinginto Kabul, aflood of questions coursed through the mind of Deborah Lyons, Canada's former ambassador to Afghanistan.

Serving at the time asthe United Nations secretary general's special representative to the long-suffering country, shewatched in utter disbelief the swift, merciless collapse of the western-backed governmentshe had devoted so much professional and personal energy to building, nurturingand, occasionally, defending in the rhetorical sense.

In the blink of an eye, it was all gone.

"How do we contend with this? How do we respond to it?" Lyons asked herself as the black, red and green Afghan flags were ripped down and replaced with the white and black Taliban banners.

A woman with short brown hair wearing a coral paisley shirt and coral scarf
Then-Canadian ambassador to Afghanistan Deborah Lyons in Kabul on Monday March 10, 2014. (Murray Brewster/The Canadian Press)

The western worldwrit largeis still asking itself the same questions twelve months later as, slowlybut surely, the Taliban government winds the clock back on all the social, economic and political reforms implemented since the hardline Islamist movement was driven into exile in 2001.

Despite its early pledges to the contrary, the Taliban have driven women out of public life and have made every effort to control their private movements as they work to restore therepressive patriarchy that made them an international pariah during their first go-round in government.

Western leadersat times described the two-decade war in Afghanistan as a fightfor the rights of Afghan women and girls. No longer.

Other symbols of western culturehave been jettisoned by the hardline regime.

A Taliban special forces guard stands in front of a Taliban flag at a park in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, April 18, 2022. (Ebrahim Noroozi/The Associated Press)

Music is banned. There are restrictions on press freedom.

In a recent interview with CBC Radio's The House, Lyons tried to remain optimistic.

"I hope we're at the bottom now and that the Taliban will see that they cannot be isolated" from the international community," she said.

"They say they don't want to be. Sonow we have got to see them respond on a more positive level to a number of the concerns that have been expressed."

Good luck with that.

During peace negotiations with the United States, the Taliban promised national peace talks that never took place and vowedto prevent al-Qaeda and other militants from operating in Taliban-controlled territory.

A 'major mistake'

That pledge was blown away when the United States killed al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in a drone strike in central Kabul several days ago.

Lyons called the decision to hostthe al-Qaeda leader "a major mistake on the part of the Taliban." She said ithas reawakened counter-terrorism concerns in the West while leaving the international communitywondering whether the regime can be trusted to keep its peace and security promises.

"We're seeing this now move to a whole new level," she said.

In short, the West is trying to come up with an answer to Lyons' question a way to"contend" with Taliban's broken promise regarding al Qaeda, the one almost everyone had hoped theywould honour.

A recent U.S. spy agency assessment cited bythe New York Timesconcluded that al Qaeda has not regrouped in Afghanistan since the American withdrawal last August and that only a handful ofhardcore members remain in the country.

An Afghan woman waits to receive a food ration distributed by a South Korea humanitarian aid group in Kabul, Afghanistan, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. (Ebrahim Noroozi/AP)

Following last year's Taliban victory, Afghanistan's economyimploded. Many people are struggling to find enough money to eat and to access services.

Ramiz Alakbarov, the UN secretary general's resident and humanitarian coordinator in the country, said it's been tough to measure how far Afghanistan has fallen.

"Let's be very honest," he said. "There's no way to compare the situation before and nowin terms of the operational economy."

The previous government had a budget of $13.5 billion. There are no reliable figures on what the Taliban is taking in and spending.

Alakbarov said that what he does see is people on the streets of Kabul selling belongings to make ends meet.

Food aid blocked

At times in the past year, as many as 10 million Afghanshadno access to food. Recently, two containers of food from Canada were blocked from being shipped to Afghanistan because federal law prevents aid agencies in this country from dealing with terrorists.

Canada's allies and the UN have carved out exceptions to their laws and policies in order to facilitate the delivery of food and medicine to ordinary Afghans. Alakbarov urged Canada to do the same.

A Parliamentary committeeexamining the chaotic withdrawal from Kabul and the effort to bring as many as 40,000 Afghan refugees to Canada has recommended such a move.

Since then, crickets.

WATCH: Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland discusses Afghan refugees

Deputy prime minister answers questions about Afghanistan

2 years ago
Duration 2:23
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada's priority is to focus on the women and children of Afghanistan 'who have suffered real setbacks.'

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada is,at the moment,focused on those whofled the events of a year ago.

"I think our focus needs to be on, first of all, bringing Afghan refugees to Canada and on the people of Afghanistan," Freeland said on the weekend.

"Speaking very personally, I'm particularly focused on the women and girls of Afghanistan who are suffering tremendously and have suffered real setbacks."

What Freeland did not address was how that could be achieved for women still in Afghanistan without involving the Taliban.

And so, one year after the fall of Kabul, it seems thatLyons' questionremains unanswered.

With files from Hannah Thibedeau