48
Congressmen Write a Letter to Joe Biden
Main
Points:
1. Taliban has
been denying basic human rights to the people.
2. One million
children are on the brink of starvation.
3. People are
compelled to marry off their minor daughters due to poverty.
4. They even
try to sell their sons.
5. The
government can't pay salaries to civil servants.
6. Banks are on
the verge of collapse.
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By
New Age Islam Staff Writer
9 March
2022
(Photo: Kashmir Times)
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Last
December, 48 members of the US Congress wrote a letter to President Joe Biden
reminding him of his duty towards the war torn Afghanistan where the US fought
a two decade long war on terror and urged him to release Afghanistan's $9.4
billion seized by the US to enable Afghanistan to cope with severe economic
crisis it was going through. The members wrote that about a million children
were on the brink of a starvation holocaust and added that the US should not be
the cause of starvation in a country where it killed millions of innocent
people, mostly women and children during the war on terror. The government is
reeling under a severe cash crunch. The prices of essential commodities are
soaring up; banks are on the verge of collapse; there is a balance of payments
crisis and payment of sarlaries to the civil servants is a problem for the
government, the letter pointed out
The
Congressmen also pointed out that the Taliban's track record on human rights
has been poor and under its government, human rights activists, women rights
activists, civil society and journalists have faced restrictions, harassment
and incarceration. Therefore, the members urged the President to engage with
the Taliban government with a pragmatic approach to avert a humanitarian crisis
in Afghanistan.
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Afghanistan on the Brink of Disaster
By
Robert Koehler
3/3/2022
“We deplore
the new Taliban government’s grave human rights abuses, crackdowns on civil
society and repression of women and LBGTQ people. However, pragmatic U.S.
engagement with the de facto authorities is nevertheless key to averting
unprecedented harm to tens of millions of women, children and innocent
civilians.”
Gay rights,
women’s rights — in reality, these are a nuisance to many U.S. conservatives,
but purporting to protect these rights on the other side of the world is a
great excuse to play war.
And you
don’t need bombs to play. All you need is the will to dominate and the ability
to dehumanize “the enemy,” so that their lives can be trashed if (and when)
necessary.
I have to
confess a stunned speechlessness as I learn about the looming fate of
Afghanistan, if President Biden refuses to release $9.4 billion of its assets
to the country’s central bank, which it had deposited abroad, primarily at the
U.S. Federal Reserve, during the 20-year war. With the Taliban reclaiming power
after the U.S. withdrawal last August, the president seized control of these
assets, potentially plunging Afghanistan into economic freefall, and . . . oh
God . . .
“United
Nations officials are warning that millions of Afghans could run out of food
before winter, with 1 million children at risk of starvation. . . .”
“No
increase in food and medical aid can compensate for the macroeconomic harm of
soaring prices of basic commodities, a banking collapse, a balance-of-payments
crisis, a freeze on civil servants’ salaries, and other severe consequences
that are rippling throughout Afghan society, harming the most vulnerable.”
These words
are from a letter to Biden last December, signed by 48 members of Congress,
urging him not to play economic war with the people of Afghanistan, even though
the Taliban is in power. Enduring 20 years of war is one thing, but it doesn’t
compare with living in the midst of total economic collapse.
A million
children could die of starvation.
This is
almost beyond comprehension. Indeed, families are being forced to take
unthinkable actions to survive.
“Many of
Afghanistan’s growing number of destitute people are making desperate decisions
. . . as their nation spirals into a vortex of poverty,” according to the
Associated Press. For instance: “Arranging marriages for very young girls is a
frequent practice throughout the region. The groom’s family — often distant
relatives — pays money to seal the deal, and the child usually stays with her
own parents until she is at least around 15 or 16. Yet with many unable to
afford even basic food, some say they’d allow prospective grooms to take very
young girls or are even trying to sell their sons.”
Jean Athey
of Peace Action, noting that the U.S. spent some $2.3 trillion dollars on the
Afghanistan war, points out that: “for the people of Afghanistan, the war has
not ended, nor has the killing. The new economic war is expected to kill more
Afghans in four months this winter than did the ‘kinetic’ war in twenty years.
No one expects the leaders of the Taliban to suffer. But everyone agrees that
hundreds of thousands of babies will die. In fact, Afghanistan in 2022 is shaping
up to be one of the worst, possibly the worst, humanitarian catastrophe on
record, for any country.”
Such data
raises endless questions, all of which can be reduced to a single word: Why?
Why? Why?
The
consciousness of war still rules. The basic, abstract answer is simply: the
Taliban. They are cruel and brutal and deny many people their basic rights as
human beings. True as that may be, how can the U.S. government and its
unquestioning supporters fail to see the irony of our faux-outrage over this, when
we have been killing civilians there with impunity for decades and are now
prepared to preside over a starvation holocaust? Furthermore, we gladly support
and ally ourselves with brutally oppressive governments all over the world, as
long as they bend to our wishes and align themselves with our “interests.”
The time is
now to ally ourselves with a million children on the brink of starvation and
directly acknowledge the endless failure of war, including economic war. The
primary victims are always the innocent.
The letter
to Biden from 48 members of Congress — barely 10 percent of the House —
addressed the issue thus:
“We deplore
the new Taliban government’s grave human rights abuses, crackdowns on civil
society and repression of women and LBGTQ people. However, pragmatic U.S.
engagement with the de facto authorities is nevertheless key to averting
unprecedented harm to tens of millions of women, children and innocent
civilians. Punitive economic policies will not weaken Taliban leaders, who will
be shielded from the direst consequences, while the overwhelming impact of
these measures will fall on innocent Afghans who have already suffered decades
of war and poverty.”
The letter
ends with a quote from Mary-Ellen McGroarty of World Food Program: “We need to
separate the politics from the humanitarian imperative.”
If instead
we continue to wage the “war on evil” that George W. Bush began, we will
continue to be part of that evil. Think about the millions of Afghans facing
starvation in their shattered country, then imagine the consequences coming
home.
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Robert Koehler is a Chicago award-winning
journalist and editor. Courtesy: PeaceVoice, a program of the Oregon Peace
Institute.
Source: Afghanistan on the Brink of Disaster
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/war-terror/us-taliban-humanitarian-afghanistan-/d/126532
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