|
Amnesty International - Report
- ASA 11/12/99
November 1999 Afghanistan Human Rights Defenders in Afghanistan: Civil Society Destroyed |
Two decades of conflict, repression and neglect have had a devastating effect on
civil society in
Afghanistan. With the virtual
collapse of the educational system there are now several generations
of Afghans who have received little or no education at all.
War and repression have deprived the
country of peaceful political activity and intellectual pursuits that are the very foundation of civil
and institutional life. Most Afghan politicians, professionals or those engaged in literary and artistic
activities have either been killed, have left the country or have died of old age while press and media
activity has been reduced to its barest minimum. The negative impact of this impoverishment on the
economic and social development of the country will be felt for decades to come.
A brief historical reference
Modern education based on Western models in Afghanistan began in early 20th century when a
number of schools were opened in Kabul. This coincided with the publication of a number of
newspapers including Serajul-Akhbar (Lamp of the News, published during the reign of Habibullah
Khan, 1901-1919) which attracted people engaged in intellectual activity.See footnote 1
1
These people in turn
formed associations which aired demand for political reform. The faculty of Medicine - opened in
1932 - was the first ever higher education institute in Afghanistan. Kabul University - established
in1946 - became home to a flurry of political activity through the years. By 1992, there were
universities in Balkh, Herat, and Kandahar. In Kabul alone, there were thousands of students in 1992
- most of whom were women as young men were being recruited by all sides to fight in the war.
Peaceful political activity was periodically encouraged or suppressed by various Afghan rulers, but many Afghans remember the first three decades after the Second World War to have been marked generally by greater tolerance of political dissent and less government interference in National Assembly elections.
Thousands of university educated Afghans fled after the communist take-over of power in April
1978 and the occupation of the country by Soviet forces in December 1979. The most common
destination for fleeing Afghan intellectuals
was the North West Frontier Province city of Peshawar
in Pakistan which became a hive of political, cultural and literary activities. These included the
formation of Afghan Information Centre in
Peshawar
by Professor Bahauddin Majrooh
(assassinated in 1988); the formation of
Writers Union of Free Afghanistan by
Professor Rasool Amin; a range of political
publications including Payam-e Zan of the
Revolutionary Association of Women of
Afghanistan (RAWA) whose leader Mina
Keshwar Kamal was assassinated in 1987;
and Afghan Mellat or the Afghan Social
Democratic Party. Some of the leading
Afghan intellectuals were associated with the
Council for Understanding and National
Unity of Afghanistan known as Shura-e
Tafahom whose Secretary General,
Jamiatullah Jalal, disappearedin 1995.
Peshawar was also the power base of the
armed Mujahideen groups fighting the
Afghan government and Soviet forces. These
groups
received funds, weapons and training from some Western and regional governments via the
Pakistani military. Pakistan maintained tight control over the distribution of this support and the
organization of the Pakistan-based armed resistance to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
In this milieu, Afghan intellectuals in Pakistan were under pressure to channel their activities in
support of one or other of these armed political groups
. Intellectuals who did not conform to these
demands felt marginalised and were at risk of attacks by members of some of these Afghan parties.
Those who raised their voice against the policies of the Mujahideen groups were targeted.
Afghan intellectuals residing in Iran were under heavy pressure to support the Hezb-e Wahdat (unity
party) which was backed by Iran. Those who did not conform to these demands were under severe
restrictions and unable to engage in any Afghan cultural or political activities.
Afghan intelligentsia today are scattered all over the world, representing shades of religious and
political thinking inside Afghanistan. Some support the Taleban; some support the opposing United
Front. Others generally advocate an end to the war and work towards a negotiated peace. It is this
latter category of Afghan intellectuals both within the country and in refugee areas in Pakistan,
which has been a particular target of assassination within the last decade or so, especially in the past
two years.
After the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, fighting continued
between government and opposition forces until the
communist government finally collapsed in 1992. The fall
of the government did not bring peace, however, as the
loosely allied and fractious Mujahideen groups started
fighting each other for control of territory and
administrative institutions. Despite the formation of a
coalition interim government, central political authority
was weak and unstable, and Afghanistan plunged into
lawlessness.
At the end of 1994, a new political and military force - the
Taleban - emerged on to the scene. Stating as their aim to
rid Afghanistan of corrupt Mujahideen groups, the
Taleban have succeeded in capturing large areas of
country from opposing armed groups. They are now said
to control around 80 per cent of Afghanistan. Fighting
however continues between the Taleban and opposition
forces and the political situation remains
volatile.
A few names among hundreds
Among the many hundred civil servants and
university lecturers who disappeared after the
communist take-over of power in the country in
April 1979 was Dr Mohammad Younis
Akbari, a nuclear physicist and lecturer at
Kabul and Jalalabad universities. He was
arrested on 27 April 1983 when Babrak Karmal
was in power. In May 1994, the state controlled
Radio Kabul announced that he had been
sentenced to death by a 'Special Revolutionary
Court' for 'counter-revolutionary activities'
with no explanation about the details of the
charges or the trial. His fate remained unknown
until June 1990 when Amnesty International
heard from an official of the Najibullah
government that he had been executed years
before without specifying the exact year or the
circumstances of his killing.
Scores of Afghan intellectuals defying the
policies of armed Mujahideen groups were
similarly targeted.
Mina Keshwar Kamal, a
founding member of the Afghan women's
organization, RAWA, was assassinated along
with two other members of her family in
February 1987 in her house in Quetta. The
assassins were believed to have been closely
linked to Hezb-e Islami. Prior to her
assassination, Mina Keshwar Kamal had received repeated death threats for her "anti-jihad [holy war]"
activities. These reportedly related to her trips to Western Europe where she made public statements
about the situation of Afghan women both in Afghanistan and in refugee camps controlled by Afghan
Mujahideen groups in Pakistan. Although she informed
the Pakistan authorities of the threats, she reportedly
received no protection from the police.
[
Mina Keshwar Kamal
]
Another victim was Professor Sayed Bahauddin
Majrooh, who published an independent monthly
bulletin in English from the Afghan Information Centre
in Peshawar and was killed on 11 February 1988 after
repeated death threats. He was known for his advocacy
of a political solution to the Afghan conflict. He was
killed by gunmen in his home in Peshawar. Several of
the threats to his life are believed to have been made by
Hezb-e Islami (Hekmatyar) who at that time were the
armed group most favoured by Pakistan in seeking a
military solution to the war in Afghanistan. No one has
been brought to justice for his killing.
Among those targeted inside Afghanistan after the
Mujahideen took power in April 1992 was
Abdul Karim
[
Jamiatullah Jalal, Afghan intellectual,
disappeared in February 1995 in Peshawar,
Pakistan.
]
Shadan, a former Chief Justice of Afghanistan. He
was reportedly abducted, tortured and killed in Kabul
on 3 May 1992 by Mujahideen armed guards acting
on behalf of the new government.
Amnesty
International
knows of no official attempts to identify
the killers or bring them to justice.
As Mujahideen groups began to fight each other in the
streets of Kabul and other cities after the collapse of
the last pro-Soviet government, Afghans inside and
outside the country who opposed the conflict and the
continued suffering of the Afghan civilians were
threatened with death. Wali Khan Karokhel, a strong
opponent of the new fighting in Afghanistan was
killed in 1993 in Peshawar
. Two days before his
assassination he had reportedly spoken against the
intervention of neighbouring countries in
Afghanistan's affairs, and his associates believe this
may have motivated his killers.
At times, those officially involved in negotiations
among the Mujahideen groups for peace have
themselves been killed. Najmuddin Musleh, a noted and widely respected Uzbek
politician who
had held high government office, including the governorship of Takhar, Ghazni and Herat, during
Mohammad Daoud's presidency was found dead in a Hezb-e Wahdat detention centre on 10 March
1994 in western Kabul. Despite being sent by a warring faction, Jamiat-e Islami, to
negotiate with
a rival leader General Dostum immediately before the renewed outbreak of fighting on 1 January
1994 which eventually left tens of thousands of people dead in Kabul, he was taken prisoner by the
allied forces of General Dostum and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Members of this alliance publicly
admitted that they were detaining him, but did not disclose his whereabouts. Later, he was reportedly
handed over to the forces of Hezb-e Wahdat in western Kabul, but the detention centre in which he
was held was never disclosed. When the prison was discovered after the armed guards of Jamiat-e
Islami had taken over the area, about 1,500 prisoners held there were released but eight of the
prisoners, including Najmuddin
Musleh, were found to have been
shot dead.
[
Afghan women's rights activists protest in Pakistan
©RAWA
]
In 1996 and 1997, Afghan
personalities from the Tajik,
Hazara and Uzbek minorities were
targeted in tides of repressive
action against these communities
by the Taleban during which
thousands were killed and
thousands more were taken to
unacknowledged detention. In
1998, a new wave of repression
began against Pushtun Afghan
personalities in Afghan territory
controlled by the Taleban and in refugee areas in Pakistan.
[
Abdul Ahad Karzai
]
Hundreds of such Afghan political personalities were arrested by the Taleban in 1998 and 1999
apparently only because of their peaceful opposition to the continued war in the country. The vast
majority of the detainees, who include intellectuals, community leaders, former army officers and
civil servants of Pushtun ethnic background, have reportedly been severely tortured. Over a dozen
of them have been killed while in custody. Some of the detainees have been released and the exact
number of those still in detention is not known.
However, the killings have continued. These
developments are particularly disturbing as they
represent a continued crackdown on elements within
Afghan society who are peacefully advocating the
establishment of a civil society and rule of law after
years of devastation and gross human rights
violations.
An alarming number of attacks on Afghans have
been taking place in Pakistan over the past months. In
November1998 alone, at least four prominent Afghan
personalities strongly advocating a political solution
to the war were killed in the cities of Peshawar and
Quetta in Pakistan.
Pakistani authorities are reported
not to have taken serious measures to investigate
these attacks.
These killings have continued and one of the latest
victims was
Abdul Ahad Karzai, a prominent Afghan
politician engaged in recent Afghan efforts to bring
about a negotiated peace to the country. He was gunned
down by two assailants on 15 July 1999 as he was leaving a mosque. The gunmen reportedly used
automatic assault rifles and drove off on a motorcycle
immediately after the shooting. Two Pakistanis
were also killed in the firing outside the mosque. Mr Karzai, who had been living in the United States,
had arrived in Pakistan only a few days before the attack. He is believed to have been targeted because
of the prominent role he played in efforts by the former king, Zahir Shah, for a negotiated settlement.
Several other Afghan personalities with similar profile have been killed in Quetta in the past year
including Nazar Mohammad, a deputy leader of the Afghan party, Da Solh Ghorzan. No one has been
brought to justice for these or other killings of Afghan political activists and human rights defenders in
Pakistan.See footnote 2
2
Amnesty International
recommendations to the Taleban authorities
:
Killing of Afghan political personalities
*
To facilitate the investigation by an independent, impartial and competent body of the
killing of Afghan personalities after their arrest in Afghanistan;
*
To ensure the safety of those providing testimony to such an investigation;
*
To state publicly the steps they are taking to ensure that those found responsible for
deliberate and arbitrary killings are brought to justice;
Other countries with influence that have attended UN meetings on Afghanistan: Egypt, France,
Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Turkey, UK
and the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).
Afghanistan Support Group brings together main donors and organizations working in Afghanistan.
These countries overlap with the UN groupings: Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy,
Netherlands, Sweden, Britain, the US, Australia, Russia, Canada, Norway, Japan, and the EU's
executive commission.
.
YOUR OWN GOVERNMENT
.
THE EMBASSIES OF PAKISTAN, SAUDI ARABIA, IRAN, AND THE USA IN YOUR OWN COUNTRY
.
THE TALEBAN
:
Alhaj Mullah Mohammad Rabbani Salutation: Dear Mullah Rabbani
(Chairman of the Taleban Caretaker Council)
Embassy of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
House No 8, Street No. 90
G-6/3 Islamabad
Pakistan
and
Mullah Mohammad Omar Salutation: Dear Mullah Omar
(leader of the Taleban)
Embassy of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
House No 8, Street No. 90
G-6/3 Islamabad
Pakistan
.
THE UNITED FRONT (ANTI-TALEBAN ALLIANCE):
Embassy of the Islamic State of Afghanistan
31 Prince's Gate
London
SW7 1QQ
United Kingdom
ENDNOTES