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Views /Opinion

Life-or-death Afghan vote tests Taliban battle on democracy

Eltaf Najafizada and Indira A

05 Apr 2014

By Eltaf Najafizada and Indira A R Lakshmanan
Halima Habibi isn’t sure she’ll have the courage to leave her home to vote in an election marking Afghanistan’s first democratic transfer of power since the US ousted the Taliban in 2001. Since her friend died in a Taliban attack last month, Habibi has stopped traveling the three kilometers to the private school where she teaches Dari literature and Afghan history. The 43-year-old lost her husband to the Taliban in 1998, and doesn’t want her children to end up as orphans.
The Taliban has vowed to kill voters picking a successor to Afghan President Hamid Karzai in an effort to roll back democratic gains made since the US invasion. At stake are legal protections for women, a jump in school enrollment, and billions of dollars in aid money that will help bolster an economy that has seen an eight-fold expansion since 2001.
“They will determine the fragility of the state post- Karzai and as the U.S. and NATO transition out,” said Caroline Wadhams, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a research institute in Washington, referring to the elections. “If the state fails in Afghanistan, expanded conflict would occur among different groups, backed by different countries, creating regional instability.”
Front-runners among the eight presidential candidates are former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, ex-foreign minister Zalmai Rassoul and Abdullah Abdullah, the runner up in 2009 who also served as the country’s top diplomat. All three have held positions in various Karzai Cabinets.
“Election day will determine the fate and destiny of our country,” Karzai said in a televised address Thursday night. “Wider participation reflects the people’s strong determination in continuing the democratic system of the country, and reflects a strong message of defiance to those who think violence would disrupt our people’s determination.”
Preliminary results will be announced on April 24, according to the Independent Election Commission of Afghanistan. If no candidate wins more than 50 percent of votes tomorrow — a scenario the head of US forces in the country views as probable — a run-off between the top two candidates would take place around the end of May.
The Taliban have called the elections a US conspiracy and vowed to use suicide bomb attacks to disrupt voting. Twenty million Afghans are eligible to vote, according to election commission data. An Afghan policeman shot two female foreign journalists working for the Associated Press while reporting on a convoy carrying materials to a polling site, Baryalai Rawan, a spokesman for the governor in Khost province, said by phone Friday. German photographer Anja Niedringhaus was killed and Canadian Kathy Gannon is seriously wounded, he said. The eastern province borders Pakistan.
“On election day, every polling site throughout the country and everyone working there or participating in voting are at risk,” Zabihullah Mujahed, a Taliban spokesman, said in an April 2 statement.  In the past month, the militant group has killed at least 25 people in Kabul, including policemen, election officials and foreigners. Habibi’s friend was slain at the election commission office in Kabul on March 25.  Even if the Taliban succeed in limiting turnout, they won’t be able to threaten the Afghan state, according to Said Jawad, who served as Afghan ambassador to Washington from 2003 to 2010.
“People are determined to go out and vote and give a blue finger to the Taliban,” Jawad said of citizens in urban areas, referring to the blue ink that shows a person has cast a ballot. The sight of a candidate traveling on paved roads with a female running mate is a leap forward from the situation a decade ago, he said.  The economy grew 9.2 percent a year on average between 2001 and 2012, expanding to $20.5 billion from $2.5 billion, according to World Bank data. Since 2002, school enrollment has risen to 7.8 million from 1 million, with the number of girls jumping 15 times to 2.8 million, the data show.
About 85 percent of the population lives within an hour from basic health centers and infant mortality, while still “worryingly high,” has fallen 33 percent since 2001, according to the National Risk and Vulnerability Assessment 2007/2008, conducted by the government with funding from the European Commission. The Taliban insurgency is threatening that progress. Prospects of violence have prompted 330 of the nation’s 17,700 schools to close, Amanullah Iman, spokesman for the country’s education ministry, said in an April 1 e-mail.
The telecommunications ministry is concerned that they may see an exodus of businesses in the sector, which contributes more than 10 percent of the country’s revenue. Afghanistan has about 23 million mobile phone subscribers, compared with 1.2 million in 2006, according to official data.
“This shows meaningful progress in a war-torn country,” ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said in an April 1 email. “These gains may be lost and telecom companies may shift business to other countries if they are not protected.”
Karzai has delayed signing a pact that would keep U.S. troops in Afghanistan beyond this year, prompting President Barack Obama to ask the Pentagon to prepare plans for withdrawal of all forces by December. All eight presidential candidates have vowed to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement, or BSA, if they take office. WP-BLOOMBERG

By Eltaf Najafizada and Indira A R Lakshmanan
Halima Habibi isn’t sure she’ll have the courage to leave her home to vote in an election marking Afghanistan’s first democratic transfer of power since the US ousted the Taliban in 2001. Since her friend died in a Taliban attack last month, Habibi has stopped traveling the three kilometers to the private school where she teaches Dari literature and Afghan history. The 43-year-old lost her husband to the Taliban in 1998, and doesn’t want her children to end up as orphans.
The Taliban has vowed to kill voters picking a successor to Afghan President Hamid Karzai in an effort to roll back democratic gains made since the US invasion. At stake are legal protections for women, a jump in school enrollment, and billions of dollars in aid money that will help bolster an economy that has seen an eight-fold expansion since 2001.
“They will determine the fragility of the state post- Karzai and as the U.S. and NATO transition out,” said Caroline Wadhams, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a research institute in Washington, referring to the elections. “If the state fails in Afghanistan, expanded conflict would occur among different groups, backed by different countries, creating regional instability.”
Front-runners among the eight presidential candidates are former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, ex-foreign minister Zalmai Rassoul and Abdullah Abdullah, the runner up in 2009 who also served as the country’s top diplomat. All three have held positions in various Karzai Cabinets.
“Election day will determine the fate and destiny of our country,” Karzai said in a televised address Thursday night. “Wider participation reflects the people’s strong determination in continuing the democratic system of the country, and reflects a strong message of defiance to those who think violence would disrupt our people’s determination.”
Preliminary results will be announced on April 24, according to the Independent Election Commission of Afghanistan. If no candidate wins more than 50 percent of votes tomorrow — a scenario the head of US forces in the country views as probable — a run-off between the top two candidates would take place around the end of May.
The Taliban have called the elections a US conspiracy and vowed to use suicide bomb attacks to disrupt voting. Twenty million Afghans are eligible to vote, according to election commission data. An Afghan policeman shot two female foreign journalists working for the Associated Press while reporting on a convoy carrying materials to a polling site, Baryalai Rawan, a spokesman for the governor in Khost province, said by phone Friday. German photographer Anja Niedringhaus was killed and Canadian Kathy Gannon is seriously wounded, he said. The eastern province borders Pakistan.
“On election day, every polling site throughout the country and everyone working there or participating in voting are at risk,” Zabihullah Mujahed, a Taliban spokesman, said in an April 2 statement.  In the past month, the militant group has killed at least 25 people in Kabul, including policemen, election officials and foreigners. Habibi’s friend was slain at the election commission office in Kabul on March 25.  Even if the Taliban succeed in limiting turnout, they won’t be able to threaten the Afghan state, according to Said Jawad, who served as Afghan ambassador to Washington from 2003 to 2010.
“People are determined to go out and vote and give a blue finger to the Taliban,” Jawad said of citizens in urban areas, referring to the blue ink that shows a person has cast a ballot. The sight of a candidate traveling on paved roads with a female running mate is a leap forward from the situation a decade ago, he said.  The economy grew 9.2 percent a year on average between 2001 and 2012, expanding to $20.5 billion from $2.5 billion, according to World Bank data. Since 2002, school enrollment has risen to 7.8 million from 1 million, with the number of girls jumping 15 times to 2.8 million, the data show.
About 85 percent of the population lives within an hour from basic health centers and infant mortality, while still “worryingly high,” has fallen 33 percent since 2001, according to the National Risk and Vulnerability Assessment 2007/2008, conducted by the government with funding from the European Commission. The Taliban insurgency is threatening that progress. Prospects of violence have prompted 330 of the nation’s 17,700 schools to close, Amanullah Iman, spokesman for the country’s education ministry, said in an April 1 e-mail.
The telecommunications ministry is concerned that they may see an exodus of businesses in the sector, which contributes more than 10 percent of the country’s revenue. Afghanistan has about 23 million mobile phone subscribers, compared with 1.2 million in 2006, according to official data.
“This shows meaningful progress in a war-torn country,” ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said in an April 1 email. “These gains may be lost and telecom companies may shift business to other countries if they are not protected.”
Karzai has delayed signing a pact that would keep U.S. troops in Afghanistan beyond this year, prompting President Barack Obama to ask the Pentagon to prepare plans for withdrawal of all forces by December. All eight presidential candidates have vowed to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement, or BSA, if they take office. WP-BLOOMBERG