The War's 'Dispensable'
People
By Rina Amiri, Reprinted from the Boston Globe
November 10, 2024
As we bear witness to the thousands of Afghan refugees flooding into Pakistan,
I am haunted and transported back to my childhood, seeing some version of my
young, anxious face, clutching hands of worried parents stumbling through the
rugged terrain of the Khyber Pass. In the 1970s, after the overthrow of the
former king, my family was among the first waves of the 5 million Afghan refugees
who were made homeless in the decades of war in Afghanistan.
Since September 11, Afghans
have been driven by terror and fear that once again political decisions beyond
their control have branded them the enemy - this time by one of the
most powerful nations in the world. Many have given up their life savings,
a measly $30, to be guided with their few belongings on a mule, or struggling
on foot with just the clothes on their back, through the Khyber Pass. And
the majority find themselves standing at Pakistan's closed borders with nowhere
to run.
Now as the bombs are falling
on Afghanistan, the international community cannot once again blind itself
to the impending disastrous humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. Mary Robinson,
the UN high commissioner for human rights, has predicted that this could
be a worse humanitarian disaster than Rwanda. More than 7 million people
inside the country and in refugee camps in Iran and Pakistan will require
humanitarian assistance to survive.
The international community
has come together, setting a common agenda to combat terrorism, and has chosen
Afghanistan as the first line of battle against the Taliban and Osama bin
Laden. We must simultaneously develop a common humanitarian agenda to avert
a deadly crisis of calamitous proportions. To do this right, the United States
and the international community have to be as invested in truly averting
the impending humanitarian disaster as they are in achieving a military success
in Afghanistan.
The Bush administration's
pledge of $320 million for food and medicine to help Afghanistan's people
survive the approaching harsh and deadly winter is an important and positive
development. While this is commendable, it is only a small part of the solution.
A comprehensive humanitarian
strategy will require action on multiple fronts, including supporting the
World Food Program's efforts towards a large scale airlift of food this winter
to 600,000 to 1 million Afghans isolated in remote areas. The program has
requested a donation of planes, pilots, and cash from the international community.
In addition, it will be
necessary to set up human corridors and food and safety operations for the
thousands of refugees trapped at Pakistan's border. Finally, it is vital
that the US support the efforts of Ruud Lubbers, the UN high commissioner
for refugees, to persuade Pakistan and Iran to keep their borders open to
the fleeing refugees during the duration of the bombing campaign.
Addressing the plight of
the refugees is essential, not only from a moral but from a strategic standpoint.
Afghans are needed as allies to prevail in this war, and the world has to
win Afghan hearts and minds by rectifying a history of using Afghans as military
allies and abandoning them to their fate when the agenda has been met.
The situation of thousands
of hungry people can also, as it has been in the past, be a breeding ground
for a new swell of radicalism and violence if it is left unattended. Moreover,
thousands of frozen and dead refugees will only undermine the US public relations
efforts in the Muslim world.
Many have resigned themselves
to the idea that the Afghan refugees already have many odds against them
and it is inevitable that they will be the casualties of this war. Or, as
one of my friends said, "Well, Rina, no offense, but it's a war, and
if innocent Afghans have to die, well then, innocent Afghans have to die."
He had forgotten that I
was one of those innocent Afghans, one of the refugees once caught up in
other people's wars, other people's politics.
An Afghan life, a refugee's
life, is equally valuable to any other population. It is morally imperative
that the international community reflect this, not just in rhetoric or symbolic
displays, but in sustained humanitarian action and with the commitment of
vital resources.
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