Marjah, Dec 26 : Nearly
three years after US-led forces launched the biggest operation of the war to
clear insurgents, foster economic growth and set a model for the rest of
Afghanistan, angry residents of Helmand province say they are too afraid to go
out after dark because of marauding bands of thieves.
And, during the
day, they say corrupt police and government officials bully them into paying
bribes.
After 11 years of war, many here long for a return of the
Taliban. They say that under the Taliban, who routinely punished thieves by
cutting off a hand, they were at least safe from crime and
corruption.
"If you had a box of cash on your head, you could go to the
farthest part of Marjah and no one would take it from you, even at night," said
Maulvi Daoud, who runs a cubbyhole-sized shop in the town.
"Today you
bring your motorcycle in front of your shop and it will be gone. Now the
situation is that you go on the road and they are standing in police and army
uniforms with weapons and they can take your money."
In Marjah in early
2010, about 15,000 Nato and Afghan forces waged the biggest battle of the war.
They not only fought the Taliban with weapons, they promised to bring good
governance to Marjah and the rest of the southern province of Helmand - and
demonstrate to the residents the advantages of shunning the
militants.
But it appears the flaw in the plan was with the quality of
Afghans chosen by the president, Hamid Karzai, to govern and police the area
after most of the fighting ended. And that adds to growing doubts about the
entire country's future after foreign troops withdraw by the end of
2014.
Many claim the US-funded local police, a type of locally sanctioned
militia, routinely demand bribes and threaten to accuse those who do not comply
of being members of the Taliban. Good governance never came to Marjah, they
say.
In villages of sun-baked mud homes, at crowded bus stops and in
local tea houses where residents sit cross-legged at plastic-covered tables
drinking tea and eating off communal plates, people scoffed at claims of
security and development. They heaped criticism on the Afghan government and
officials- accusing them of stealing billions of dollars in aid money meant for
the people - and on an international community that they said ignored their
needs and pandered to a corrupt administration.
Mr Daoud, the Marjah shop
owner, said there had been more security under the Taliban, who were ousted by
the US-led invasion in late 2001.
"They were never cruel to us and the
one difference was security. It was better during the Taliban," he
said.
His partner in the rickety shop along Marjah's chaotic one-street
bazaar, Mohammed Haider, said poppy farmers who planted substitute crops such as
cotton are losing money because they cannot sell their harvests. He predicted
poppy production would double when foreign soldiers leave in
2014.
Analysts who know Helmand say a corrupt government poses one of the
biggest hurdles to stability, alienating the locals and driving them into the
hands of the Taliban.
The province is strategically important because of
its large-scale poppy production that is financing the insurgency and fuelling
criminal activity. While some success has been achieved at getting farmers to
plant substitute crops, Helmand is still one of Afghanistan's largest
opium-producing provinces.
The Nato-led coalition, known as the
International Security Assistance Force, claims there are tangible gains against
the Taliban in Helmand and neighbouring Kandahar province.
"While
insurgent activity remains problematic in several districts, primarily in
northern Helmand and western Kandahar, data from the battle space shows a marked
decrease in overall enemy activity," an ISAF spokesman, Jamie Graybeal, said
recently.
Despite a drop of 8 per cent in militant attacks from January
to October compared with the same period last year, Helmand and neighbouring
Nimroz province accounted for 32 per cent of all such attacks reported across
the country from October 2011 to October this year, according to the
ISAF.
Ryan Evans, a research fellow at the US-based Centre for National
Policy, called Helmand the "most dangerous and violent" of Afghanistan's 34
provinces.
Some Afghans believe their countrymen are responsible for the
current state of affairs.
Haji Khalil, who moved his family from Marjah
to Lashkar Gah during the 2010 offensive, blamed Afghans for the rise in thefts
and lawlessness since the defeat of the Taliban.
"During the Taliban no
one would steal because we knew the punishment, but when they left everyone
began to steal," Khalil said. "We became worse after the Taliban," he said. "The
problem is with us."
Ends
SA/EN
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'Helmand was safer under the Taliban'
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