Jirga- Why many could not get it? --By Jan Assakzai
http://pashtunchronicle.com/Blogs/tabid/81/EntryId/20/Jirga-Why-many-could-not-get-it-By-Jan-Assakzai.aspx
The four-day long Jirga in Kabul came to an end with fully extending support to President Karzai’s vision of planned strategic agreement with the United States for post 2014 Afghanistan. The Jirga preceded by wider criticism in Afghanistan and in the west. For example, the two main criticisms were: it was argued that despite the Parliament in session, Jirga was held: the underlying thrust of the argument was the lack of constitutional provision justifying holding a Jirga when there is a functioning Parliament.
The four-day long Jirga in Kabul came to an end with fully extending support to President Karzai’s vision of planned strategic agreement with the United States for post 2014 Afghanistan. The Jirga preceded by wider criticism in Afghanistan and in the west. For example, the two main criticisms were: it was argued that despite the Parliament in session, Jirga was held: the underlying thrust of the argument was the lack of constitutional provision justifying holding a Jirga when there is a functioning Parliament.
The
second argument was: Afghanistan needs modern politics and it needs to bring to
an end holding of traditional Jirgas whereas political parties should be
crystallising the grievances or problems/interests of the people through the
Parliament. The above criticism mainly came from more-politically-active
figures, intellectual and member of civil society belonging to the Afghan
north. Western arm-chairs analysts have questioned the legitimacy of
the Jirga based mainly on these two arguments.
However, a detached
look at the opposition to the Jirga suggests that there are other
misconceptions of the non-Pashtuns in Afghanistan bubbling under the surface
finding ways into public debate on such occasions. These narratives paddled by
many have created misperceptions among the non-Pashtuns stemming, though, from
some inherent difficulties besting political, economic and social issues
between the Afghans mainly between the Pashtuns and the non-Pashtuns that need
to be addressed once peace returns to Afghanistan.
Let us scratch them
one by one. First, many Persian-speaking Afghans while debating the problem of
Afghanistan would say: Pashtuns are part of problem and part of solution; they
would maintain that Pashtuns created the Taliban who do not agree to the rights
of other Afghan minorities, among other issues. And Pashtuns are part of the
solution if they are exposed to modern political culture (including
discouraging Jirgas like institutions) while assuming them to be
"backward" and anti-civilizational group of people.
However, this
misconception simply ignores facts: the Pashtuns in Afghanistan did not
cultivate the Taliban and their predecessors, the Mujahidin. But Pakistan's
official policy was to support Pashtun
Islamists starting from as early as 1973 under the Dawood regime. After 1978
and the arrival of Soviet Union 1979, the campaign of supporting Pashtun
Islamists assumed grand scale: the west led by the US and the Gulf petrol money
backed the Islamists and opposed the Pashtun moderate nationalists leaders
forcing them to go into exile while literally undertaking the demolition of
Afghan state and the destruction of the moderate fabric of Pashtun society bit
by bit.
The cultivation of
Pashtun Taliban is the by-product of Pakistan's over 30 years of strategic
policy to eliminate the Pashtun patriotic and nationalist political elements on
both side of the Durand Line in latter's bid to put an end to any lingering
desire of the Pashtuns to reach out to each others divided by the Durand Line,
among other strategic reasons. Thus the Taliban phenomenon is complex to say
the least, and does not represents the vast majority of Pashtuns.
The second
misconception in Afghanistan has been about the Pashtun code of Pashtunwali. It
has been misinterpreted by some Afghans and western scholars. They ignore the
fact that the code encompassing the political, judicial, and social spheres of
Pashtuns is older than the unwritten Anglo-Saxon code including its judicial
and political order. For Pashtuns this
code has worked for thousands of years and hence has to be taken into account
and amalgamated while supposedly exposing the Pashtuns to modern state systems.
The third
misconception is that Pashtuns are the "major" ethnic group in
Afghanistan- not the “majority” group. The misconception crept in when some
pro-western and pro-Iranian scholars in Afghanistan, wanted to undermine the
legitimate right of Pashtuns being the majority group of Afghanistan hence
entitling to rule Afghanistan, paddled this narrative. Western scholars most of
whom sharing the stereotyping of non-Pashtun scholars and orientalists also
accepted this narrative. It is
conveniently forgotten that the Pashtuns created the Afghan State in the first
place and they are the early inhabitants.
But the fact is that
there has never been census carried out in Pashtun areas. While non-Pashtun
communities and ethnic groups are by and large politically more active and
organised hence better able to project their grievances and interests as
compared to Pashtuns. Recent example was seen in Ghazni where all 11 seats of
the National Assembly were won by Hazara community candidates in Pashtun
majority province. It is not that Pashtuns simply disappeared but they did not
participate because they are less organised and political active and threats
and intimidation of the Taliban militants scared many away from casting votes.
Thus In order to
isolate the Taliban politically, the non-Pashtun political figures and
intellectuals peddled this theory that Pashtuns are not the majority. So that
the Pashtuns’ claim to power is done away with for ever.
By and large
Pashtuns dominate no political party in Afghanistan today. Even President
Karzai has no political party where as the non-Pashtun ethnic groups dominate
most of the current political groupings so are more organised in articulating
their interest and favouring narratives supporting their quest to have the
whole cake and eat it.
This narrative could
not be countered as well because of the complete annihilation of the Pashtun
nationalist political movement and currents in Afghanistan, during the cold
war, whereas only the Islamists left to be taken as representatives of the
Pashtuns. But they were in fact in no position to counter this narrative while
supposedly representing the Pashtuns in the eyes of others, for they in fact
never represented the interests/grievances of the Pashtuns in the first place.
The fourth
anti-Pashtun narrative is that they are against minority rights. The proxy
Taliban's treatment towards the minorities in late 1990s in Afghanistan is
painted as the treatment of Pashtuns in general towards others. The treatment
of the Taliban is condemnable on its own merit.
However, it is far from the truth that Pashtuns are intolerant to
minorities.
Not only in
Afghanistan but also among Pashtun population of Pakistan, you will find Sikhs,
Hindus, Bahais and Christians living comfortably even today not to mention
other co-Afghans, showing how large- hearted Pashtuns have been. The historic argument of Pashtuns/Afghan’s
rule over Delhi Sultanate also supports this fact: it would have never been
possible for Pashtuns to rule so diverse communities of Delhi Sultanate nearly
600 years ago, had they been anti-minority and sectarian group of people.
The Pashtuns were so
tolerance that their ruling elite in 20th century spoke other languages than
Pashtu in order to assure all Afghans that they are treated even handily. This
is why even today in Pashtun majority city e.g., Jalalabad, 75 per cent of official
correspondences is carried out in Persian language despite the promise of the
constitution to accord equal status to Pashtu and Persian. Ironically, most of the literature on
Pashtuns have been written and published by western orientalists in the west
not by Pashtun elite as they preferred to speak Persian at the cost of Pashtu.
So the political leaders and figures
representing the Pashtuns and other ethnic groups need to address this
imbalance: the neglect of Pashtu language at official level.
They also need a new
formula to divide representation at all level of governmental departments in
order to ensure fair representation of all ethnic groups keeping in view not
only population but also the degree of backwardness and isolation of the areas.
The code of Pashtuns
including resolving issues through Jirgas will simply not go away just because
non-Pashtuns/Afghans do not understand it or because they wish it to disappear.
Though the code is not perfect but it still works. It is unwritten constitution
that lays down rules almost about every aspect of Pashtun society.
It will continue to underpin the lives of the
majority of the Pashtuns in Afghanistan and Pakistan until and unless modern
but functioning state system starts to govern their lives. The Jirga
institution is the mother of democracy and even ancient to the current model of Westminster form of
democracy. So is the judicial system.
Afghanistan is the
motherland of every Pashtun/Afghan and non-Pashtun/Afghan alike. But it has
been down to Pashtuns/Afghans more than anyone else that the integrity of
Afghanistan throughout history has been ensured. Excluding them from the Afghan state system
is not only against fairness but also does not
foster stability and ethnic harmony.
However,
fortunately, provided foreign interference stops in Afghanistan, Afghans of all
shade and background have a traditional mechanism to resolve their differences
amicably. Yes, they have crystallised their grievances and interests in
different ways but in the end sheer pragmatism has always prevailed in
resolving intra-Afghan differences. So
it is time that the political leadership of Afghanistan address all issues that
may hinder intra-Afghan cohesion and solidarity in Afghanistan and do not leave
it to extremist fringe groups to undermine the
intra- ethnic harmony among Afghans.
The Pashtuns/Afghans
need to be more politically active in political parties, movements so as to
politically represent their interests and complaints well. Democracy and
party-led political activities of the Pashtuns will deny a space and dialogue
to the Taliban, and help the community to bring them at par with other
politically active fellow countrymen.
Regardless of whether the
recently concluded Jirga was more
a desire
for gaining legitimacy and
support of the Afghans for the US-Afghan strategic agreement, or was
an attempt to by-pass the parliament, the process of integration and
assimilation of Afghans has taken a battering in the last over thirty years,
though; it is still irreversible.
Comments
Thanks for the good parts of the article. But no-thanks to the "Pashtun majority" myth.
So long our Pashtun brothers stick to this myth, which they believe will assure them supremacy in Afghanistan over others, there will be no peace, no progress and no nation. And moreover, the Panjabis and ISI will always use this myth and mix it with Islamism for their own good and the people of Afghanistan in general, and Pashtuns in particular, will continue to suffer. So, it is for the Pashtun intellectuals to lower the expectations of their populace in order help them live in peace and presperity [and avoid becoming tools in great games] without feeling disenfranchised - not the other way around.
While you admit that there has been no census in Afghanistan, but strongly assert that Pashtuns are the majority. Had the Pashtuns been a majority, there would have been 10 censuses by now to prove themselve a majority. The reason why they promote medieval jirgas is to bypass elected institution - knowing that they will lose under democracy which is based on majority rule.
So, for us all to become civilized and live in peace and harmony like other nations, its important to do away with myths and adjust with the new realities of the 21st century. I admit it is difficult to admit. No one loves medicine for its taste.