With today's news of the death of "brutal butcher" Mullah Dadullah Lang, the Taliban's second-in-command man with a "gruesome penchant for decapitation", one is forced for a moment to contemplate the manner and method by each one of us will meet our own certain and eventual end.
So the question of the day is, if you were a citizen of Afghanistan and you could choose the method of your death, would you prefer to go quickly, or would you rather wait to meet your maker, in a most agonizing fashion - one that would take a very, very long time?
Americans are rarely (if ever) told the truth about anything. So what is actually going down in
To get a better idea what has happened since the US first plundered into Afghanistan in October, 2001 to search for a now-legendary cave hopper on dialysis, I spoke with Dr. Mohammed Daud Miraki, a native Afghan here in the United States with many ties "back home", to tell us all about the long-forgotten people of Afghanistan that the US mainstream media will not. After hanging up the phone, it occurred to me that what is actually going down in
A recent article in The Hindu Times gives us a glimpse into the creation of devastation in which the
Steve Lendman, in "Afghanistan - The Other Lost War"shares a deeply disturbing account of reality in the nation where we are waging this long-ignored-but-not-forgotten war:
"For them [Afghans] life is harsh and dangerous, and they show their frustration and impatience in their anger ready to boil over on any pretext. As in Iraq, there's been little reconstruction providing little relief from the devastation and making what work there is hard to find and offering little pay�Unemployment is soaring at about 45% of those wanting work� half of the working population getting it earns on average about a meager $200 a year or a little over $300 for those involved in the opium trade which is the main industry in the country�about one-fourth of the population depends on scarce and hard to find food aid creating a serious risk of famine� life expectancy in the country at 44.5 years is one of the lowest in the world� infant mortality rate is the highest in the world at 161 per 1,000 births�One-fifth of children die before age five�An Afghan woman dies in childbirth every 30 minutes�.In Kabul alone an estimated 500,000 people are homeless or living in makeshift and deplorable conditions...Only one-fourth of the population has access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation�Only one doctor is available per 6,000 people and one nurse per 2,500 people...100 or more people are killed or wounded each month by unexploded ordnance...Children are being kidnapped and sold into slavery or murdered to harvest their organs that bring a high price...Less than 6% of Afghans have access to electricity available only sporadically� Women's literacy rate is about 19%, and schools are being burned in the south of the country and teachers beheaded in front of their students�--Many women are also forced to beg in the streets or turn to prostitution to survive�lawlessness is back, Sharia law has been reinstated, the internal conflict has resumed, and no one is safe either from the country's warring factions or from the hostile occupying force making life intolerable for the vast majority of the Afghan people."
A disturbing scenario indeed. And lest Americans are tempted to believe this is nothing but liberal, anti-war rhetoric? One gets the sense that things are pretty darn bad when even the Council On Foreign Relations (arguably not exactly the bastion of progressive ideals) is forced to admit at least some of this as the actual truth.
The CFR recently featured on its website comments made by
"it's been five years since the international community came to
From the entire financial assistance that's been given to
First, there is a waste in the way the money has been spent in
The people are saying, 'We have played our part, we've played our role. You've asked us to participate in the political process, we did. But we don't see visible improvement in our daily life."
To get to the heart of the matter by someone who is intimately familiar with the current situation, I contacted Afghanistan native and author of Afghanistan After Democracy, Dr. Mohammed Daud Miraki, to get his take on how the people of
CG:
MDM: There were two reasons, actually. One was to really expose what is really going on there�the truth, for the common folks to know what's going on in
Sure, the big power benchmark of elections, constitution? These things are simply words - intangibles. They do not mean anything to the common people. To them, what matters is food, a warm place to sleep and spend their nights in winter, and have basic necessities, medical care. To make sure that their kids don't die from cold, from infections, from other conditions. But all that�they not only cease to have these services, the common people, but even whatever rudimentary services in terms of health care, they cease to exist - they exist� but nonetheless, they are not provided because even doctors nowadays ask for bribes! So if you're poor? A government hospital is no place to go, either, because even there, doctors and nurses take bribes.
And the second reason for producing this book was the hope that I could raise some funds�to pay for the land that I actually lost a month and a half or so ago. In
CG: When did it "hit" you that Americans don't have any idea what's going on inside
MDM: - Actually it happened when I was in
I told them, "Let's make this a pictorial presentation in the form of a book, and open people's eyes and see if that works! And everyone said, Yeah, it makes sense. Let's go for it! Go right ahead. That's a really superb idea. Lots of people will be fascinated or saddened or whatever, or surprised - but nonetheless, they will be informed. So having said that, I'd made sure that I'd taken all these photos and documented what I'd jotted down, and then subsequently when I came here, we produced it � and a lot of optimism, I think.
The whole purpose was � the idea was, I'll show people these photos and say, Hey look, this is how life is over there. But the whole thing is, how this conceptualized into a book, was sitting that evening in a hotel room and I thought to myself that evening was, instead of me just roaming around, showing these to people, how life is there, let's make it into a formal book, so people could look at it. And meanwhile, the revenue from the book will benefit people here. And I thought by purchasing this land, I would have something tangible to show to people, and this tangibility would serve as a cornerstone for extracting more funds from whatever sources to build a hospital and such facilities. Because unless you have something to show to people � tangible that you're able to result it into, people will not be too optimistic of what you're doing. So this book was to produce these funds and hopefully, produce it in terms of land for which a hospital or such will be built. And that will serve as a domino effect for concerned people worldwide.
CG: - Why do you want a hospital for the people of
MDM: -There are a few hospitals over there, but first and foremost there is the age of corruption� widespread corruption, no investment in health care, there's infant mortalities gone through the roof, mortality rate of women during childbirth has gone through the roof, and really, some of the hospitals you have that have gotten so deteriorated they look like medieval hospices, rather than hospitals!
Secondly, this hospital would not be solely a hospital, per se. Rather, the hospital would be the operational wing of a research facility. The research facility would be a kind of a "mother ship" for collecting data throughout
So I subscribe strongly to herbal medicine, alternative medicine, and by having such an approach and by getting various resources, various people who have innovative, diverse approaches dealing with these matters? I could create really an innovative center that could treat people for various ailments and detoxification that could become a regional center.
CG: - You know such about Uranium in weapons and its effects on health. Are you thinking that your medical facility would fulfill the people's needs?
MDM: - Yes, the whole thing was to produce, build this facility, the aim will be � this would become a hospital, a research facility, if you will. But it would become part of a paradigm shift in health care that would provide healthcare to everyone throughout the country and train other physicians in alternative medicine. Train doctors and nurses how to deal with various ailments, environmental researchers how to deal with cleaning the [uranium-contaminated] soil�.kind of a widespread, expansive approach to well-being.
My philosophy is that if you want to take care of somebody's ailment, you have to look at that person in his totality, he or she, in his or her environment, in conjunction with that person. And then you can treat the person in such a way that could benefit the person or the people there.
CG: - The people don't have any socialized medicine?
MDM: - Initially, before these issues, they had socialized medicine, yes. The infrastructure is still there, but the problem is that there is more money invested in the so-called "war on drugs" deception nonsense - the "war on drugs" - than on medicine! Then, this whole idea, making the economy the dollar as the cornerstone of everything, has really induced people to simply want to earn dollars rather than be concerned about the well-being of others! Worse thing is, doctors � the last people in the world you would expect - doctors want to take bribes and perform surgery and at the end of surgery you will hear "Where's my gift?"
So people, the type of dependence that they had on hospital and facilities? They cease to have those dependencies because they can't count on them, because if they do, they have to have money. Officially they don't ask for money, but when your procedure is done or a visit is performed, they ask for money, under the table. And people are just simply are desperate and they don't know what to do.
CG: - Was it like this before 9/11 and the subsequent
MDM: - Oh no, not at all! Medicine there � people would go to the hospital and they would be given the best care possible at that time. Sometimes they didn't have medicines themselves, the patients, at the time, because the government did not have the money to supply the medicine. Mostly, they would rely on donations, from outside world medical donations.
But now, because everyone is concerned about how to make green, green dough, everyone is concerned with how to really rip the other person off, no matter what the context of the rip off is � whether they're in medicine, whether they're in administration, whether they're regular folks. It's just a complete mess! It is absolutely hopeless for the common people because those in power are actually the utmost corrupt, from Karzai all the way to the very bottom, eager to fill their pockets rather than being concerned about others.
CG: - Has the
MDM: - The
CG: - Do you think that's why we are not reading much of this in the media, because they're shielding us from this truth?
MDM: - That's the main reason, because they just want to put the really positive spin on it. All this is fine! We've done a superb job! We've done democracy. We've done liberation. All this is crap. Nothing really is going on. The fact of the matter is? It's disaster - on many levels.
CG: - I was shocked to see the pictures in your book, the pictures of the children, not going to school, but rather, going out in the streets every day, trying to earn money in the streets. Is that what you mean by disaster?
MDM: - Exactly! Children ages 7, 6 and up to teens, they are outside till late at night, actually endangering themselves to the common criminal element, who are preying on children. In fact, they kidnap those children for various purposes. They are actually selling them for prostitution, they are actually kidnapping them for their organs, to sell them for transplant to the highest bidder.
These people do not get anything. They are basically running around, hoping to survive, at what they know best, which is basically begging and cleaning car windows. If they have some money, somehow found? They buy gum and sell it, so that people can buy gum for them.
CG: � In your book you said that children would walk an hour or 5 miles to get into
MDM: - Yes, in order to get to
CG: - And there are not any big soup kitchens - or anything like that to take care of people?
MDM: - Oh no, no. Nothing like that! In fact there was an orphanage in
CG: - That is horrible!
MDM: - It's absolutely horrendous. Think about it. Within
CG: - Your book shows there a great disparity between the very poor and the very rich.
MDM: - Yes, so these various NGOs [non-governmental organizations] and consulting firms, they get millions of dollars in US contracts, they simply get these contracts to share them for their employees. And the common people who can't afford to live in the city, they get pushed out, or they try to subsist or try to survive in bombed-out buildings, or tents, or shacks here and there � they just build some ways to try to shield themselves from the elements. And then, when the night is over, they get out and try to survive.
So the result of that extreme amount of corruption at the social level also, has emerged. And so, society�society has turned into crap. It has become trashed. So it is a difficult thing, and when you, if you have money, let's say, to purchase land in
If the judge asks you permission for this, the police ask, Okay, where is my share? That is, if you want them to implement what the judge has said.
CG: - Did people lose their homes because the economy fell and there are no more jobs to be able to support themselves and afford them?
MDM: - Many people lost their jobs, but first and foremost, what happened is that when the Northern Alliance came in with the
I went there to secure my own land that was actually taken over by somebody else! That's why I went there in 2005 and also, on top of that, I was trying to unveil what was really going on in 2005. And when I looked at all these situations there? I was simply speechless. I said, this is hopeless! And then in 2006, I went there again, and the situation had gotten even worse, especially in winter. My God, it's horrific!
CG: - Are the pictures in your book, that of a very filthy, dirty city � it didn't always look like this? How has it gotten worse?
MDM: - No! It was much cleaner, there were sanitary conditions, and at least the mayor's office had a budget for cleaning the city. And it was a reasonable place. But now, whatever rudimentary infrastructure that existed got collapsed throughout the years, and instead of investing the so-called development money in that? They're simply investing that into symbolic nonsense of democratic projects � this project, that project, which is nothing but BS!
They should be investing in how to build sewage facilities, how to build sewage infrastructure and canals to clean the city and prevent infections and other diseases, but that's not an issue. Because they say, that's public projects are not profitable. They just invest in things that are supposed to bring them money.
When you create a living environment that's fit for animals? Because just everyone is after everyone, trying to outdo the other person, in whatever way is possible. They do not behave in ways that are expected of them. For example, on the one hand you have the
So people [who live in
You have the dichotomy of disaster� and a few with riches.
CG: - Are there any significant aid relief agencies there, trying to help the people?
MDM: - There are agencies there, yes. Nonetheless, there are some legitimate aid agencies there, but they're overwhelmed! The problem is too big. The problems are too many, and too vast to tackle. And there is no really systematic � What's going on is that first, the aid really goes through certain corporations, certain designated NGOs. Whatever they choose to spend it on? They spend it. They bypass the needs criteria that the government, or at least the administrative infrastructure, formulates and say, okay, these are the basic needs of people and they should be tackled first. They bypass that and do whatever they want to do with that money. They pocket most of it. They're rich or "fat", if you will, and they just take a hike and leave.
And so, of the billions of dollars that supposedly went to Afghanistan, twenty-three percent of that went to the Afghan government, which mostly went to the basic needs of running the government. But the other seventy-seven percent of or so of that went into the pockets of the NGOs, consulting firms. For example, in the case of the US, eighty-six cents of every dollar that the
CG: - It's not actually going to put fruit and vegetables on people's tables?
MDM: - Forty-seven percent of all the aid goes to overpriced experts! They will go to someone and say, How should you do this thing? He then gets $18,000 a month for whatever stupid opinion he or she has. And the very opinions are widely available through Afghan experts who would more than happy to accept $1,800 a month, instead of $18,000 per month! But that's not how it works, because the corporations they designate their own people, they find their own individuals, to fill their pockets. That's how things works.
Those few companies that actually serve as lobbyists in Congress are the ones that get the contracts for work in
CG: � What do you know about the combat that's still going on?
MDM: - Combat is really widespread. Combat is going on in mostly west and southwest. South and southeast in
The NATO forces and US forces are in constant military action, bombardments as we speak. They use munitions, Depleted Uranium munitions on their targets. It's a total disaster.
People can't travel. They will be robbed and killed by someone, or they will just be caught in crossfire between the insurgents and the
Uranium is all over. While I was in
The people though? They don't know about this�the issues of Uranium and so forth? That's a luxury for them. They're focusing about food, about shelter, about medical care. Those issues are beyond them.
Even the government did not want to address this until I pushed them, and until I brought the issue to the office of the President there as well as to the Ministry of Public Health. They did not want to touch the issue! They said, "Oh that's controversial". Well, controversial rather what? "That affects the people, so what the hell is wrong with you people?" I told them!
Those who are in power are cowards and they have their own interests to worry about rather than to worry about what's really going on.
CG: - I was floored about the numbers of early deaths. Nearly one-hundred percent don't expect to survive past forty-five and one in five children don't make it until age five. Is this correct?
MDM: - Yeah, one in five children don't make it to their fifth birthday. And also the projection of them dying after the fifth year is extremely high and childbirth mortality for women is extremely high. Statistically, from whatever angle, this is a disaster for the population.
This whole notion of re-building and reconstruction is nothing but a total lie. It has not amounted to anything. If you go to
They worry about and hope that somebody will come out of those places, and they will donate a few bucks to them and then they could go and eat.
You've seen the pictures of the trash in
CG: - Where are they getting their fresh water?
MDM: - There is no fresh water. There are some wells dug in houses they end up using. One reservoir in
It is not very expensive for clean water. They could produce clean water. There is no budget for them because every amount of money that's donated from abroad has to be approved for certain projects. If that project is not in the domain of acceptability of the donor, irrespective of how needed it is for the common people, it will not be implemented.
So,
So the question remains, with heavy military combat dispersing toxic, radioactive Uranium contamination in the air, high rates of cancer, short life expectancy and high death rates for children, filthy polluted rivers and a vast shortage of clean, uncontaminated water, the necessity of finding shelter at night in bombed-out buildings and begging in the streets for a loaf of bread�what sort of life is this for any human to endure?
Is a quick demise perhaps sometimes more of a blessing � a more humane way to be allowed to go and meet one's maker�than a life filled with protracted, unfathomable amounts of hunger, thirst, grief and illness, of endless pain, misery, hopelessness, and suffering?
After hearing what has happened in
On Saturday, May 19, Dr. Miraki will be speaking at the National DU Conference http://www.wfn.org/2007/05/msg00127.html at
Cathy Garger is a freelance writer, public speaker, and certified personal coach. Living in the shadow of the national District of Crime, Cathy is constantly nauseated by the stench emanating from the nation's capital during the