Political and social reform stall again in Afghanistan

The death of the former king reminds Anne Brodsky of an earlier - and doomed - effort to liberalise the country

The death of the former king reminds Anne Brodskyof an earlier - and doomed - effort to liberalise the country

The death last week at 92 of the former king of Afghanistan, Mohammed Zahir Shah, is yet another sad loss on Afghan soil this year. Zahir Shah's 40-year reign is remembered for promoting women's rights, bringing democracy in the form of a constitutional monarchy and providing Afghanistan's longest modern period of peace.

But 34 years after he was overthrown in a bloodless coup for allowing these political and social reforms to stall, the heartbreaking fact is that progress is once again stalling in Afghanistan, and a peaceful death of old age is a luxury few Afghans will experience.

I was back in Kabul this month for my sixth visit, five and a half years after the touted defeat of the Taliban and - contrary to the popular notion that only the provinces are in peril - the city felt markedly less secure and hopeful than it had during my first trip, in June 2002.

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Then, I had found a country physically destroyed but a people optimistic for the prospects offered by a life newly-freed of Taliban oppression.

In those first months and years, women took the brave steps of rejoining public life; male and female students returned to reopened schools to catch up on education interrupted by Taliban restrictions, economic hardship and refugee life; and everyone dreamed of a reborn Afghanistan and renewed economic opportunities rising from infrastructure, roads and buildings constructed with promised international assistance.

This summer I travelled regularly over the busy city thoroughfare where a Taliban bus bombing days earlier had killed 35 police recruits and civilians. But it's not only the Taliban who threaten the lives of Afghans. At the end of June, the Associated Press reported that the 178 civilians killed to that point this year by insurgent attacks were surpassed by the 203 killed by US and Nato forces. Such "carelessness", as president Hamid Karzai termed it, gives the Taliban more ammunition in the battle for Afghan sympathies and makes US "liberation" look like a political game the Bush administration is losing.

Despite millions of dollars in aid promised by the international community, Afghanistan remains a country in which most people lack access to clean drinking water, proper sanitation, electricity and basic medical care.

The unemployment rate is 40 per cent, the mean life expectancy is 45, one in five children does not live to age five, and one in nine women dies in pregnancy or childbirth.

The story I heard from a woman I'll call Asima is not unlike those of other Afghan women I've interviewed over the years. Married forcibly at age 16 to a relative stranger who offered a large bride-price to her poor father, Asima spent the next four years being abused by her husband, who would beat her with electrical cords and then pour scalding tea on her wounds.

Knowing she would be blamed for causing his violence and that her family would be dishonoured if she left, she withstood his abuse until she was sure the entire community, including her in-laws and father, could not deny his abuse was unjustifiable. But as I talked to her in a Kabul woman's shelter, she feared for her life from her husband, who was free and looking for her.

He was released from jail because no one had taken her side when he told the police and a judge that he'd done nothing more than slap her around a bit when the housework wasn't done to his liking.

Just before Zahir Shah's overthrow for not moving his promised reforms forward, Louis Dupree, author of a widely cited text on Afghanistan, incorrectly predicted: "The modernisation cannot be stopped, only the direction and rate of the changes can be affected by subsequent governments."

Little did he or anyone know at the time what was in store. Empty promises, stalled change and inattentiveness can have dire consequences for countries and peoples.

In the absence of care, focus and constant effort, progress is not the inevitable course of history. - (The Baltimore Sun)

Anne Brodsky is associate professor of psychology and director of gender and women's studies at the University of Maryland