After the presidential elections in Afghanistan will be able to open the flower of peace or human blood

Afghanistan to become a problem

Afghanistan to become a problem

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In Afghanistan, seven-year-old innocent Kamran opens his eyes as the red flames of the sky open. The family, which includes a father and five brothers, heads to the brick kiln, which is located in the outskirts of Kabul. Father, son, there will be night baby turtle bread and years of breakfast to go to work. Now they have to prepare bricks for the next 10 hours. Kamran is the youngest of the brothers. He has to play with his peers and lift his parents’ pads, but his soft and delicate hands have been raised as hard as stones. For the past four decades, the wars in Komsan Kamran have brought this unfortunate and tragic situation, that at such a young age, he struggled to work hard, instead of being overwhelmed by the blurred balloons of childhood and memories.

Two years ago, he was laughing with his parents in a village in Baghlan Province. Father and brothers used to farm and earn good money. He was self-taught in a local school. One day, the US military arrived. The Taliban had set up checkpoints near the village. There was a war between the sides in which heavy weapons were used. Bombs destroyed Kamran’s house. The crop also caught fire due to the bombs and the fire burned after watching the hard work for months. All the inhabitants of the warring villages were forced to flee. Atiqullah also came to Kabul for a child so that he could find a job there. After searching, he was employed in a brick kiln. The salary was so low that the daily expenses could not be met. Inflation was rising here. The flour bag was available in several hundred afghanis. Atiqullah, along with other sons, also employed the younger Kamran with a stone on his heart. He thought he should earn at least his share of bread. When two-time bread making becomes a difficult step, where to study and where to jump! Kamran is forced to raise his father’s hand. He could not find the joys, the joys, the freedoms and the joys of childhood and childhood that are destined for other boys.ontinues to flow?

Kamran’s plight is not a rare example in Afghanistan, as more than two million more young boys, ages 5 to 10, are forced to do different things, even though they do not want girls, to increase the income of their poorer families. In fact, 40 years of continuous wars have destroyed the Afghan economy. As a result, jobs are rarely born in every economic sector of Afghanistan. Most Afghans are forced to work small jobs in order to maintain a relationship of body and soul. Every Afghan citizen sees the war in Afghanistan with his own eyes. Many Afghans see the Taliban as their heroes and militants because they are trying to control the invading forces. For them, the Afghan government is puppet America and NATO. Other Afghans say that it is a war of power that has been waged by various warlords (war lords). Each group wants to establish its own government in Afghanistan. It is a war created by rich warlords in which the poor die. The rich chiefs themselves live in palaces comfortably and roam the streets for expensive vehicles. Their salaried soldiers are killed on the battlefield in a state of cynicism and anonymity, and they have no memory.

It is a fact that ethnic, linguistic, economic, religious, ideological and political differences have led to Pashtuns living in Afghanistan (40% of the population), Tajiks (38%) Hazaras (9%) Uzbeks (9%) Amik (4%) and other groups could not take the shape of the Afghan nation. That is why for the last 150 years the country has been subjected to civil war from time to time and has not been economically stable. The Afghan people suffered the most casualties due to these civil wars and attacks by foreign forces.

An American non-governmental organization, the ACMED (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project) collects data on human beings killed in wars, battles, and riots worldwide. According to its latest report, Afghanistan has become the most dangerous country in the world in terms of war casualties. In August this month, 74 men, women and children lost their lives daily during the war there. Similarly, according to the Global Peace Index, Afghanistan is the most peace-deprived country in the world.

The most recent era in Afghanistan began in July 1973 when the commander of the Afghan army, General Mohammad Dawood Khan, abolished the stepson’s cousin and the Afghan King Zahir Shah. It was supported by the leftists party PDP (People’s Democratic Party). Now General Mohammad Dawood Khan has become the new Afghan ruler. He made the members of the PDP a minister. But the party was ideologically and racially divided into several groups, with the flag and the people the largest. Now the two groups have fought in the pursuit of enjoying power and privileges. On 17 April 1978, the flag leader Mir Akbar Haider was mysteriously killed. Thousands of people attended his funeral. After the funeral, people took to the streets of Kabul and chanted slogans against the government. Dawood Khan arrested all PDP leaders in fear of public protests. But 10 days later, PDP supporters seized the presidential palace and killed Dawood Khan with his family. Now the PDP leader becomes the ruler. Soon a war of power between the space and the flags broke out. The two began to kill each other’s leaders. Not only this, the leaders and workers of the opposition parties were also targeted. From April 1978 to December 1979, the period of anarchy and lawlessness in Afghanistan continued. Meanwhile, thousands of Afghans lost their lives because of the civil war.

On December 17, 1979, the Soviet army occupied Afghanistan. Then Afghan Mujahideen confronted the Russians and in February 1989 forced them to return. Mujahideen of all Afghans were involved in the jihad against the Russians. Their alliance overthrew a super power like the Soviet Union. With the departure of the Russian army, however, a war of power took place among the Mujahideen groups. The Taliban ended the civil war, but Tajiks, Hazaras and Uzbeks turned against their government. They formed their own organization called the Northern Alliance. The groups accuse the Taliban of being religiously extremist and politically aggressive. Therefore, the Taliban and the Northern Alliance have tried to fight each other in different areas of Afghanistan. In December 2001, US and NATO forces chased al-Qaeda leaders and raided Afghanistan.

The Afghan Taliban has been fighting against foreign invaders ever since. They also had to fight with Afghan security forces and opposition organizations like the Northern Alliance ISIS and warlords. These constant battles, however, closed the gates of progress and prosperity for the Afghan people. The majority of them also lack basic amenities such as good food, safe drinking water, sewage sanitation school hospitals, electricity, needle gas and solid roads. They earn some money and live off the subsidy to cover their daily living by raising livestock and farming. The main reason for their misery is war. Prominent American author Ernest Hemingway has written a place: I will consider it a crime, no matter how important the war. American General, Dwight D. Eisenhower fought wars all his life. Compelled to say at a later age war does not solve any problem. U.S and European rulers came to Afghanistan to eliminate Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaeda leaders. He announced that he would assist the Afghans in every possible way to make this country modern, advanced and prosperous. Human rights champions and Democrats wanted to find a way to justify their war. As a result, U.S and NATO troops continue to massacre Afghans in Afghanistan. More than two million Afghans have been killed in this war.

On the other hand, billions of dollars were given to the Afghan government to start development projects in the state. The question is, did the American and European ruling elite, as judicial and legal, make Afghanistan as advanced and prosperous as it has been declared? A baby boy in the mainland Afghan knows that the American and NATO invasion has plunged the Afghan people into poverty, problems and disaster. Professor Neta C. Crawford is the head of political science at Boston University, USA. He along with other experts started the ProjectCosts of War in 2011. She wanted to know how much money the US government is spending on its wars. The latest report for this project was published on November 18, 2018. According to the report, the US government spent $ 5.9 trillion ($ 5900 billion) on its wars against terrorism by March 2019.

In World War II, the United States spent $ 4.1 trillion as the American ruling class in the 21st century surpassed World War II in terms of military spending. The war on terror has become one of the most expensive military adventures in American history. The $ 5.9 trillion spending includes net combat spending, as well as other war-related expenses. For example, the amounts that were given to the Allied countries, the costs of setting up overseas military bases, and the costs incurred on disabled soldiers, the huge expenditure on contractors, and the interest paid on them. Obviously, decorating the vast theater of war is not a children’s play, it requires a lot of planning. This theater seems to be a great investment. About $ 2 trillion ($ 2000 billion) of the $ 5.9 trillion spent by the researchers of the Cost of War project was spent on the Afghan war. Assume the vastness of this amount, the total debt owed to Pakistan is worth $ 350. As the Second World War, the Afghan War became the second most expensive war in American history. Even today, the United States spends $ 50 billion a year on various wars, to be clear, keeping all NATO spending in Afghanistan for 19 years, the cost of the Afghan war goes to between $ 250 and $ 3 trillion. The basic question is, but what is the benefit of spending trillions of dollars in Afghanistan?

According to US and Afghan governments, 60% of Afghanistan’s population is very poor. 90% of Afghans are doing modest jobs. More than 55% of the population is in the age group of 5 to 14 years and the majority of these children are doing some work rather than going to school so that they can be kept alive. The fact is that not a few Afghan people suffer from numerous problems such as: the lack of rule of law, the spread of crime, the spread of hospitals, the spread of ill health, the lack of schooling, unemployment, pollution, inflation, water and food. Reduction, increased pollution, etc. In many areas, farmers grow opium as a cash crop.

Millions of Afghans are living a very difficult and difficult life. Most of the trillions of dollars that the US and European governments provided to Afghanistan have been consumed by the Afghan ruling elite or by Western contractors who have taken over Afghanistan. These trillions of rupees did not benefit the Afghan people at all. Prime Minister Imran Khan, while interviewing the US TV channel MSNBC, said that the US has spent billions of rupees in the Afghan war but paid no attention to the country’s infrastructure. Today I was sitting in the car, she was eating and walking. Meanwhile, China has set up infrastructure in Afghanistan. Yet the American Establishment is not ready to learn any lesson.

Afghanistan presidential candidates Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah

Afghanistan presidential candidates Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah

After the US occupation in Afghanistan on September 28, 2019, the fourth election took place. More than 15 candidates stood in the race. The original contest was between Ashraf Ghani, Abdullah Abdullah and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. The results will be released the last week of October. During the election, reports of corruption, rigging and low turnout came out. The Taliban were against the election, so they targeted the security forces. Citizens in many districts refrained from voting because of Taliban intimidation. With the coming of the new government, there is no hope that the peace and security of the country will be restored to the Afghan people. The US will also keep this government artificially alive and will continue to grow on its pieces. Only after the departure of the US and the end of the civil war will there are signs of peace and prosperity in Afghanistan. But the US ruler is not ready to leave this area geographically and politically important. It seems that in the coming years, Afghanistan will continue to be chained up in civil war, murder, poverty, unemployment, ignorance and so on.

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