Source:
UN OCHA Integrated Regional
Information Network
Date:
6 Dec 2001
Afghanistan: Challenges
ahead for interim authority
ISLAMABAD, 6 December (IRIN)
- Delegates to
Afghanistan's UN-sponsored
peace talks in Bonn were
leaving on Thursday in
preparation for the
establishment of a new interim
government, which is expected
to assume responsibility later
this month for running the
country for six months.
The decision to create a
new administration, after more
than eight days of
negotiations, would lead to
the creation of a 30 member
government, headed by tribal
Pashtun commander, Hamid
Karzai. The administration
would call an emergency 'Loya
Jirga', an Afghan traditional
council of elders, to approve
the creation of a subsequent
transitional government. In
two years time, Afghanistan
would have its first national
elections to create a formally
elected government.
In the interim
administration, the key
ministries such as interior,
defence and foreign affairs
would be retained by members
of the Northern Alliance (NA),
while the finance ministry
would go to Hidayat Amin
Arsala, a former World Bank
official, nominated by the
Rome group of former king
Zahir Shah. Two women have
been included in the new
cabinet, marking the first
time in more than five years
that women would hold high
office in an Afghan
government.
Showing visible delight at
the outcome, the UN's special
representative to Afghanistan
who chaired the talks, Lakhdar
Brahimi, maintained that the
real work would now begin.
"The real difficulties are
going to start when this
interim administration moves
to Kabul," he told journalists
in Bonn. Brahimi added that
all the elements in the
agreement were proposed by
Afghans, and stressed that the
commitment of the
international community to
help and assist was "very
strong, perhaps
unprecedented".
The intra-Afghan agreement
has been warmly received by
Western governments. A senior
western diplomat observing the
talks praised Brahimi for "a
stunning success". Western
diplomats believe that the
Bonn agreement has a good
chance of surviving previous
ones because of its strong
international backing.
Response among
Afghanistan's neighbours was
also positive. Pakistan,
staunch supporter of the
Taliban regime until recently,
was quick to welcome the
agreement. A foreign ministry
press statement issued in
Islamabad said that the "new
interim authority would
establish the foundation of a
stable, prosperous Afghanistan
which was friendly to all its
neighbours".
Some Afghan analysts have
warned that the perceived
under-represetation of some
Afghan communities would be
the first hurdle to overcome
for the fledgling
administration. Members of
Afghanistan's minority Shi'ite
community left the meeting
displeased. Other observers
have pointed to lack of
popular support for the four
groups who clinched the Bonn
deal as a weakness of the
agreement.
Afghanistan's senior
Shi'ite cleric, Ayatollah Asif
Mohseni, called a meeting of
his key supporters in Mashhad,
the northern Iranian city and
centre of Shi'ite theology to
discuss the outcome. His son,
a delegate at the Bonn talks,
said they had not been happy
with receiving only four posts
in the new administration.
The fact that the Northern
Alliance has received key
ministries; Interior, Defence
and Foreign Affairs, has also
alarmed members of
Afghanistan's ethnic Pashtun
tribes, with some members of
the so-called 'Peshawar Group'
delegation to the talks
claiming that many ethnic
Pashtuns would not accept it.
However, the leader of the
Peshawar group, Pir Gailani,
told IRIN on Thursday that
although key portfolios had
remained with representatives
of the Rabbani government, he
would not oppose it. "We have
our concerns. Though it tilted
towards one faction, it's
better than nothing," he said,
adding that his focus now was
to ensure that the forthcoming
Loya Jirga would have far
broader Afghan representation.
The Afghan Support Group (ASG),
which includes representatives
of the main donors to
Afghanistan, is meeting in
Germany this week. One senior
Western diplomat attending the
talks said there was a close
link between reconstruction
aid and the peace agreement.
After 23 years of conflict,
economists estimate that
Afghanistan will require
between US $6.5-10 billion in
humanitarian and
rehabilitation assistance over
the next five to 10 years.
This was unlikely to
materialise without clear
progress towards stability in
the country.
"The delegates at Bonn were
made acutely aware that this
money would come only if they
can reach a peace agreement
and stick to it," he said,
adding that Afghans should not
take international assistance
for granted. |