Afghan Pre-Loya Jirga Complexities
By Yayha Effendi
Dawn
December 14, 2001
The state of Afghanistan did not exist as a separate
political entity before the 18th century, but it was
through a process of political and religious
evolution, arising out of the conflict of interests
between Mughal India, the Safavid Empire of Persia and
the Uzbek Khanates of Trans-Oxiana that made the
Afghans emerge as a political force.
The mystery shrouding the obscure Afghan
socio-political fabric could not be deciphered unless
insight into its ethnic and demographic complexities,
which as well holds a key to the success of Loya
Jirga, now considered as the last prescription of
enduring peace and political stability in Afghanistan.
Afghans rank top in population with 47 per cent
majority, Pushto as their language and Sunni being
their sect.
They are concentrated in the oases of eastern
Afghanistan and the Helmand, and the Arghandab
valleys. The major tribes are the Ghiljai and the
Durrani. The Ghiljais are a formidable tribe and are
both feared and respected by their neighbours, and
those who come into contact with them.
The British during the First Anglo-Afghan war had to
pay a heavy price when they thought that they could
buy the Ghiljai loyalty with subsidies. It only ended
for them with the loss of Ghazni and the terrible
massacre in the Khurd Kabul Pass in 1842. Subsequent
British relations with the Ghiljai tribe ceased after
this experience.
The British, thereafter, preferred interaction with
the Durranis who despite their martial qualities are
more inclined to exercise moderation. With the result
that they were able to forge a precarious cohesion
among the diverse Pushto speaking tribes and the non-Pakhtun
races through tactful and diplomatic handling rather
than exercising coercion, undue force or intrusive
manoeuvres something which is always outrightly
rejected by the tribal Afghan society.
Tajik, another important segment with 26 per cent of
the total Afghan population are predominantly Sunni
with Dari (Farsi) as their language. A sedentary race,
living in the highlands along the southern slopes of
the Hindukush range subsisting on agriculture. They
are excellent horticulturists, artisans and farmers,
they tend to form the urban elite of all the major
population centres in Afghanistan.
Basically they are a mild-tempered but a courageous
people, who have an ancient tradition of culture and
education extending to pre-Islamic times. They have
always looked down on Afghans as boors, and consider
themselves the custodians of the ancient Aryan
civilization of the region. Majority of the literate
and intellectuals in Afghanistan are from the Tajik
community.
Hazaras constitutes 12 per cent of the population with
Dari (Farsi) as their language and Shiaism as their
sect. By origin, the Hazaras are Mongols. They claim
to be the descendants of the trapped Mongol "Tuman" or
formations who had garrisoned Afghanistan during the
period of the Ilkhans. However, the complexity of the
Hazaras is their division in the two major sects of
Shias and Sunnis and call themselves Aimaqs while the
tribes in the central massif of the Afghan highlands
are orthodox Shias.
Uzbeks and the Turcomans together form 8 per cent of
the population are the major race living between the
river Oxus and the Hindukush. The Uzbeks tend to
predominate in the region. The Turcomans are mainly
refugees who fled before the Czarist armies until the
19th century and later during the war after October
Revolution of 1917. They are a very steady and
disciplined people unlike the volatile Afghans. But
since their population was comparatively less, as the
bulk of the Turkic races live across the Oxus in the
Russian Turkistan, the Uzbeks and the Turcomans were
never able to play a major role in Afghan politics
except in the recent past owing to increasing
trans-frontier support lent to the Uzbeks forces under
their warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum.
Historically, the Uzbeks were confined to their
provinces in the north, living a life of their own in
splendid isolation. The recent high profile role by
the Uzbeks is likely to have its own ramifications
with its trans-frontier cultural and political
affinities. Much would depend on how, their political
existence is stabilized with military aid and the time
span for such a life support measures from across the
border is another serious threat to the already
volatile situation well in advance of the Loya Jirga.
Such dissension if backed from across the border will
pose a serious threat and is capable of endangering
the geographic stability of Afghanistan in particular
and the South East Asian general.
Other races in Afghanistan include Nuristanis and the
Balochs who together form 7 per cent of the
population. The Nuristanis are the descendants of some
forgotten Aryan people cut off from the world, in
their inaccessible valleys in the eastern arm of the
Hindukush. Amir Abdur Rehman Khan forced their
conversion to Islam in the later part of the 9th
century.
He pre-empted the British, who were thinking of
sending Christian missionaries to proselytize among
these fair skinned Eurasian people. The Baloch are
confined to the desert zone, south of the Helmand
River, and are a spill over of the race from
Balochistan. They are more in number than the
Nuristanis but they have never played any important
role in Afghan politics.
Amir Dost Mohammed Khan is remembered as the
Amir-i-Kabir (The Great Amir). He consolidated his
power by establishing familial links with all the
major Pakhtun tribes and the other races in
Afghanistan. He was a very broad-minded man who had no
class or racial prejudices. His policy continued after
him, with the result the ruling family of Afghanistan,
the Mohammadzais, were linked to all the foremost
Tajik, Hazara, Nuristani, and the Uzbek families other
than their relationships with the major Pakhtun tribes
of the country.
In other words almost everyone could claim a
relationship, or at least close ties, with the
Muhammadzais. It was a vast and complex exercise of
establishing blood links, which probably had never
been done before in the region lying between the
Sulaiman Range and the River Oxus.
The Muhammadzais of Kabul even lost their language,
Pushto, because a majority of them had non-Afghan
mothers. By the turn of the century the Tajiks,
Hazaras, Uzbeks and the Nuristanis all began to call
themselves "Afghans" and became the part of a
"nation". The later Muhammadzai ruler, Zahir Shah,
even went to the extent of discouraging the royalty,
and the noble Barakzai families from attaining
influential positions in the Government. This had its
own unfortunate backlash for the royal family.
By opening the door to the corridors of power to
commoners on a basis of some crude form of
meritocracy, those deserving Barakzais who could have
strengthened the hands of the king were excluded by
this rather liberal and idealistic attitude had there
been no external influence at work in the social and
political fabric of Afghanistan, instituted by no one
less than the father of the nation, Ahmed Shah Durrani
would have evolved from a tribal democracy of
traditional respect and understanding between the
chieftain families into a true national democracy. But
this was unfortunately not to be in the Afghan case
because of the aggressive and intrusive foreign
manoeuvring which has not ceased till date.
The Durranis are divided into two main branches, the
Zirak and the Panjpia. The Zirak branch of the
Durranis was dominated by the Popalzai of which origin
is the Prime Minister Hamid Karzai, who has an uphill
task to prove his mantle in the wake of the surrender
by Pakhtun dominated Taliban forces in Kandahar. Much
would depend on Hamid Karzai's policy of
reconciliation and appeasement than vindictive
measures which might be expected from him by his
behind the stage benefactors. Ahmed Shah was a scion
of the chieftain family (Sadozaa) of that clan.
'Piryan' in Pushto with English translation of ghost
is the current code word used in Pushtu speaking parts
of Afghanistan for foreign intelligence operatives.
Ghosts are found in horror stories and so goes the
Afghan history. The invisibility and destructive
nature of this evil influence could be a logic behind
the usage of this terminology.
The recent death of a CIA agent in Mazar-i-Sharif
attaches much significance to this terminology of the
foreign power dependence on clandestine methods to
influence Afghan affairs which in fact has been so far
the recipe of disaster for Afghanistan.
After the Kingdom of Afghanistan emerged in 1747 under
Ahmed Shah Durrani, the ghost of foreign spirits seems
to haunt the Afghans till this day. The history of
this unfortunate state seems replete with foreign
imposed conflicts, tragedies and wars. The First
Afghan war, the second Afghan war, the third Afghan
war and now the fourth Afghan war.
The Afghan story at the CIA closed on the eve of
Soviet withdrawal. No rehabilitation of handicapped
war victims or haven for orphans, destitutes and
widows. No war heroes or solemn ceremony in honour of
the unknown soldiers who died for an unknown cause at
least not for their own. Humanity seems to have gone
into slumber. Chaos, internal conflicts and anarchy
began to reign Afghanistan. Thousands more were to die
while the world walked away leaving the innocent and
hapless Afghans in the lurch.