Killing
with smaller stones by Alexander Cockburn - 01.08.02
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FIRST the tumult of war, now the
fruits of peace. From Afghanistan comes
bracing news about the new era of
tolerance, now that the Taliban have,
at least for the time being, slunk off
the stage of history.
Shortly before the turn of the year,
Justice Minister Karimi declared
Afghanistan's new government will still
impose Sharia Islamic law on its
people, but with less harshness. The
details were fleshed out by Judge
Ahamat Ullha Zarif, who has told
the French news agency Agence France
Presse that public executions and
amputations will continue, but there
will be changes:
"For example, the Taliban
used to hang the victim's body in
public for four days. We will only
hang the body for a short time, say
15 minutes."
Kabul's sports stadium, financed by
the International Monetary Fund, was
where the Taliban used to carry out
public executions and amputations every
Friday. No longer. "The stadium is for
sports. We will find a new place for
public executions," he said.
Judge Zarif makes it clear that the
ultimate penalty will remain in force
for adulterers, both male and female.
They would still be stoned to death,
Zarif told the French news agency, "but
we will use only small stones."
Now there's progress! This
adjustment in the size of the executive
munitions will, the judge explains,
allow the condemned person a chance to
escape. "If they are able to run away,
they are free." It turns out that this
avenue of escape is only available to
those adulterers who confess to their
sexual misdeeds. "Those who refuse to
confess their wrongdoing and are
condemned by a judge will have their
hands and feet bound so that they
cannot run away. They will certainly be
stoned to death," Zarif said.
The winds of change can be felt on
another front. Afghanistan's farmers
faced bankruptcy after Mullah
Omar ordered a halt to the planting
of opium poppies last year. In the
years that the CIA was rallying
Afghanistan's landlords and mullahs
against the Soviets, Afghanistan became
the West's prime supplier of heroin and
morphine.
Mullah Omar's ban has been variously
explained as an effort to ingratiate
the Taliban regime with the United
States in hopes of getting aid, or as
an effort to restrict supply and thus
hike prices.
Whatever the motive, the prohibition
led to a 96 percent fall in
Afghanistan's production of raw opium
-- from more than 453,500 kilograms in
1999 to 18,500 kilograms this year,
according to the United Nations Drug
Control Program.
Now, news reports, such as this from
Craig Nelson, describe renewed
poppy cultivation in lyrical terms:
"Everyone is planting," says
Ashoqullah, a 25-year-old
landowner. "In a few months, these
fields will be covered in a blanket of
spectacular red and white flowers.
We'll draw the ooze from the flower
bulbs, pack it in plastic bags or small
soap cartons, and sell it at the
bazaar."
From the bazaars the raw opium will
makes its way north or south to
processing labs in Pakistan or
Uzbekistan, two sturdy members of the
great anti-terror coalition, and then
westward to the veins of addicts in
Europe and the United States.
But Afghanistan's swift return to
preeminent status as this country's No.
1 heroin supplier is surely a small
price to pay for the extinction of the
Taliban and routing of Al Qaeda.
Alas, this raises the question of
just how extinct the Taliban is. Fudge
the numbers as you may, not too many of
them ended up dead, aside from those
prisoners killed at Mazar e Sharif or
suffocated on their way to other
prisons.
Presumably they dispersed to their
homes, awaiting further instructions
from their Pakistani supervisors.
Osama bin Laden? Suppose he
pops up in Kashmir, calling for a
renewed jihad against the Indian
occupier. Now that would set the cat
among the pigeons! So, perhaps it's not
quite so clear how much has really been
achieved in the great crusade, but for
sure, it is a famous
victory!
© 2002
Creators Syndicate