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Today's Globe & Mail.
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060809.wafghanistan09/BNStory/National/
Battles leave Afghans nowhere to turn
TIM ALBONE AND TAHIR LUDDIN
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
Rozi Mohammad had been digging for hours and he was nowhere near finished.
“I am digging because I will not leave this village like I left my home village,” the 24-year-old said, his three children by his side. “When the bombs come again we will hide in here.”
Like hundreds of families who live in Pashmul district, Mr. Mohammad had left his home among the fertile grape fields 40 kilometres west of Kandahar city that have been the scene of some of the fiercest fighting between Canadian troops and Taliban rebels. He thought he was safer here in Sartakht village. Though still in Pashmul, it's closer to the main highway and closer to Kandahar city. He was, however, not taking any chances, and so he began digging.
The villagers in this rural area are put in an impossible position. “The Taliban are forcing us to give them food and shelter and the coalition are bombing us,” said Sultan Mohammad, a man of 50 with five children who also fled. “We hate the Canadians and we hate the Taliban.”
The families, mostly farmers, are leaving behind their harvests and their livelihoods. The grapes have grown and now is the time they would dry and sell them. “I have no water and no food now, my grapes are back on my farm and ready to be dried, but it is not safe for me to go back,” said Mohammad Talib, 35, a father of 10. “I have nowhere to turn. Should I cry to the government, the Canadians or the Taliban? It is useless, no one is listening.”
For those who have fled, the conditions in Sartakht are basic. The nearest well for water is more than a kilometre away and near a Taliban position. The shelters are makeshift and there is no electricity. Yet Mr. Mohammad is not alone.
“More than 800 families from Pashmul and Zhari districts have fled,” said engineer Abdul Quadar Norzai, the regional program manager of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission. And with families often being 10 or more people, the areas worst hit by the fighting are now nearly devoid of civilian life. “It is creating a huge problem for the families leaving,” Mr. Norzai said. “They are leaving everything ... and it will create negative thoughts.”
Canadians and NATO commanders are aware of the situation, but Afghan agencies have asked that they be allowed to deal with the internally displaced people who don't have a kind view of the Canadian troops.
Lieutenant-General David Richards, head of NATO forces in Afghanistan, has twice called off missions for fear of civilian casualties. “I have made it clear in my orders to troops to be very, very careful,” he said during a briefing in Kandahar.
Abdul Samat, 35, had his household possessions on the back of a tractor. Four of his five children and his wife had already fled the village of Ghulam Haidar for Kandahar city. He was on his way to join them. “I have no choice, I don't care about my land or my house, only for my children, and for them I need to leave,” he said, his child wailing as he spoke. “First the Taliban force their way into our houses and then the coalition bomb us,” he said.
If the NATO mission is to be successful, it has to provide for people like these. “The first time we had the Karzai administration, we had great expectations, but we were not expecting to have to flee our homes,” said Mohammad Talib, another villager.
“I don't know what side to support. I hate the Taliban. I hate the government. I hate the Canadians. They have not done anything for me except kill our children with their bombs.”
Special to The Globe and Mail
What do you guys think?
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060809.wafghanistan09/BNStory/National/
Battles leave Afghans nowhere to turn
TIM ALBONE AND TAHIR LUDDIN
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
Rozi Mohammad had been digging for hours and he was nowhere near finished.
“I am digging because I will not leave this village like I left my home village,” the 24-year-old said, his three children by his side. “When the bombs come again we will hide in here.”
Like hundreds of families who live in Pashmul district, Mr. Mohammad had left his home among the fertile grape fields 40 kilometres west of Kandahar city that have been the scene of some of the fiercest fighting between Canadian troops and Taliban rebels. He thought he was safer here in Sartakht village. Though still in Pashmul, it's closer to the main highway and closer to Kandahar city. He was, however, not taking any chances, and so he began digging.
The villagers in this rural area are put in an impossible position. “The Taliban are forcing us to give them food and shelter and the coalition are bombing us,” said Sultan Mohammad, a man of 50 with five children who also fled. “We hate the Canadians and we hate the Taliban.”
The families, mostly farmers, are leaving behind their harvests and their livelihoods. The grapes have grown and now is the time they would dry and sell them. “I have no water and no food now, my grapes are back on my farm and ready to be dried, but it is not safe for me to go back,” said Mohammad Talib, 35, a father of 10. “I have nowhere to turn. Should I cry to the government, the Canadians or the Taliban? It is useless, no one is listening.”
For those who have fled, the conditions in Sartakht are basic. The nearest well for water is more than a kilometre away and near a Taliban position. The shelters are makeshift and there is no electricity. Yet Mr. Mohammad is not alone.
“More than 800 families from Pashmul and Zhari districts have fled,” said engineer Abdul Quadar Norzai, the regional program manager of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission. And with families often being 10 or more people, the areas worst hit by the fighting are now nearly devoid of civilian life. “It is creating a huge problem for the families leaving,” Mr. Norzai said. “They are leaving everything ... and it will create negative thoughts.”
Canadians and NATO commanders are aware of the situation, but Afghan agencies have asked that they be allowed to deal with the internally displaced people who don't have a kind view of the Canadian troops.
Lieutenant-General David Richards, head of NATO forces in Afghanistan, has twice called off missions for fear of civilian casualties. “I have made it clear in my orders to troops to be very, very careful,” he said during a briefing in Kandahar.
Abdul Samat, 35, had his household possessions on the back of a tractor. Four of his five children and his wife had already fled the village of Ghulam Haidar for Kandahar city. He was on his way to join them. “I have no choice, I don't care about my land or my house, only for my children, and for them I need to leave,” he said, his child wailing as he spoke. “First the Taliban force their way into our houses and then the coalition bomb us,” he said.
If the NATO mission is to be successful, it has to provide for people like these. “The first time we had the Karzai administration, we had great expectations, but we were not expecting to have to flee our homes,” said Mohammad Talib, another villager.
“I don't know what side to support. I hate the Taliban. I hate the government. I hate the Canadians. They have not done anything for me except kill our children with their bombs.”
Special to The Globe and Mail