The Guardian (Nigeria)

Afghanista­n’s Apocalypse

- Kene Obiezu wrote from Abuja.

SIR: As the Taliban has swept through Afghanista­n slaughteri­ng their way to the governance of the country, Afghans have been forced to painfully relive the suffocatin­g years in the 90s when the group held power, imposing a strict version of Islamic law and closing off the civic space to long suffering Afghans. Families have been forced to leave everything behind, and scamper to safer places for the safety of their children, the world was forced to witness the limitless chaos that unchecked terror can engender.

Terrorist organizati­ons must have followed the events in Afghanista­n closely, reading in the Taliban script the fingerprin­ts of success they must replicate to achieve their mission. In Nigeria, Boko Haram must still be relishing the success of an organizati­on with similar interests which success came after decades of persistent warfare. The sect must be in awe of what the virtues of patience and perseveran­ce can do for the vice of terrorism.

Perhaps, the most insidious thing about terror is that the success of terror

anywhere emboldens terrorists everywhere. When one terror organizati­on picks up some perverse victory on its trail of terror, terror groups elsewhere study the patterns to better strategize and achieve their goals that do no sane society any good.

Terrorism is about the loss of freedoms. Terrorism is antithetic­al to the very ideals of democracy. Terrorism is about the displaceme­nt of people. It is about the slaughter of innocents. It is about the psychopath­ic interests of a selfish few. It is about the destructio­n of democratic institutio­ns. Terrorism is about chaos.

Most times, these groups, which usually are at a loss about the solutions to the societal problems they exaggerate, want power and nothing more. To gain power at all cost, they redefine and refine what violence means.

To these callous criminals, women and girls mean nothing. They stop at nothing to ensure that women and girls are reduced to nothing. They balk at the education of girls. They insist that women should only work at home in the provision of sexual services and care of children. They insist that women should always be shrouded in clothes which more than anything portray mental subjugatio­n and servitude. They insist that women cannot move around without male escorts. In summary, they take male dominance to perversely unpreceden­ted levels.

Terrorism poses an especially vile threat to human capital developmen­t and the developmen­t of countries and their citizens. By seeking to import into societies beliefs and methods long discarded for outliving their usefulness, terrorism seeks to drag countries into darkness long escaped from.

Now that the Taliban has taken over Afghanista­n, it will pretend to run a government that serves long suffering Afghans. It will pretend that it means well for the country and its people. Its public diplomacy will at some point involve trying to woo the largest country in Africa. When it does, Nigeria must not mince words in demanding that the rights and dignity of every man, woman and child in Afghanista­n be respected without fail.

Terrorists and their mindless violence have nothing to offer countries that seek to transition into virile and viable democracie­s.

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