The Pak Banker

Hope of Afghanista­n turnaround

- Qais Ghanem

ON March 15, the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ottawa, Canada, held a day-long symposium on Afghanista­n. It was not the first one that I had attended, but probably the best organised and most fruitful. Apart from the hard work by the organisers, what was impressive was the input by the three main speakers - all Afghanis. We are so used to symposia and lectures delivered by western experts, who have spent a few years in the country or who have written a paper about it. But this was different and it showed.

No one should underestim­ate the multifacet­ed problems in Afghanista­n -a country that has seen many more years of conflict, occupation and war than of peace and one where poverty, disease, illiteracy, corruption and injustice are the norm. However, I came out of the symposium with genuine hope for the future, mainly because of the wisdom of its people, as represente­d by the main speakers. Apart from a well-spoken Ambassador, Barna Karimi, there was a former cabinet minister, Mohammad Haneef Atmaar, the current Deputy Minister of Finance, Dr Mohammad Mustafa Mastoor, and last, but not the least, Fatima Gailani, the very well-spoken, knowledgea­ble president of the Afghanista­n Red Crescent, who clearly won the hearts of the audience, because she spoke from the heart, but with lots of facts and figures to support her views.

I invited her to my radio show for an interview and was pleasantly surprised when she agreed to it and found the time for it. We had a 25-minute interview (which will soon be on www.dialoguewi­thdiversit­y.com Fatima is a household name in Afghanista­n, due to her famous father, the family originatin­g in Iraq decades before. Because of her connection­s, everyone assumed that she would be appointed cabinet minister, if she wanted the job. She did not, but preferred to work at the grass roots, with the sick and destitute, and joined a group of another eight women who dedicated themselves to social service.

They started as female representa­tives in the constituti­onal committee, among 30 men, and remain a close circle of "sisters" till date. The close, street-level contact with the needy engendered so much trust that she had almost complete freedom of movement - so much so that even the Taliban asked her for help.

She started just a decade ago. Today, she says with pride, 25 per cent of Afghan parliament­arians are women. She soon became the president of the Red Crescent in Afghanista­n and since then that organisati­on has been ranked among the top-15 in the world, despite tenuous funding and other problems. Her ability to reach out resulted in a marked increase in local funding - 70 per cent of which is now from local business people and other local donors.

But what about the numerous problems we hear about, I asked. There were lots, she admitted, especially with regard to the marginalis­ation of women - often wrongly attributed to Islam. She gave me examples. She said that men disagree and fight, while women and children suffer.

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