Cape Breton Post

Tough sell: Taliban has work cut out to win hearts and minds in Kabul

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After 20 years of fighting, the Taliban have tried to present a conciliato­ry face to the world. Afghanista­n’s new rulers have a problem closer to home: winning the hearts and minds of their own people, starting in the capital.

Since the group entered Kabul on Aug. 15, armed members have roamed the streets in battlefiel­d dress, often with no obvious chain of command. Many city dwellers are not used to the sight, and heavy-handed security tactics have not helped.

Ahmad, a Kabul teacher who was a small child when the Taliban last ruled Afghanista­n 20 years ago, has adjusted to the shock of seeing their fighters on the streets. But weeks after the city fell, he feels no more reconciled to their presence.

“People in Kabul hate them,” he said, with a city dweller’s distaste for rough fighters who have descended from the countrysid­e. Ahmad declined to give his surname for fear of retributio­n.

“You should see them, they are wild-looking people, dirty, uneducated with long hair and dirty clothes. They have no manners at all.”

After 20 years of Western presence, Kabul is no longer the bombed-out shell the Taliban took over in 1996.

While it remains scruffy and traffic-snarled, with overflowin­g drains, patchy electricit­y and no running water in many areas, it has a lively urban culture far removed from the austere rural background of most Taliban fighters.

A fan of Barcelona’s soccer team with a taste for Bollywood, Ahmad reluctantl­y let his beard grow and exchanged the Western-style clothes he used to wear for a traditiona­l perahan tunban to avoid standing out when he runs into a Taliban checkpoint.

Instead of Dari, the language mainly spoken in Kabul, he is careful to address any Taliban he meets in Pashto, the language of the south and east where most of the fighters come from.

“They have never been in a city and many of them don’t speak Dari - as well as Pashto you hear Arabic or Urdu and other languages,” he said. “They beat people in the street with their weapons. People are very afraid of them.”

REASSURANC­E

Taliban leaders say they want Kabul residents to feel secure, but they acknowledg­e they were surprised by the swift collapse of the Westernbac­ked government, leaving next to no time to plan the running of a city of over 5 million people.

They also admit that their fighters, most of whom have known little but years of war, are not trained police used to dealing with the public.

The group says its government is different from the hardline Islamist administra­tion that ruled from 1996 to 2001, and it has promised there would be no arbitrary punishment­s and that patrols had been ordered to treat people with respect.

“If there is a problem in any area, whether it is a thief or an oppressor or a gunman or a tyrant, let the people know that we have shared our contact numbers everywhere,” said Seyed Rahman Heydari, a Taliban patrol commander in Kabul’s police district 6.

“Just let us know when facing such issues; we will follow up seriously and arrest the criminals.”

When they were last in power, Taliban religious police would beat people breaking the rules, and the group became notorious internatio­nally for its public amputation­s and executions.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A member of the Taliban forces points his gun at protesters, as Afghan demonstrat­ors shout slogans during an anti-pakistan protest, near the Pakistan embassy in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Sept. 7.
REUTERS A member of the Taliban forces points his gun at protesters, as Afghan demonstrat­ors shout slogans during an anti-pakistan protest, near the Pakistan embassy in Kabul, Afghanista­n on Sept. 7.

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