Toronto Star

Twin tragedies and the strings that pull them

Haitians, Afghans victims of the games nations play for money and influence

- NIKO PRICE

LONDON—Twin tragedies on opposite sides of the world are piling misery on people who have seen far more than their share.

In Afghanista­n, a group of gunmen known for sadistic tyranny rocketed back into power after 20 years as western and Afghan leaders walked away with a sad shrug. In Haiti, yet another earthquake and yet another storm struck a country exceptiona­lly ill-equipped to handle either.

On the face of it, little links the two catastroph­es. One can easily be blamed on geopolitic­s and an unwinnable war, the other on motion in the Earth’s crust and tropospher­e.

And yet these assaults on the usual suspects are deeply connected. They are unfolding in two nations that, as the planet strains with stressors both natural and willful, sit at the fault lines of everything that the 21stcentur­y world struggles to control.

Once more, some of the world’s least fortunate people have become even less so. And whether the catalyst is war or weather, the suffering in both places is rooted in two all-toohuman syndromes: poverty and corruption.

That’s no accident. Both Afghanista­n and Haiti have been invaded and occupied by western powers for great parts of their histories, and both have suffered under corrupt government­s propped up by the selfintere­st of western countries. The United States, for one, has done both things to both countries.

As much as the West would like to ignore the fact, both countries are victims of power dynamics and unabashed greed that have stacked the cards against them. The fact that neither has a functionin­g government able to help them in their time of need is a direct consequenc­e of “Great Games” played by other nations for money and influence.

This predicamen­t should sound a warning siren in a world ravaged by extreme weather, viral infection, religious intoleranc­e and political opportunis­m. Fundamenta­l inequaliti­es in the availabili­ty of food, water, medicine and education mean that people unlucky enough to be born outside of privilege have few opportunit­ies to change their place in the world.

Haiti embodies this. Afghanista­n, too. The most vulnerable are usually the first to fall, and falling they are.

In Afghanista­n, invaded by everyone from the Greeks and the Mongols to the Soviet Union and a U.S.-led NATO operation, they fell across the past half century.

They fell when the Soviets came in 1979, when the Taliban first came in 1996, when the U.S.-led coalition displaced them in 2001 and again when they returned this week.

In Haiti, which endured a twodecade U.S. occupation from 1915 and U.S.-backed dictators for most of its history since, they continue to fall under crushing poverty, political chaos and natural disasters, including a devastatin­g 2010 earthquake.

Can these well-carved paths be altered? Is there a chance that people in places like Afghanista­n and Haiti can forge a different way forward? Many on the ground doubt it.

In a lifetime of reporting in some of the world’s least favored nations, I have come across hope in the unlikelies­t of places: in El Salvador, where three boys took a break from picking through a landfill to wrestle and laugh; in Iraq, where a merchant marine captain dipped in nitric acid for his political opinions dreamed of telling his story in court; in southern Mexico, where a young man sneaking northward hoped to find out why his father had died in a Texas detention center (suicide, he would later learn).

But hope has been especially elusive in these two places, whose new disasters seem to confirm people’s lack of faith that somehow, someday, things might get better.

In Afghanista­n in 2002, after the 9/11 attacks and the tectonic shifts they brought to a country already accustomed to a generation of war, 12-year-old Hamida was picking through rotting vegetables by the roadside to feed her 10-member family.

“Under the Taliban, under the new government, it’s the same,” she whispered, hiding her face behind a mud-caked shawl. “I can’t imagine anything will ever change.”

In Haiti in 1998, on the heels of a hurricane that had devastated large parts of the country, a young man in a squatter camp saw little reason to dream of anything better.

“Every day I wake up and put water on my face. I look in the mirror, and I see nothing,” said Fritzner Midil, then 24.

At the time, I found Hamida’s resignatio­n and Midil’s despondenc­y hard to bear. Surely, I thought, things can only get better from here.

Two decades later, Haiti has suffered more hurricanes, more earthquake­s and more U.S. interventi­on. The Taliban have reversed their 2001 defeat, sweeping into Kabul triumphant­ly this week with a new generation of young militants at their resurgent core and a promise of inclusivit­y that no one is certain they will keep.

And I wonder what Hamida and Midil think of all this. I wonder whether Hamida went to school, started a family, built a life. And Midil? I wonder what he sees in the mirror today. Niko Price is a London-based executive producer for The Associated Press’s global video service and has reported from 49 countries, including Afghanista­n and Haiti.

The most vulnerable around the world are usually the first to fall, and falling they are

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? As Afghans fled the chaos at Kabul airport this week, they were reminded that their country has been invaded by everyone from the Greeks and Mongols to the Soviets and U.S.-led NATO group.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES As Afghans fled the chaos at Kabul airport this week, they were reminded that their country has been invaded by everyone from the Greeks and Mongols to the Soviets and U.S.-led NATO group.
 ?? RICHARD PIERRIN GETTY IMAGES ?? Haiti, like Afghanista­n, has been invaded, occupied and suffered under corrupt government­s leaving it ill-equipped to handle the fallout from catastroph­es such as last week’s earthquake.
RICHARD PIERRIN GETTY IMAGES Haiti, like Afghanista­n, has been invaded, occupied and suffered under corrupt government­s leaving it ill-equipped to handle the fallout from catastroph­es such as last week’s earthquake.

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