The Scotsman

Sibghatull­ah Mujadidi

Afghanista­n’s first president after Soviet withdrawal

-

Afghanista­n’s first president following the withdrawal of Soviet troops from the country and the collapse in 1992 of Kabul’s procommuni­st government, Sibghatull­ah Mujadidi, has died. He was 93.

The white-turbaned and soft-spoken Mujadidi was a mentor to former President Hamid Karzai, who had belonged to his anti-communist resistance group during the 1980s Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n.

Mujadidi’s guerrilla group – the Us-backed Afghan National Liberation Front – was perhaps the smallest and most moderate of guerrilla groups fighting to oust the former Red Army from Afghanista­n.

The Soviet invasion came at the height of the Cold War between America and the former Soviet Union. The last Soviet soldier withdrew from Afghanista­n on 15 February 1989, ending a 10-year invasion that had failed to defeat the Usbacked anti-communist guerrillas who were known at the time as mujahedeen, or holy warriors.

President Ronald Reagan called the mujahedeen freedom fighters. Some later became the Taleban while others were known as warlords who later turned political leaders in Afghanista­n.

Some rights activists have accused the warlords of fomenting Afghanista­n’s post2001 decline, contributi­ng to the nation’s insecurity and widespread corruption.

Following the collapse of the communist government, Mujadidi in 1992 served for two months as Afghanista­n’s president in line with an agreement signed in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, by the leaders of all the mujahedeen groups who had fought the former Soviet Union.

Mujadidist­eppeddowna­she said he would, according to the agreement, but his successor, Burhanuddi­n Rabbani, who was to serve for four months instead hung on to power for four years. The agreement broke down and a brutal war between rival mujahedeen groups engulfed the Afghan capital of Kabul, killing tens of thousands of mostly civilians until the Taleban took power in 1996.

During the Taleban rule, Mujadidi lived outside of Afghanista­n and returned to the country following the Us-led invasion in 2001 that drove the Taleban from power. He served as head of the first post-taleban Loya Jirga, the 2,500-member council of elders or “grand gathering” that eventually crafted Afghanista­n’s current constituti­on.

He also briefly served as head of the government High Peace Council tasked with trying to find a peaceful end to Afghanista­n’s war.

An ethnic Pashtun from Kabul, Mujadidi came from a deeply respected religious family, who often advised former Afghan kings on matters of religion.

“He was always seeking peace and stability for Afghanista­n, but he died before he could see his wish fulfilled,” said Attaulrahm­an Salim, deputy head of the peace council. “We are still a country at war.”

KATHY GANNON

PATRIOT

“He was always seeking peace and stability for Afghanista­n, but he died before he could see his wish fulfilled”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom