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    South Asia
     Mar 14, 2008
Afghanistan: New envoy, old challenges
By Sharif Ghalib

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has nominated Norwegian diplomat Kai Eide to be the next UN envoy in Afghanistan. The nomination, already welcomed by the government of Afghanistan and approved by the UN Security Council this week, will practically bring to a close the dragging quest for the UN secretary general's special representative to the country to succeed the ex-UN envoy, Tom Koenigs of Germany.

Correspondingly, the nomination will make the bitter row between the Afghan government and its major allies over the ill-fated appointment of Paddy Ashdown, a Briton, and former UN high representative and European Union envoy to Bosnia, which brought the sides to the verge of a war of words a theme of the past.

Without a doubt, the appointment of Eide comes at a delicate



time. He is to embark on a task unlikely to be easy, with the deteriorating security situation and violence high. More than six years after US-led Afghan resistance forces deposed the Taliban, North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Afghan forces are still battling an unrelenting Taliban insurgency.

According to news media accounts quoting a United Nations report released on Monday in New York, a tenth of Afghanistan is off limits to aid workers because attacks by Taliban insurgents make it too dangerous, hindering the delivery of humanitarian assistance to vulnerable Afghans.

Violence last year was at the highest since the Taliban regime was toppled in late 2001. There were 160 suicide attacks and 68 thwarted attempts in 2007, compared with 123 suicide attacks and 17 failed attempts in 2006. Afghanistan had more than 8,000 conflict-related deaths last year, including 1,500 civilian deaths, the UN report was quoted as saying.

Frustration over the lack of security is mounting so much so that a growing number of ordinary Afghans question whether the multinational coalition forces are in their country to bring peace or whether these forces are capable of doing the job in the first place.

As a result, the declining pattern of security has taken a heavy toll on the confidence of the people over the ability of the Afghan government and the international community to carry out reconstruction objectives at the desired pace, aimed at tangibly improving their lives.

To date, however, to the dismay of the Afghan government and of the nation at large, arguments stressing the need for the international community to set the pace and ratchet up the building, training and equipping of the indigenous security institutions of the nascent Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP) have gone unheeded and to no avail.

Much as with security, the slow pace of development and sluggish reconstruction efforts continue to leave ordinary Afghans increasingly infuriated. Lacking adequate access to health and education facilities, social services and employment opportunities, a great many wonder how negligibly their lives have been changed with the billions of dollars that have been funneled to the country.

In this context, media and government reports on the on-going widespread calamitous fatalities and the loss of lives across Afghanistan this winter due to preventable conditions provide a clear testimonial to the extent of vulnerability among the country's larger populations.

Characterized as correlated and intertwined, security and development remain of paramount importance to the overall situation, whereupon a great many often tend to contemplate each as balancing the other, thus requiring a close and effective coordination between the two by the newly headed United Nations Mission Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA).

The alarming proportion of poppy cultivation and heroin production is yet another indicator of the international community's profoundly flawed counter-narcotics strategy in Afghanistan. Failure to adopt a comprehensive and integrated approach to combating narcotics has led to record increases in illicit drug production, which demands earnest attention by the new envoy.

According to the International Narcotics Control Board agency, last year Afghanistan produced an "exceptional quantity" of opium, at 8,200 tonnes, 34% more than in 2006. The country now accounts for 93% of all opiates on the global market, the UN agency said in its annual report made public last Wednesday in Vienna.

Addressing the precarious situation, inter alia, requires fresh resolve and renewed leadership by UNAMA. The very fact that Eide is slated to be assuming a "strong mandate" to "accelerate and strengthen the coordination of the support of over 40 countries contributing military forces or military support to Afghanistan, and over 60 countries, nation states and institutions contributing development assistance and reconstruction assistance to Afghanistan", will inevitably prove to be of fundamental importance to his success in confronting the formidable challenges and the implementation of the stated objectives.

However, it is equally important that Eide should be able to ensure bringing a distinct perspective to the conduct of the work of the UN office with regard to the government of Afghanistan and the greater ethno-political dynamics of the country.

Oddly, UNAMA, on more than one occasion, has been on the record as taking position and/or putting out intrusive statements over purely internal government issues, such as appointments of certain state officials, and at times even judging the country's parliamentary decisions, irrelevant to its jurisdiction and the framework of its responsibilities, and detrimental to the efficacy of its role, image and integrity in a post-conflict nation still susceptible to upheavals.

By the same token, revelations about UN-ranking delegates' clandestine activities in southern Afghanistan in making contact with the Taliban last December, found by the Afghan government to be unsanctioned and inconsistent with the nature of their jobs, and the ensuing controversy surrounding their expulsion, are instances which run utterly counter to impartiality as an underlying principal enshrined in the charter of the United Nations as an international organization.

The United Nations must strictly adhere to its commitments and obligations to the inviolability of the sovereignty of the elected government of Afghanistan and the sanctity of its constitutional duties before the Afghan nation in dealing with state affairs.

Looking forward to the next historical watershed events of presidential and parliamentary elections in their country, the people of Afghanistan cannot be indebted enough to the United Nations for the pivotal role it has played all along. And much the same, they continue to trust and pin hope in UNAMA's invaluable mission dedicated to their collective well-being and strengthening the nation's grasp on its newfound democracy.

Sharif Ghalib served at the UN for 10 years and was the first Afghan diplomat to negotiate the establishment of full bilateral diplomatic and consular relations between Afghanistan and Canada at resident-embassy level. He opened the Embassy of Afghanistan in Ottawa in late 2002 and served as the country's Charge d'Affaires and Minister Counselor until 2005.

(Copyright 2008 Sharif Ghalib.)


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