Sunday, July 23, 2006

Taliban still influential in Afghanistan

From the Sunday Times:
AFGHANISTAN’S notorious Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which was set up by the Taliban to enforce bans on women doing anything from working to wearing nail varnish or laughing out loud, is to be re-created by the government in Kabul.

The decision has provoked an outcry among women and human rights activists who fear a return to the days when religious police patrolled the streets, beating or arresting any woman who was not properly covered by a burqa or accompanied by a male relative.

“This is a very bad idea at a bad time,” said Sam Zia-Zarifi, the Asia research director of Human Rights Watch. “We’re close to the edge in Afghanistan. It really could all go wrong and it is alarming that the United Nations and western governments are not speaking out on this issue.”

President Hamid Karzai’s cabinet has approved the proposal to re-establish the department, and the measure will go to Afghanistan’s parliament when it reconvenes later this summer. The conservative complexion of the assembly makes it likely to be passed.

It's only a matter of time before the Taliban regains control of Afghanistan. Perhaps if President Bush hadn't gotten sidetracked in Iraq more attention could have been focused on keeping Afghanistan out of Taliban control. Many parts of that country remain under the control of the Taliban and warlords. The Bush administration can't seem to do anything right.