BSS
  27 Dec 2021, 09:29

Afghanistan's tumultuous year and uncertain future

  KABUL, Dec 27, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Few nations endured as tumultuous a year as

Afghanistan in 2021, and the country's woes are far from over as a bitter
winter draws in.

  The Taliban's astonishing return to power caught everyone on the wrong foot
-- not least the hardline Islamists themselves -- and Afghans are stumbling
to make sense of what happened, and what the future holds.

  For the Taliban, the biggest challenge remains being able to transform from
an insurgent force into an administrative body that can govern a complex and
diverse nation.

  For Western nations such as the United States and its NATO partners, the
fear is twofold: that conditions will deteriorate and prompt tens of
thousands more Afghans to flee abroad, and that terror groups such as Al-
Qaeda will again find safe haven.

  And for ordinary Afghans, food, shelter and employment are a priority --
with women in particular bearing the brunt of the Taliban's oppressive social
policies.

  "The consequences of the takeover were calamitous and immediate," Kate
Clark wrote in a special report for the Afghanistan Analysts Network (AAN).

  The Taliban, she argued, "had no plans for how they would run the Afghan
state without aid, an entirely predictable outcome of their decision to push
for a military victory". "In opposition, they taxed the population under
their control effectively, but were able to leave public services entirely up
to the government, NGOs and ultimately donors," Clark added.

  "Now, in power... (they) find government revenues greatly reduced and they
have an entire population to look after."

  - Women and girls on front line -

  One of the biggest problems facing the Taliban is the effective collapse of
the bureaucracy.

  Over 120,000 Afghans were evacuated in the chaotic last days of the US
withdrawal -- mostly people who had worked with foreign powers in managing
the aid-dependent administration and economy.

  Many civil servants had not been paid for months before the Taliban
takeover, and have little incentive to go back to work without knowing when
they will get a salary.

  "I go to the office in the morning but there is nothing to do," said
Hazrullah, a mid-level technocrat at the foreign ministry.

  "Before, I was working on trade deals with our neighbours. Now we have no
instructions on how to proceed. Nobody knows anything."

  Some of the Taliban's leadership have been at pains to present the new
regime as different to the hardline rule that characterised their first stint
in power from 1996 to 2001, and -- superficially at least -- there have been
some changes.

  There has been no edict on women having to again wear the face-covering
burqa, for example, or to be accompanied by a men in their families when
leaving the house, though authorities say close male relatives must accompany
women on long-distance road trips.

  But apart from essential services such as healthcare, women are effectively
barred from government work and high-school girls from education in several
provinces.

  The Taliban have tried to justify their decisions according to their
definition of Islamic principles.

  "It is for their own security," they say -- turning a blind eye to the fact
that the biggest threat to women and girls' safety has for years come from
the Islamists themselves.

  With the Taliban in power, security has undoubtedly improved, but brazen
attacks by IS jihadists are on the rise -- particularly targeting the
country's Shiite minority and also the Taliban fighters.

  But it is the teetering economy that will dictate Afghanistan's future at a
time when a major humanitarian crisis is unfolding across the country
described by the UN as an "avalanche of hunger".

  - Donors' dilemma -

  For humanitarians, it is a race against time as nearly 23 million people,
or 55 percent of the population, face "crisis or emergency" levels of food
insecurity this winter, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said.

  Both the Taliban and foreign powers will need to strike a delicate balance
in the months ahead.

  Donors are concerned about helping a pariah regime, while the Taliban
believe their victory should not be compromised by, for instance, allowing
women to work.

  On Wednesday, the UN Security Council adopted a US-proposed resolution to
help humanitarian aid reach desperate Afghans while seeking to keep funds out
of Taliban hands.

  The Islamists welcomed the move as a "good step", though they deny the
country faces a humanitarian crisis.

  At a local level, some aid organisations have already been able to bypass
Taliban officialdom and distribute essential supplies directly to those in
need.

  Elsewhere, Taliban commanders insist they have the sole right to hand out
aid -- to cement their authority and reward loyalists.

  But at the national level, the Taliban can't be seen to be dictated to by
foreign powers and organisations and the leadership insists it must have
control of funding and aid -- something still unpalatable to many donors.

  "If all the assistance goes to the poorest and most needy without
discrimination -- a very tall order -- it would still make it easier for the
Taliban to focus their resources on strengthening their control of the
state," Clark wrote for AAN.

  The road ahead is unclear.

  "The economic benefits flowing from the peace will still only be marginal
nationally compared to the harm done by the absolute loss in foreign income
and the isolation Afghanistan now faces," said Clark.