Annie Anthrax wrote on Feb 26
th, 2012 at 5:49pm:
Falah, you should be ashamed of yourself. You go against your own God by defending that organisation against their Muslim women accusers - your sisters in Islam.
There aren't only two sides to that war. You don't automatically stand against Islam if you stand against and condemn the Muslims who commit these atrocities. You can stand with the victims against all oppressors.
Do read this list.
From RAWA (they'd know, right?) :
RAWA is a socialist atheist organistaion which invents a lot of anti-Taliban propaganda. The letter R stands for "revolutionary" and should be a big clue to the nature of the organisation.
The founder of the oranisation attended Socialist meetings:
Quote: Meena represented the Afghan resistance movement at the French Socialist Party Congress.
http://www.rawa.org/meena.html
Anyway, you have to ask yourself which is worse Taliban ordering women to wear a burqa in urban areas or the US-backed Karzai government legalising rape.
‘Worse than the Taliban’ - new law rolls back rights for Afghan women
http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/2009/03/31/and-8216-worse-than-the-talibanand-8217-new-law-rolls-back-rights-for-afghan-women.html
Strange how we don't see George Bush's wife carted out to condemn the Karzai government treatment of women.
'Worse than the Taliban' - new law rolls back rights for Afghan women
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/31/hamid-karzai-afghanistan-law
Quote:Child Rapist Police Return Behind U.S., UK Troops
The strategy of the major U.S. and British military offensive in Afghanistan's Helmand province aimed at wresting it from the Taliban is based on bringing back Afghan army and police to maintain permanent control of the population, so the foreign forces can move on to another insurgent stronghold.
But that strategy poses an acute problem: The police in the province, who are linked to the local warlord, have committed systematic abuses against the population, including the abduction and rape of pre-teen boys, according to village elders who met with British officers.
Anger over those police abuses runs so high that the elders in Babaji just north of Laskgar Gah warned the British that they would support the Taliban to get rid of them if the national police were allowed to return to the area, according to a Jul. 12 report by Reuters correspondent Peter Graff.
Associated Press reporters Jason Straziuso and David Guttenfelder, who accompanied U.S. troops in Northern Helmand, reported Jul. 13 that villagers in Aynak were equally angry about police depredations. Within hours of the arrival of U.S. troops in the village, they wrote, bands of villagers began complaining the local police force was "a bigger problem than the Taliban".
The brutality of the Afghan police toward the civilian population in Helmand was no surprise to Ambassador Ron Neumann, who was the U.S. envoy in Afghanistan from 2005 to 2007. Such abuses, including rape of pre-teen boys, "are part of the larger problem of repression and oppression" in Afghanistan, Neumann told IPS.
Neumann said the problem of police abuses against the population can be traced back to the creation of the national police after the overthrow of the Taliban regime in late 2001. The Afghan police were not created afresh by U.S. and NATO force, Neumann recalls but were "constituted from the forces that were then fighting the Taliban".
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=47871
Current Government Worse than Taliban": Report on Afghanistan
http://tv.globalresearch.ca/2010/07/current-government-worse-taliban-report-afghanistan
Quote:My organisation, the Open Society Foundations, recently asked 250 Afghans across Afghanistan who or what they thought was contributing to the escalation of conflict in Afghanistan, and, in particular, whom they blamed for the high civilian casualties and other civilian losses that have been such a flashpoint among the Afghan population.
...our analysis found that Afghans blamed international forces as much, if not more, than insurgents...the vast majority described international forces as equally brutal toward civilians, and equally, if not more responsible for civilian casualties, detention abuses and other concerns.
They said international forces were often indiscriminate, and that many civilian deaths could have been prevented through better targeting, intelligence or coordination. "When an accident happens, or there is an attack against Nato troops, then Nato troops react and start firing on people. They never think about those around them as human. They think every person on the street is their enemy," said a man from western Herat province.
Most alleged more horrific stories of international forces shooting people point blank in front of their families, of kidnapping women and returning their dead bodies, or of firing on or abusing children...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/oct/12/afghanistan-nato
Quote:In quotes: Excerpts from Nato report on Taliban
"In the last year there has been unprecedented interest, even from GIRoA [Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan] members, in joining the the insurgent cause.
Afghan civilians frequently prefer Taliban governance over GIRoA
...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16829368