advertisement
After the collapse of Taliban for the first time in my life I saw women go out of their houses without a male company and a burqa. I saw men with trimmed hair and no beard. It was strange to see that.
There were talks of TV stations, schools, universities, and hospitals re-opening. I will never forget that first time the national TV station decided to broadcast a song, sung by a woman. That was the first time I was hearing a woman’s voice through an Afghan TV station.
In a couple of months, I enrolled in an official school.
Soon, my friends and I joined different youth groups and took many capacity building trainings. Everywhere we went there were talks of democracy, transitional justice, human rights, freedom of speech, freedom of expression, women’s rights and so on.
But we were convinced these universal values should be institutionalised in the hearts and minds of the people of Afghanistan. Taliban were bad, their values were bad, their approaches were bad.
17 years later, the Taliban are the new heroes. The Taliban are seen as the only way to peace in Afghanistan. The US is ready to compromise on everything that was brought to Afghanistan by its intervention. The peace negotiations are happening behind closed doors and that scares me.
Peace without a general consensus will not last long. The people of Afghanistan need to know what is going on behind the closed doors in Doha, we need to know what game is being played at the cost of our lives and faith, and our concerns should be taken into account.
(The author Nargis Azaryun, a student of political science at American University of Afghanistan. She was one of the three young women behind the documentary film Kabul Cards which was screened at the Mumbai Film Festival in 2012. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)