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Hunger
and anger in In the following article written
before the December review by the THE Obama administration has
announced the imminent release of a December Review which will evaluate
the In 'Do you think we like to live
this way?' an Afghan man asked me, last October, as he led us toward
a primitive tent encampment on the outskirts of Standing next to him was a
man who quietly handed me three crumpled photos, never lifting his eyes
from the ground. The spokesperson identified the man as his cousin.
The first picture showed his cousin's ruined home. A Inside one of the tents, a young mother welcomed me to sit down on the only available cushion. It appeared that they slept on the ground. The families share one pot over a fire pit, and a few utensils. They also have access to a water pump. Near their area is a tent where they join for prayers, and also one that is used for classes. One man begged us to tell the authorities that they have no medicines in the camp and that many of the children are ill. Anger Days earlier, in a far more
comfortable setting, students at the I felt embarrassed not to know
what he was talking about. Several weeks later, I read a New York Times
article about a trial taking place at an army base in Although the US military forbids
soldiers to mutilate corpses and go on killing sprees that target civilians,
the US occupying forces in Afghanistan have bragged, in recent weeks,
about increased capacities to kill with ever more invulnerable weapons.
A company of 16 Abrams tanks was recently delivered to The Pentagon is also sending
12,500 XM25 Individual Air Burst Weapons to 'Nowhere to Turn' In a report to the November NATO conference held in Lisbon, 29 aid groups working in Afghanistan warned that the increases in air attacks, the use of night raids, and the destruction of civilian property contribute to 'rapidly deteriorating' security for most Afghans and a rise in civilian casualties. People who flee from US attacks face food insecurity, loss of income, lack of health care, and homelessness. The aid groups' report is entitled 'Nowhere to Turn'. Increasingly, Afghans living in war zones have nowhere to hide. Commenting on impoverishment and displacement caused by military offensives, a Pakistani op-ed recently compared hunger and anger to two live wires. When the wires touch, they create an incandescent and uncontrollable flash. It's hard to imagine the extent of explosive popular rage that would result if the shoe were on the other foot, if US people were subject to aerial bombing, night raids, destruction of civilian homes, displacement and starvation. In reality, the live wires of hunger and anger could exist in our lives too; we could be angry, very angry, about this war, angry enough to make it a political issue. But if our hunger were for an end to the war, if our hunger even signalled a desire to rethink and repent our murderous policies, if we honestly sought forgiveness from Afghan civilians who've borne the brunt of our war of choice, then perhaps an uncontrollable and incandescent flash of fairness and peace could govern our future. Kathy Kelly (Kathy@vcnv.org)
cocoordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org). From 11
December-2 January, she will be part of a Voices delegation in *Third World Resurgence No. 244, December 2010, pp 31-32 |
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