Q+A: Brodie Kane interviews Dr Najibullah Lafraie
Sunday 26 August, 2012
Q+A: Brodie Kane
interviews Dr Najibullah Lafraie
Former
Afghan minister warns of increased risk for New Zealand
soldiers in Bamiyan.
“It seems the Taliban have
found a way to penetrate into Bamiyan, so that there’s
more danger and more risk to the lives of Kiwi soldiers.”
New Zealand’s PRT has helped local
infrastructure, but “because Bamiyan, being an isolated
place and the level of activity going on there, the impact
on the overall situation is almost negligible.”
Even before today’s reported threats by Taliban
leaders, Lafraie said: “They see all the foreign troops as
invaders and take action wherever and whenever they can.”
Fears “civil war” after the NATO withdrawals,
only worse than the 1990s as regional and global powers use
Afghanistan as a pawn.
“…so that means
another very, very dark and tragic page in Afghan
history.”
Taliban are ready for peace talks;
some settlement is essential.
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Q + A – August 26, 2012
DR NAJIBULLAH LAFRAIE
Five
New Zealand soldiers have died in Bamiyan this month – a
province once regarded as peaceful. Dr Najibullah Lafraie,
now a lecturer at Otago University, was a minister in the
Afghan government before the Taliban took over in 1996. He
believes New Zealand troops are not being directly targeted,
but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen again.
“It seems the Taliban have found a way to penetrate
into Bamiyan, so that there’s more danger and more risk to
the lives of Kiwi Soldiers. I don’t think that it’s
specifically about Bamiyan or specifically against New
Zealand troops. They see all the foreign troops as invaders
and take action wherever and whenever they can.”
Dr Lafraie says people have misconceptions about the
Taliban and claims they will be watching the reaction of our
Government following the deaths of Corporal Luke Tamatea,
Lance Corporal Jacinda Baker, Private Richard Harris and
Lance Corporal Pralli Durrer and Rory Malone.
“We think that the Taliban are just a bunch of
traditional, uneducated youth and they don’t know anything
about what’s going on in the world, but that is not the
case. The sophistication is there and they are following the
news, and certainly they take note of what’s going on and
what the politicians say.”
New Zealand’s
Provincial Reconstruction Team has been in Bamiyan since
2003. Dr Lafraie says while the work they’ve done in the
region has helped locals, they won’t come home with a
legacy of helping Afghanistan.
“Unfortunately,
that is the case, because Bamiyan, being an isolated place
and the level of activity going on there, the impact on the
overall situation is almost negligible.”
So
what happens after the Kiwi and other NATO troops leave? Dr
Lafraie says peace talks are essential.
“I
believe Taliban are ready for some kind of peace, peaceful
settlement of the problem, and they know that they cannot
bring the country under control through war, so this is why
I think they would opt for peace if there is sincere
intention for the withdrawal of all troops.”
Without such negotiations, Afghanistan’s future is
bleak.
“Then what happens is we have a repeat
of 1990s with much worse consequences. Now it’s not only
the neighbours, but other players involved, so Afghanistan
would become a battleground for regional and world forces.
Of course, they’d use Afghan allies and again it’d be
called civil war, but actually it would be a battle game
among the world powers, so that means another very very dark
and tragic page in Afghan history.”
ENDS