to demonstrate against the war in Afghanistan
http://stopwar.org.uk/content/view/1379/1/
British soldier says he faces court martial for refusing to return to
Afghan war
By Feyzi Ismail
24 July 2009
On Thursday 23 July, the Stop the War Coalition held one of its most
electrifying rallies in its eight year history. The inspirational
anti-war Afghan MP Malalai Joya was joined on the platform by Lance
Corporal Joe Glenton, a serving British soldier who was speaking in
public for the first time against the horror caused by the war in Afghanistan.
Malalai Joya has been called one of the bravest women in Afghanistan.
She told the 300-strong audience that she's survived five
assassination attempts and is still not safe with personal security
guards or by wearing a burkha to cover her identity. Yet she
continues to campaign against foreign occupation and fundamentalist
warlords, and for women's rights and education. She believes all NATO
troops must leave Afghanistan immediately.
Elected to the Afghan parliament as its youngest MP in 2003, her
first speech called on the Afghan government to prosecute the
warlords and criminals also present in the assembly. But she had
barely started her speech when her microphone was cut off, angry men
were raising their fists towards her and she had to be escorted out
by a human chain of supporters and UN officials around her.
In 2005 she told the assembled parliament that it was "worse than a
zoo." Two years ago she was suspended from the parliament.
Afghans against occupation
She told the audience of the suffering of Afghans, and in particular
women, at the hands of both occupation forces and the warlords who
benefit from the occupation. If the war was ever about eradicating
opium, 93% of global opium production now comes from Afghanistan, and
£500m goes into the pockets of the Taliban every year because of the
drug trade. Afghans have lost almost everything, she said, except
that they have gained political knowledge. And they are against the occupation.
She holds little hope for the upcoming elections in August. She said
the ballot box is controlled by a mafia of warlords and criminals,
and that even if the democrats in Afghanistan could put up a
candidate, they would inevitably become puppets of the US and NATO,
or they wouldn't survive in office. NATO could not possibly provide a
solution because the troops are despised for the carnage they have
brought to the country.
As Malalai repeated a number of times in the meeting, no nation can
liberate another nation, and only the oppressed can rise up against
their oppressors. The only solution, she said, was for the anti-war
movement internationally to speak out and demonstrate against the war
in their own countries, "because our enemies are afraid of
international solidarity." It will be a prolonged and risky struggle,
she continued, but the Afghans must liberate themselves.
Soldier ashamed and disllusioned
The other highlight of the meeting was the testimony of a serving
British soldier. While Malalai fights against the war in Afghanistan,
more and more British troops - who equally risk their lives fighting
in Afghanistan - are realising the futility of this project. Lance
Corporal Joe Glenton, who fought in Kandahar in 2006, told the
audience that he came back ashamed and disillusioned. He said the
army and the politicians never explained why they were there or what
was going on, only that British troops were helping the Afghan people.
When he found that the Afghans were fighting against them, this came
as a real shock. He spoke of the discontentment in the ranks, which
he described as dangerous, and the need for Britain to withdraw its troops.
Two years ago when Glenton heard he was being posted back to
Afghanistan, he decided the only sensible thing to do was to leave
the army, even illegally, as he did not believe that Britain was
doing anything constructive in Afghanistan. He now faces up to two
years in a civilian prison. Stop the War Coalition declared it would
support Glenton and any other soldier who faced the courts on account
of being against the war.
Andrew Murray, Chair of Stop the War, opened the meeting by reminding
us that the Stop the War Coalition was founded eight years ago in
response to the threatened invasion of Afghanistan. Now that the
British government has shifted its focus to Afghanistan - discussing
the possibility of sending more troops, as the death toll rises past
that in Iraq - so the anti-war movement will step up its campaign to
mobilise public opinion to demand that all the troops are brought
home as soon as possible.
Public opinion in Britain has indeed shifted against the war in
Afghanistan. Whatever support the war had initially - for reducing
opium production, for the reconstruction taking place, for keeping
the Taliban in check, for defending women's rights and bringing
democracy - people are now cutting through the media spin. They know
this is an unwinnable war, that there is no reconstruction taking
place and that the longer we stay the more death and destruction we
cause. As Malalai put it, the war being waged by the British
government in Afghanistan not only causes untold suffering for the
Afghans, but it takes away from our humanity too.
In the event of the 200th British soldier that is killed in
Afghanistan, Stop the War will call on all its local groups across
the country to organise street protests. The current death toll
stands at 188 and is rising at an average of about one per day.
--
Stop the War will also be announcing shortly details of a major
national demonstration in November to mark the anniversary of the
Afghanistan invasion in 2001.
--
Malalai Joya's new book Raising My Voice: The Extraordinary Story of
the Afghan Woman Who Dares to Speak Out has just been published by Rider Books.
.
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