Title: Early Afghanistan History
1Afghanistan
Beth Akerlund, Alex Lanzel, Ryan Selvik, Jamin
Brunette
2Geography
- Located in center of Asia
- Enclosed by land
- Mostly rugged mountains
- -Hindu Kush
- Plains in north and southwest
- Large areas of sandy desert near the southern
border with Pakistan.
3Hindu Kush Mountains
Kabul Capital City
Northwestern Afghanistan
Afghanistan-Pakistan Border
4Islam
- Rules for daily life
- Dos and donts
- Gender roles
- Dress
- Interaction
- Sunni vs. Shiite
- fight for right
- Disagreements fuel disharmony
5Early Afghanistan History
- Afghanistan was made up little tribes, but these
tribes united to fight off Alexander the Great in
327 BC. - Then in 642 AD, the Islamic Empire swept in and
took control of western Afghanistan, converting
much of the population to Islam.
6Pre Russian Invasion History
- Then in 1826, British and Russian forces fought
each other, in Afghanistan. The citizens of
Afghanistan fought against the British troops
three times, and on August 19, 1919, defeated the
British for the last time, and British troops
left the country. - From there, political unrest dictated Afghanistan
life, with several powers coming and going until
1979.
7Russian Invasion
- Then the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to set
up a pro-Moscow government. - For the next 9 years, a civil war broke out with
different tribes of Afghanistan against and with
the Soviet forces. - The Soviets pulled out in 1989, but they left a
pro-Moscow government who fell with the Soviet
Union in 1992. - Over 1 million Afghans were killed. 5 million
Afghans fled to Pakistan and Iran. - Another 2 million Afghans were displaced within
the country.
- In the 1980s, one out of two refugees in the
world was an Afghan - Vital parts of the Afghan economy were destroyed
including Irrigations systems to provide water
for farming
8Post Russian Invasion
- In the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet
Government, there were several attempts to create
a collation of Afghanis to run their country.
They all failed until a group of Pashtuns (which
is a linage of people located in Southern
Afghanistan and Pakistan and Iran), united one
final time and formed the Taliban government in
Afghanistan. - The Taliban preached an extreme
- following of Islam, and when they took over
- Afghanistan, they put their beliefs into action.
- Their leader is Mullah Mohammed Omar.
- With the support of Pakistan, the Taliban
- Ruled until 2001.
9United States Invasion
- The Talibans primary opposition was called the
Northern Alliance, and by 2001, the Northern
Alliance had been pushed back to only 10 of
Afghanistan to the north. - Then, as we all know, the events of September
11th, 2001. - The United States knew that Osama Bin Laden was
in Afghanistan, and that we were going to go in
there and get him.
- In October of 2001, the United States invaded,
and in a short time, by December of 2001, swept
through and took control of the major cities and
pushed the Taliban and Al Qaeda to the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, and we helped to
establish a new government that is in place
today.
10Current Government
- Islamic Republic
- 3 branch system executive, judicial,
legislative - President Hamid Karzai elected 2004
- Target of assassination attempt in September 2002
- Karzais one mission is to bring peace to
Afghanistan
11Government Corruption
- Corruption very high
- 1,5 176/180 CPI
- Drug related (Opium) issues
- are dominant
- History of unqualified appointees
- Poor judiciary legal enforcement systems
- Karzai other government officials accused of
using connections for profit, including his
brother - Foreigners have defamed Afghanistan so badly in
terms of corruption. But it's not as serious as
they think
12Even More Corruption
- corruption and inefficiency in Afghanistan were
as much to blame as the Taliban insurgency for
the country's instability - ½ said corruption had increased among officials
and the police in Afghanistan - anti-corruption department,
- and a more open government
13Economy of Afghanistan
- Recovering from decades of conflict
- Has improved since the fall of the Taliban in
2001 - Highly dependent on foreign aid
- Instability inhibits economic growth
14Economic Long-Term Challenges
-
- - budget sustainability
- job creation
- corruption
- rebuilding war-torn infrastructure
15Afghanistan- Economic Indicators
- GDP 35 billion (2007)
- GDP Real Growth Rate 7.5
- GDP per capita 1,000 (2007)
- Ranks 157th in the World
- Inflation Rate 13
- Unemployment Rate 40 (2005)
- Labor Force, approximately 15 million
- Agriculture 80, Industry 10, Services 10
16Imports and Exports
- Imports
- Capital goods, food, textiles, petroleum products
- Exports
- Opium, fruits, nuts, hand-woven carpets, wool,
cotton, precious gems -
17Agriculture
- Lifeblood of Afghan economy
- 38 of GDP, non-opium agriculture
- 12 of land is arable and only half that is
cultivated - Accounts for 80 of workforce
- Not self-sufficient in agriculture and must rely
on food aid to meet domestic needs - Increasing agricultural production has been a
focus of development efforts in Afghanistan
18Opium Production
- Greatest illicit opium producer in the world
- In 2007, 93 of the opiates on the world market
originated in Afghanistan (export value of 4
billion) - High rate of return on investment from opium
poppy cultivation has driven an agricultural
shift in Afghanistan from growing traditional
crops to growing opium poppy. - Shortage of food and other crop production
(wheat, fruit, nuts, etc) - Opium
19Natural Resources
- Unexploited mining territory
- Geological surveys are incomplete, additional
energy and mineral deposits likely to be found - As economic conditions improve, Afghanistan will
be in a better position to attract investment - World Bank estimates value of mineral production
could be 253 million, compared to 60 million
currently
May be a key to long-term economic
development! Produces natural gas, copper,
iron Has deposits of marble, salt, gold, and
silver
20Trade and Investment
- Important and growing component in economy
- Trade deficit
- Increased in recent years as more development aid
and equipment have entered country - Inflow of foreign aid is large enough to wipe out
current deficit, help to keep monetary conditions
stable
21The People
- Population 33,609,937 people
- Age Breakdown
- 0-14 years 44.5 (male 7,664,670/female
7,300,446) 15-64 years 53 (male
9,147,846/female 8,679,800) 65 years and over
2.4 (male 394,572/female 422,603) - Life Expectancy total population 44.64 years
male 44.47 years female 44.81 years - Median Age 17.6 years.
- Pop. Growth Rate 2.629
- Birth Rate 45.82 births/1,000 population
- Death Rate 19.56 deaths/1,000 population
- Sex Ratio total population 1.05 male(s)/female
22Health
- WHO Afghanistan's health status is one of the
worst in the world - HIV/AIDS Percentage 0.01
- This number is expected to rise as the number of
drug users goes up. (ie heroin, opium) - Major Diseases bacterial and protozoal diarrhea,
hepatitis A, and typhoid fever, malaria, rabies - Health Sector is dismal at best. Lacks
- infrastructure, competent workers, supplies,
open channels of communication, terrible
information systems. - Health related expenses amount to .5 of GDP
- 1 doctor/6000 patients
- 1 nurse/2500 patients
23Improving the Healthcare System
- Update/improve information systems
- Restore/update facilities
- Extend care to rural areas
- Drug availability
- Hire more trained workers
- Boost efficiency of response time to natural
disasters.
24Why?
- 39 of children under age five are underweight
- 48 of children under age five are under height
- 61 of the population is without sustainable
access to an improved water source - Access to safe water 23
- Access to adequate sanitation 12
- In 2001 8 of popn had access to basic
healthcare. - Most used alternative healthcare ie. Midwives
25Rahera Malnutrition
- 7 y/o
- Eats breakfast 7AM every morning.
- 1 loaf of bread lasts her, her two brothers and
her parents 3 days. - 10 AM, gets 12 small biscuits from school. Eats
6, brings home the rest to family. - Lunchtime, goes home and has bread with some oil.
- 9PM, eats bread with a little yogurt for dinner.
26Child Labor
- 50 of pop is under 18.
- UNICEF says 30 of primary school aged children
are working. - 21 of child laborers work in shops
- 13 work as street vendors
- Poverty is the driving force.
- Parents cant pay for schooling
- Opportunity cost of schooling is high.
27Education
- Two Types
- Religious Schooling
- Secular Schooling (introduced in 1964)
- Post-Taliban, resurgence in education
- Schools are in a disarray though.
- funding is limited and unstable
- Security of Schools is a problem.
- Taliban destroy secular schools.
- Illiteracy 56 men, 87 women
- Hinderance in workforce
28Security Overall Well-Being
- As of today, Afghanistan is still a LDC
- Security against Taliban is shakey
- US troop deployment
- Taliban are numerous attack the few govt
services available - Their goal is to demoralize the country
international community. - 2100 Afghanis dead from insurgent attacks.
29Afghanistan An Evaluation
- As of 2006, Afghanis are feeling hopeless
- Surveyed 1000 citizens from 13 provinces and
balanced the different ethnic groups. - Surveyed on Pillars of Reconstruction
- Security
- Governance
- Justice
- Economic Opportunity
- Social Well-Being
30Security
31Governance
32Justice
33Economic Opportunity
34Social Well-Being
35Family
- Governed by Islam
- Single most important unit, sacred protected
- Marriages usually arranged divorce initiated by
men only - Polygamy for men
- Inheritance
36Honor
- Honor Shame
- Worth reputation of an individual/family
- Work hard to protect honor (avoid shame)
- If honor is compromised, Afghan people will
retaliate work to get revenge/honor back - Fueled much of the
- disharmony of the country
- Honor killings
37Tribes
- Pashtuns
- Largest, roughly half of the population
- Have most power
- Split amongst themselves, rivalry
- Sunni Muslims
- Uzbeks
- Most populous Turkic group
- Sunni Muslims
- Turkmen Kirghiz
- Nomadic tribal
- Sunni Muslims
38Tribes
- Tajiks
- Second largest group
- Make up educated elite
- Rival Pashtuns for power
- Sunni Muslims
- Hazaras
- Discrimination
- Shiite Muslims
- Many other small tribes
- Nuristanis, Aimaqs, Baluchis, Hindus,
- Sikhs
39Prior To the Taliban
- Women were educated employed.
- 50 of students
- 70 of teachers
- 50 government workers
- 40 of doctors
40Women Today
- Although the new constitution guarantees equal
rights an opportunities for both men and
womenthat is not always the case. - Health care
- Child birth
- highest maternal death rate
- in the world
- Male doctors
- Men boys take precedence
- in the few emergency rooms
- that exist (very few hospitals after Taliban
rule) - Unequal opportunities jobs, divorce, custody
41Womens Problems
- Taliban Insurgencies harsh policies for women
- Afghanistans Human Rights Commission
- 1,500 atrocities against women (2008)
- 1/3 domestic violence cases
- 200 forcibly married
- 98 set themselves on fire
- 100 tried to commit suicide
- by taking poisen
- Increasing number of women
- taking drugs
- Judgments against women (Jirgas)
- New Rape Law against Shiite women
42Hope
- Rights of women enshrined in the new Constitution
- Women can participate in every walk of life
- 91 of 361 members of Parliament are women
- It is becoming ok to talk about forced marriages,
rapes, honor killings, etc. - Human rights groups are starting to document and
publicize atrocities - Groups campaigns fighting
- for Muslim womens rights
- Polygamy, inheritance, custody,
- consent to marry
- International attention
- Rape Law to be amended
- Rights groups around the world
43Afghanistan Policy Suggestions
-Improve Health Sector -Improve
Education -Stabilize economy -Rebuild
infrastructure -Strengthen centralized
government and reduce corruption -Promote gender
equality and empower women -Create national
unity -Improve national security
44Questions?
45References
- http//www.afghan-network.net/Culture/
- http//afghanistan.saarctourism.org/culture.html
- http//www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/global-e
tiquette/afghanistan.html - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taliban
- http//www.norway.org.af/development/anticorruptio
n/ - http//transparency.org/news_room/in_focus/2008/cp
i2008/cpi_2008_table - https//www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world
-factbook/geos/af.html - http//www.rawa.org/wom-view.htm
- http//feminist.org/afghan/facts.html
- http//www.policyinnovations.org/ideas/briefings/d
ata/afghan_child_labor - http//www.usip.org/pubs/usipeace_briefings/2007/0
504_health_afghanistan.html - http//www.voanews.com/specialenglish/archive/2002
-09/a-2002-09-06-2-1.cfm?moddate2002-09-06 - http//www.who.int/hac/donorinfo/afg/en/index1.htm
l - http//www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900sid/TKAE-
6V44GJ?OpenDocument