Afghan ethnic groups at Taliban’s mercy
A state of
fear and anticipation is being experienced by the ethnic minorities and
components of Afghan society after the Taliban took control of the country, as
those minorities suffered scourges during the movement’s first mandate, when
they came to power in 1996 until they were removed by the international
coalition forces in 2001.
These fears
were reinforced by the fact that the movement, according to Amnesty
International, tortured and killed a number of ethnic minorities after the
recent invasion of their villages, especially in the village of Mundarakht in
Ghazni province, where six Hazara people were killed, while three were tortured
to death, which confirms that the Afghan people are facing difficult days and
that the Taliban has not learned from its previous failure.
Afghans fear
a return to the Taliban rule of the late 1990s, when the movement largely
forced women to stay in their homes, banned television and music, cut off the
hands of suspected thieves, and carried out public executions.
Afghan
society, with its various sects and ethnic components, also fears that the
Taliban will focus on its ethnic Pashtuns as the most numerous in forming the
government and gaining various privileges, ignoring the rest of the ethnic,
national, religious and sectarian minorities in Afghanistan, including the
Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, Baluchis and others.
Despite the
Taliban’s control of the country and the departure of the American forces, the
matter will not settle for the movement as long as it ignores the national and
sectarian pluralism, as the policy of exclusion will lead the country to
unrest, conflicts and countless internal and external wars, as if this country
was destined to always be an arena for settling accounts and open disputes
regionally and internationally, just as happened during the Taliban’s first
emirate.
It is
noteworthy that last year, Afghanistan ranked fourth as the most dangerous
country in the world in the Peoples Under Threat index prepared by Minority
Rights Group International, which stated that all ethnic groups in the country
are at risk of systematic violent persecution and mass killing.
Most
prominent components of Afghan society
Pashtuns: They are the largest ethnic group
in Afghanistan and make up more than 42% of the population, to which the
Taliban belong. This predominantly Sunni and Pashto-speaking group has
dominated Afghan political institutions since the eighteenth century, and over
the years many Pashtun leaders have stressed their right to rule Afghanistan,
which has angered other ethnic groups, particularly in the south and east of
the country, due to their political, economic and cultural marginalization.
Tajiks: They are the second largest ethnic
group in the country and make up more than a quarter of the population. The
main language used by the Tajiks is a branch of the Persian language called
Dari, which is also a lingua franca in Afghanistan. The group is distributed
mainly in the north and west of the country and has strongholds in the Panjshir
Valley, Herat city and some northern provinces.
The Panjshir
Valley is famous for its resistance not only to the Soviet occupation in the
1980s, but also against the former Taliban regime, which it still fiercely
resists. The area was recently resorted to by former Afghan Vice President
Amrullah Saleh, accompanied by Ahmad Masoud, the son of Ahmad Shah Massoud,
known as the Lion of Panjshir. They called on the Afghans to rise up and resist
the Taliban in case the negotiations fail. Massoud hopes that negotiations will
provide for “the adoption of decentralization of governance to achieve a system
that guarantees social justice, equality, rights and freedom for all.”
Hazara: This community constitutes 10% of
the population of Afghanistan and is concentrated in the center of the country.
They speak Dari, and the majority of them are Shiite Muslims. This group has
faced violent persecution and discrimination on the basis of religion and
ethnicity for more than a century, and massacres have been carried out under
various Afghan governments in recent decades, especially under the rule of the
Taliban, who are extremist Sunni Muslims who have branded Shiites as infidels.
Afghan
Uzbeks: They make up
10% of the population and are concentrated mainly in the north of the country
near the border with Uzbekistan. They are among the Turkic-speaking peoples,
most of whom are Sunni Muslims.
It is
noteworthy that Afghanistan includes 12 other ethnic groups, including the
Bedouin Aimaq, the Turkmen and the Baluch, as well as the Nuristani people in
northeastern Afghanistan.