For Haji Abdullah, doing business in Kandahar Province, southern Afghanistan, is impossible without bribing insurgent commanders who often approach him for cash, telephone top-up cards, clothes or motorcycles.
“If I don’t comply with their demands they can easily make a lot of trouble for me, or even kill me,” the 52-year-old businessman told IRIN, asking that his real name not be disclosed.
The Taliban have established a "shadow government" in parts of Afghanistan and are seeking to extend their influence and control, according to US defence sources, and the UN has acknowledged that the influence of the insurgents is beginning to affect development activities, too.
said in a report to the Security Council in December 2009.
Laurent Sailard, director of ACBAR, a consortium of over 100 Afghan and foreign NGOs, said aid workers must not make payments to insurgents for security, access or safe passage.
“Buying a passage for humanitarian convoys or access is a bad strategy with long-term negative impacts. Demands could increase, and if not satisfied could lead to increasing threats. It is a never-ending process that always leads to the worst,” he said, adding that aid workers had to ensure access and security through acceptance among local communities and impartial dialogue with belligerent parties.
No discrimination
However, people living in areas controlled or influenced by insurgents - even if they back the insurgents - must not be discriminated against in terms of the provision of aid, aid agencies say.
Photo: Ahmad/IRIN |
Aid to pro-Taliban communities is possible but rare becuase of insecurity |
“The ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross] delivers humanitarian assistance to all those conflict-affected persons in need of it, irrespective of their affiliation,” said Bijan Frederic Farnoudi, ICRC’s communications officer in Kabul.
Aid to pro-Taliban communities or people living in areas under Taliban control is possible, but in practice few if any aid agencies are involved in this due to widespread insecurity.
The Afghanistan NGO Safety Office (ANSO), which provides security advice to NGOs, has said armed opposition groups have a presence in over 97 percent of the country and have warned that NGO staff face heightened risks in 2010.
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions