Baroness Amos on Afghanistan
in the House
of Lords
Dr Mozammel Haque
Baroness Amos (Lab)
Baroness Valerie Amos, Labour Member of the House of Lords participated
in the Emergency debate on Afghanistan on 18 August 2021 in the House of Lords.
She said, “My Lords, it is eight years since I visited Afghanistan, and the
appalling scenes from Kabul, the heart-breaking testimony of women and girls,
the despair of aid workers and the questioning of the value of our interaction
and presence by so many of our Armed Forces brought back to me forcefully the
anger and frustration of dealing with conflict situations, particularly where
the rhetoric of the international community does not match the reality.”
Baroness Amos mentioned, “Many of the things that struck me about
Afghanistan all those years ago are still relevant today. The first is the
complexity of the country—its urban and rural regional differences. Some areas
outside Kabul were actually peaceful. The complexity is reflected in its
history and the different interests of the UN Security Council members and
neighbouring countries, such as Pakistan.”
“The Taliban set the rules in vast swathes of Afghanistan, controlling
education, access to information, healthcare, economic activity”
and so on, which impact the lives of millions of Afghans. Had we done
our homework, we would not have been surprised at the speed of their recent
success. It underlines that we use the language of global Britain to mask a
failure of comprehensive policy analysis to inform strategic decision-making. I
ask the Minister: when the Prime Minister speaks to other G7 leaders and
engages with the Security Council, what will change in our approach?”
Baroness Amos continued, “Secondly, in terms of the need for dialogue,
the Taliban are not a monolithic organisation. We saw the way that local staff
working for civil society organisations, for example, negotiated locally for
access and service provision. We need to create the possibility that the
extreme voices do not flourish. Track two diplomacy is a real thing, used in
every conflict; it is a nonsense to pretend otherwise.”
Baroness Amos asked, “ Can the Minister say what plans we have in that
regard? Can he also say whether we will support a resolution to protect women
and girls—indeed, whether we will initiate such a resolution—at the Security
Council? How do we intend to support UN and other agencies working in
Afghanistan and neighbouring countries as they respond to the unfolding crisis?
Will the Government rethink their decisions on the aid budget?”
She concluded, “I
have watched every time that we have let people down. I ran out of things to
say; I ran out of excuses to make. Let us not do it again.”
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