Lord Dholakia Speaks on Afghanistan
in the House
of Lords
Dr Mozammel Haque
Lord Dholakia, Liberal Democrat Member of the House of Lords participated in the Emergency debate on Afghanistan in the House of Lords on 18 August 2021. Lord Dholakia said, “My Lords, it is a delight to follow the noble Baroness, Lady Amos.
Lord Dholakia mentioned, “In a fully functioning democracy, we would
have expected the Government to inform us about the constantly changing
situation in Afghanistan; until today, it has not been possible. The Foreign
Secretary has almost remained muted for a long time, and it is our high-calibre
journalists and newspapers that have been at the forefront of updating us about
what precisely is going on in a country where we have substantially invested in
promoting democracy and democratic values and human rights.”
Lord Dholakia said, “We talk about over 450 British lives lost; we will
have to add to this the large number of casualties we have now lost in civilian
lives. What a heavy price we have paid. I was once told by a prominent Army
general that you never get involved in a conflict unless you have a clear exit
strategy. In Afghanistan, we seem to have lost this particular point.”
Lord Dholakia also mentioned, “I have also had the privilege to meet a
number of Afghani delegates at inter-parliamentary conferences abroad. One
point that they often raised was about Britain’s idea about promoting democracy
in a predominantly tribal society. It is time that we think about how our work
can be advanced and how democratic values should be promoted where religion and
tribal rules and loyalty play an important part. After 20 years, we seem not to
have much of an idea on this particular point.”
Lord Dholakia also said, “There is no dispute that those who wish to
leave Afghanistan should be assisted, but what lessons have we learned, given
that, with a trained Afghani army of over 300,000, the Taliban was successful
in taking over Kabul without any resistance? The present crisis points to
failures at various levels. Did we ever work out the policy implication of the
Taliban takeover? How effective was our intelligence service? The
capacity-building work will now be negated. What is likely to replace this
under the new regime? The allegations of corruption were rife against the previous
Administration. The extent of opium production has remained high all these
years. There is still no news about the involvement of al-Qaeda and ISIS in the
present events.”
Lord Dholakia
concluded, “My final point is about the Afghani people wishing to leave their
homeland. I once had an interesting meeting with Lord Carr of Hadley, who dealt
with this type of crisis as Home Secretary. He told me that it took less than
five minutes for the Cabinet to take a decision that admitted 29,000 Ugandan
Asians to this country. We should look at the initiative that the Government
took at that time, which is today proved by the remarkable contribution of this
community in Britain. The same can happen with refugees from Afghanistan.”
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