Guest
Contributor
Hamid
Karzai
His Excellency
Hamid Karzai, President of the Transitional Islamic State
of Afghanistan. [go
to Guest index]
The
Achievement in Afghanistan
The speech that mainstream media ignored...
[President Hamid Karzai] 6/21/04
Thank you
for the great honor. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members
of Congress, distinguished guests, the great people of
the United States of America, it is my distinct honor to speak
on behalf of the Afghan people in this august assembly.
I thank you and the people of this great country for your generosity
and commitment to our people. You have supported us with your
resources, with your leadership in the world community and, most
importantly, with the precious lives of your soldiers.
With your support, Afghanistan has accomplished a number of
significant achievements. We have begun to rebuild our schools.
Over 5 million children, boys and girls, attend schools across
Afghanistan. We have also commenced to develop health centers
to provide basic services to our people, especially to our women
and children, who have suffered the most during the decades of
war and turmoil. We have embarked upon the reconstruction of
our roads to encourage traders and businessmen to transport products
to markets.
We have started to reconstitute our national army, our national
institutions, national police, in order to both defend our sovereignty
and provide security to our citizens. Our national army is being
trained by American forces, American troops, and wherever we
have deployed them the Afghan people have welcomed them. We have
initiated the fight against narcotics to save our children, to
save your children and children across the world from the evil
of addiction to drugs.
The confidence of our citizens in the future of our country
is clearly signified by the return of 3 million refugees in the
past 2 years.
Once again, ladies and gentlemen, Afghanistan is the home of
all Afghans. We have today in Afghanistan our former king back
in his old home. We have today in Afghanistan the leaders of
the former resistance of Afghanistan against the Soviet Union.
We have also millions of refugees who have left Afghanistan because
of tyranny and invasion. They are all back in their country,
and more are returning.
Ladies and gentlemen, Afghanistan has emerged from a very dark
era, one of oppression and terror. We have adopted an enlightened
Constitution, establishing a democratic Islamic government. It
guarantees equal rights and equal protection for every citizen
of our country. With your support, men and women of Afghanistan
have now equal rights before the law and the Constitution. The
new Constitution replaces the Taliban-imposed gender discrimination
by assigning 25 percent of the seats in our future parliament
for women. Together we have furthered democracy by creating a
climate where 35 percent of the voters so far registered for
our election are women. And as I speak today, ladies and gentlemen,
I received a report this morning from the election commission
in the central part of the country that the registrators for
voting are more than 50 percent women, and in the rest of the
country they are more than 30 percent. As this process continues
through September, we will have at least 6 to 7 million registered,
and I am sure we will reach nearly 70 percent of them to be women.
We have secured and opened an inclusive society where minority
languages are accorded official recognition and where the press
enjoys unprecedented freedom.
We, the Afghan people, have once again established ourselves
as a proud and sovereign nation. Without your support and commitment
and without the partnership between our two nations, none of
this would have been achieved.
Ladies and gentlemen, together we have come a long way, but
our common journey is far from over. Many obstacles exist, and
numerous milestones remain to be reached before we can fully
realize our shared vision of a stable, prosperous and democratic
Afghanistan.
We have to travel further. Private militias pose a threat to
the consolidation of stability and democracy in our country.
They continue to oppress our people and challenge law, order
and government authority. The Afghan people demand and insist
on disarming and demobilizing private militias. Only with your
support and that of the international community can we achieve
this necessary goal.
We are also confronted with the evil of narcotics. Drug profits
finance private militias, terrorists and extremists. Drug profits
undermine our efforts to build a healthy and legitimate national
economy. Drugs threaten the lives and future of children, yours
and ours. We are determined to cleanse Afghanistan from this
menace.
In the economic dimension, despite our achievements over the
past 2 1/2 years, we continue to be one of the poorest countries.
We still have the second highest infant and maternal mortality
rates in the world. We have one of the highest illiteracy rates.
Very few Afghans have access to safe drinking water. While our
country has rich hydroelectric potential, oil, gas and coal reserves,
only 6 percent of the Afghans have reliable access to electricity.
While Afghanistan has great rivers, our farmers ironically suffer
from a shortage of water. Even now our vast mineral resources
such as iron ore, copper and precious stones remain undeveloped.
Our delicious fruits are not reaching major markets due to the
lack of refrigeration and proper marketing.
Ladies and gentlemen, these are significant impediments, yet
we are confident that with your continued support and commitment,
we, the Afghan
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people, will overcome them as we have triumphed over other challenges
in the past 2 years. To succeed, we ask for your continued
investment. Afghanistan is open for business and American companies
are most welcome. Together we will make Afghanistan a great
success and an enduring example of a prosperous democratic
society.
Our shared success in Afghanistan is vital to achieving victory
over the greatest menace the world faces today, terrorism and
extremism.
Long before the horrific tragedy of September 11, terrorists
subjected the people of Afghanistan to unspeakable brutality
and oppression. Even though we were among the most pious Muslims
in the world, we were the first and foremost victims of al Qaeda.
In the name of Islam, a religion of peace and tolerance, they
terrorized and killed the Muslim people of Afghanistan and deprived
us of our basic rights. These atrocities continued for many years,
and the world remained unengaged.
The tragedy of September 11 once again tied the destinies of
our two nations. You came to Afghanistan to defeat terrorism,
and we Afghans welcomed and embraced you for the liberation of
our country. Together we ended the rule of terrorism.
Ladies and gentlemen, this was not the first time America confronted
a great evil and rescued the world. Two weeks ago, on Memorial
Day, you remembered the hundreds of thousands of American soldiers
who gave their lives for defending democracy and freedom around
the world. You led the world in eliminating fascism. You stood
with the Afghan nation in our heroic fight against the former
Soviet Union. Just last week, we honored one of our great fellow
freedom fighters in that struggle, the late President Ronald
Reagan.
Today, the United States is once again leading the global effort
to defeat terrorism and extremism. Afghanistan is a central front
in the war against terrorism. The Afghan people are and will
remain with you in this struggle.
Ladies and gentlemen, in this great Chamber, in the House of
the American people, democracy and liberty thrive. Afghans are
honored to have become partners in this noble tradition. The
Afghan people will not forget your help and will always remember
and cherish your friendship. The Afghan people desire to further
build on this solid foundation of mutual trust and friendship
by creating a strong partnership between our two nations.
We must build a partnership that will consolidate our achievements
and enhance stability, prosperity, and democracy in Afghanistan
and in the region. This requires sustaining and accelerating
the reconstruction of Afghanistan through long-term commitment,
a free trade agreement between the United States and Afghanistan,
and providing incentives to the private sector for investing
in Afghanistan. We must enhance our strategic partnership. The
security of our two nations is intertwined.
In December of 2001, a U.S. bomb went astray and exploded a
few meters from where I was staying. This was the last day of
our resistance against the Taliban. This was the day that the
Bonn process announced me as the chairman. This was the day the
Taliban were to come and surrender. This was also the day that
the stray bomb came to us and killed more than 20 of my people
and also four U.S. soldiers. In the midst of all that confusion
and pain, an old man walked up to me. I did not know him. I had
not seen him before, and I have not seen him since then. He came
to me and said, ``Mr. Karzai, go to the Americans. Tell them
that in a war like this, things like that happen. Tell them not
to lose heart. Tell them that we shall continue to fight and
we must win.''
Ladies and gentlemen, upon my arrival in the United States
last week I stopped at Fort Drum, New York, to meet some of your
troops who had served in Afghanistan. Senator Clinton graciously
came to receive us. We honored two American soldiers who recently
returned from Afghanistan and who a few months ago in Kandahar
were traveling in a vehicle. Somebody, a terrorist, threw a grenade
at them. The grenade landed in their vehicle. They took the grenade.
Instead of throwing it into the street where there were people
around them, civilians, these heroic men stuck the grenade under
their seat. The grenade exploded. Fortunately, they survived.
But they were badly injured. To us, this was also an example
of heroism and care for humanity, and we are proud of these two
American soldiers. These stories tell a tale of partnership,
tell a tale of joint struggle, tell a tale of care and courage
and care for humanity.
Ladies and gentlemen, together we have a long road ahead, but
we will move forward to make the world a better place. For us
in Afghanistan, we remember you for every help that you have
given us, and we will have that in our books written in golden
letters. This road, this journey is one of success and victory.
We will continue to triumph and win the war against terrorism
and make the world a better place for us and the rest of the
world. May God bless America and Afghanistan and our two nations. CRO
ADDRESS BY
HIS EXCELLENCY HAMID KARZAI, PRESIDENT OF THE TRANSITIONAL
ISLAMIC STATE OF AFGHANISTAN -- (House of Representatives -
June 15, 2004)
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