The People's Peace Movement [1] or Helmand Peace Convoy [2] is a nonviolent resistance grassroots group in Afghanistan, created in March 2018 after a suicide car bomb attack on 19 March in Lashkargah, Helmand Province. [3] [2] [4] The PPM calls for the military forces of both the government of Afghanistan and the Taliban to implement a ceasefire and advance the Afghan peace process. [3] The group marched across Afghanistan to Kabul, where it met leaders of both parties and conducted sit-ins in front of diplomatic posts, [5] before continuing its march to Balkh and Mazar-i-Sharif, arriving in September 2018. [6]
Nonviolent resistance movements in Afghanistan include Khudai Khidmatgar in the 1930s, and in the 2010s, the Tabassum movement in 2015, the Enlightenment Movement during 2016–2017 and Uprising for Change in 2017. [7] People's Peace Movement is named as unprecedented nonviolent movement in recent Afghan history by International Center on Nonviolent Conflict. [8]
The People's Peace Movement was created in Helmand Province after a car bomb suicide attack in Lashkargah killed 17 civilians on 19 March 2018. [3] [2] [4] [9] Activists held a protest in Lashkargah against the killings, calling for peace, not revenge, and were joined by parents of the victims. The activists planned a march to spread their message, to which the Taliban objected. On 29 March, the activists stated that they would start a hunger strike until the government and Taliban forces declared a ceasefire of at least two days. [4] Other sit-ins took place around Afghanistan to support the Lashkargah protestors. [3]
A month later, eight of them started a march towards Kabul, walking through local villages and talking to the residents. In June 2018, they marched from Maidan Wardak Province to Ghazni, reaching a total of 65 participants. The marchers regularly stopped at mosques to hold talks with locals, who typically provided food for the marchers. [5] The size of the group grew to 100, arrived in Kabul on 18 June, and presented demands for a peace process to the government and to the Taliban. The marchers met with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani personally. They held sit-ins in front of diplomatic offices and embassies in protest at the government's and Taliban's refusal to declare a ceasefire. The march then continued to Balkh and Mazar-i-Sharif, arriving in September. [2] [6]
During 2018 and 2019, one of PPM's main leaders were Iqbal Khyber [4] [5] [2] (or Khaibar). [10] Qais Hashemi, a Pashto poet promoted the main narrative along with Sharif Alizai [11] [12] who used the influence of media and other civil society networks to grow awareness and garner support for the movement. Many other individuals also contributed to the move.
Women participated in the marches during the daytime, returning home in the evenings, "due to traditional sensitivities around spending nights on the roads". [10]
During the late March 2018 phase of initial protests, Qais Hashimi of the PPM described both the Afghan government and the Taliban as "puppets of foreigners". [4] In March 2019, PPM activists, including Khyber, stated that regional and global powers, including the United States (US), Russia, Pakistan and India were opposed to the Afghan peace process, instead seeking their own benefits from the war. Mohammad Nekzad of the PPM stated that "Taliban and Afghan forces are brothers" and that high-ranked people did not have the right to create war between them. [2]
PPM uses nonviolent resistance techniques such as marches in its aims of promoting peace in Afghanistan. [3]
During 2018 and 2019, PPM activists made several more marches throughout Afghanistan, including regions controlled by the Taliban. [9] Their original 2018 march passed through six Afghan provinces. [10] In December 2019, PPM activists marched from Herat Province and entered Farah Province. [9]
In January 2021, the PPM called for the government and the Taliban to accept mediation by a neutral third party in their peace negotiations. [13]
During 2018–2019, the Taliban claimed that the PPM was funded by the Afghan government. The PPM denied the claim. [9] In 2018, Maria J. Stephan and Johnny Walsh of the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) saw the PPM as a sign of a widespread desire for peace across diverse components of Afghan society. They stated that the PPM had gained a reputation for independence from US, Afghan and Taliban military forces and from local and international political groups, as a genuine grassroots group. [3]
The Taliban kidnapped PPM members several times. The fourth incident took place during a December 2019 march. [1] Twenty-seven PPM activists were kidnapped by the Taliban while travelling by car [9] on 24 or 25 December and released on 26 December. [1] [14]
The PPM inspired other groups for peaceful protests, including a June 2018 all-female street protest in Helmand Province that "welcomed" the Taliban with flowers and demanded that an existing ceasefire be extended.
In 2019, Nancy Lindborg and Andrew Wilder of USIP argued that PPM and other grassroots peace-related activities in Afghanistan, including peace and conflict studies courses that were implemented in several Afghan universities, could "increase much-needed pressure on [Afghan] leaders to take peace more seriously." Lindborg and Wilder quoted a civil society activist who stated, "The Taliban are afraid of the people being mobilized." [15]
The economy of Afghanistan is listed as the 155th largest in the world in terms of nominal gross domestic product (GDP), and 137th largest in the world in terms of purchasing power parity (PPP). With a population of around 41 million people, Afghanistan's GDP (nominal) stands at $6.81 billion as of 2024, amounting to a GDP per capita of $200. Its annual exports exceed $1.0 billion, with agricultural, mineral and textile products accounting for 94% of total exports. The nation's total external debt is $8.0 billion as of 2024. Afghanistan’s (GDP) nominal is projected to fall to $5.79 billion & GDP per capita $142 for the financial year 2025.
The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) is an American federal institution tasked with promoting conflict resolution and prevention worldwide. It provides research, analysis, and training to individuals in diplomacy, mediation, and other peace-building measures.
Helmand, also known as Hillmand, in ancient times, as Hermand and Hethumand, is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, in the south of the country. It is the largest province by area, covering 58,584 square kilometres (20,000 sq mi) area. The province contains 18 districts, encompassing over 1,000 villages, and roughly 1,446,230 settled people. Lashkargah serves as the provincial capital. Helmand was part of the Greater Kandahar region until made into a separate province by the Afghan government in the 20th century.
Lashkargāh, historically called Bost or Boost, is a city in southwestern Afghanistan and the capital of Helmand Province. It is located in Lashkargah District, where the Arghandab River merges into the Helmand River. The city has a population of 201,546 as of 2006. Lashkargah is linked by major roads with Kandahar to the east, Zaranj on the border with Iran to the west, and Farah and Herat to the north-west. It is mostly very arid and desolate. However, farming does exist around the Helmand and Arghandab rivers. Bost Airport is located on the east bank of the Helmand River, five miles north of the junction of the Helmand and Arghandab rivers. Because of the trading hubs, it is Afghanistan's second largest city in size, after Kabul and before Kandahar.
Environmental issues in Afghanistan are monitored by the National Environmental Protection Agency (NEPA). They predate the political turmoil of the past few decades. Forests have been depleted by centuries of grazing and farming, practices which have only increased with modern population growth.
The War in Afghanistan was an armed conflict that took place from 2001 to 2021. Launched as a direct response to the September 11 attacks, the war began when an international military coalition led by the United States invaded Afghanistan, declaring Operation Enduring Freedom as part of the earlier-declared war on terror, toppling the Taliban-ruled Islamic Emirate, and establishing the Islamic Republic three years later. The Taliban and its allies were expelled from major population centers by US-led forces supporting the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance; Osama bin Laden, meanwhile, relocated to neighboring Pakistan. The conflict officially ended with the 2021 Taliban offensive, which overthrew the Islamic Republic, and re-established the Islamic Emirate. It was the longest war in the military history of the United States, surpassing the length of the Vietnam War (1955–1975) by approximately six months.
Presidential elections were held in Afghanistan on 5 April 2014, with a second round held on 14 June. Incumbent President Hamid Karzai was not eligible to run due to term limits. The registration period for presidential nominations was open from 16 September 2013 until 6 October 2013. A total of 27 candidates were confirmed to be running for office. However, on 22 October Afghanistan's Independent Election Commission disqualified 16 of the candidates, leaving only 11 in the race. By April 2014 three candidates gave up the race and decided to support some of the eight remaining candidates. Opinion polls showed Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani as the front-runners and indeed the results of the first round of the election had Abdullah in the lead and Ghani behind him. The second set of results came after the run-off on 14 June, two months after the first round. Preliminary results were expected on 2 July and the final result on 22 July. However, widespread accusations of fraud delayed these results. As a result, John Kerry, then United States Secretary of State, mediated the negotiations between the two final candidates, Ghani and Abdullah. After a series of negotiations and talks between Ghani, Abdullah and Kerry, the two candidates agreed to sign an Agreement to form a National Unity Government based on 50–50 power sharing. As a result of that political agreement, a separate position was created for Abdullah as Chief Executive. The National Unity Government's term ran out after the next Afghan presidential election was held in September 2019.
Peace processes have taken place during several phases of the Afghanistan conflict, which has lasted since the 1978 Saur Revolution.
Events in the year 2020 in Afghanistan.
The COVID-19 pandemic in Afghanistan was part of the worldwide pandemic of COVID-19, caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The virus was confirmed to have spread to Afghanistan when its index case, in Herat, was confirmed on 24 February 2020.
Babaji, is a rural suburb of Lashkargah, the capital of the southern province of Helmand in Afghanistan. It is in the Lashkargah District. Babaji is dominated by the Barakzai tribe.
The Fort of Bost, locally referred to as Qala-e-Bost, is a fortification near Lashkargah in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan, which is believed by some to have been built approximately 3,000 years ago. It has been visited by many locals and foreign tourists throughout history. The archaeological site covers an area of around 10 kilometers.
The Tabassum movement was a grassroots protest movement in Afghanistan that held several protests in Kabul and other Afghan cities in mid-November 2015, following the execution by an armed opposition group of nine-year-old Shukria Tabassum and six other Hazaras around 9 November 2015. The protests were ethnically diverse, had strong participation and leadership by women, and the organisational structure avoided concentration of leadership.
The Enlightenment Movement or Junbesh-e Roshnayi is a grassroots civil disobedience movement of Hazaras created in 2016 in Afghanistan in response to the Afghan government's change in routing plans for proposed international electricity networking, which was perceived as continuing historical anti-Hazara discrimination. The group organised major protests in Afghanistan and internationally during 2016 and 2017, protesting against discrimination. The group's youthful leadership challenged traditional Hazara leaders for representativity of the community.
Uprising for Change is an Afghan civil disobedience movement that started with tent sit-ins in central Kabul in June 2017 in response to the 31 May 2017 Kabul bombing, the killing of protesters by Afghan security forces on 2 June, the 3 June suicide bombings at a funeral of one of the 2 June victims, and subsequent police violence. On 11 June 2017, the commander of the Kabul Garrison, Ahmadzai, and Kabul police chief Hassan Shah Frogh were suspended from duty following the protests. In March 2018, Uprising for Change called for the Afghan government to be replaced by a six-month interim government.
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The Battle of Lashkargah was fought between the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and the Taliban for control of the city of Lashkargah. The United States supported Afghan forces with airstrikes. The fighting started in late July 2021, and clashes occurred around the governor's residence, NDS headquarters, police headquarters, and prison. The police headquarters was captured by the Taliban on 12 August 2021, and the last government forces evacuated or surrendered in the night from 12 to 13 August 2021. More than 40 civilians were also killed in the fortnight-long fighting.
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