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| For Aisha Khurram, reaching out to all young Afghans -- including those joining the ranks of the Taliban insurgency -- is critical (AFP Photo/WAKIL KOHSAR) |
Afghanistan's ruling elite and international power brokers must listen to the fast-growing youth population -- including junior Taliban members -- if the war is ever to end, the country's new youth delegate to the United Nations says.
In a nation
at war for 40 years and where two-thirds of the population is aged 24 or under,
twenty-year-old Aisha Khurram says the younger generation's concerns have been
shunted aside even as they inherit the conflict.
"For
decades and even centuries, our fears and future have always been decided by
the warring parties, irrespective of our perspective, irrespective of our
opinions and our part in the process," Khurram told AFP in the UN's Kabul
compound.
The
international relations student at Kabul University was picked from 100
candidates for her high-profile role in early October, at the end of a tough
selection process.
For
Khurram, reaching out to all young Afghans -- including those joining the ranks
of the Taliban insurgency -- is critical.
"Before
they join the militant groups... we have to make the opportunities for
them," she said.
"We
have to hear their voices, we have to consider their right for education, their
right for work opportunities and their right for life," she added.
"My
own peer groups... do not enjoy the access to education, do not enjoy the
opportunities that we have right now in Afghanistan."
Afghanistan's
mainstream media -- concentrated in Kabul -- only reflect the views of urban
Afghans she said, effectively blacking out opinions of vast swathes of the
country, especially young people.
"It's
not inclusive", she said.
She offered
the #MyRedLine social media movement as an example in which young Afghans --
mostly educated -- state the "red line" they are not prepared to see Afghanistan
cross in any eventual peace deal with the Taliban.
The
campaign is "ignoring the needs and demands of the Afghan youth that are
living outside of the Kabul (region)," she said, noting their urgent need
for security trumps many "secondary" rights.
Global
youth
Khurram,
who was born in Pakistan after her family fled violence in Afghanistan, came of
age at a time when the gruelling conflict is worsening.
According
to the UN, the period of July to September this year was the deadliest on record
for civilians, with more than 2,500 killed.
With half
of the world's population now aged under 25, the UN is trying to amplify young
voices at major summits through a youth delegation programme.
Countries
can select representatives to advocate on several priority areas including the
environment, juvenile justice and employment. But for Khurram, the key issue is
peace.
She first
went to Afghanistan in 2004, three years after the US-led invasion to topple
the Taliban and hunt for Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
In recent
years the security situation has only deteriorated, and the US spent the past
year pushing for a deal with the Taliban that would have seen the Pentagon pull
thousands of troops from Afghanistan in return for security guarantees.
But
President Donald Trump nixed talks last month as Taliban attacks continued.
Khurram
said many Afghans were suspicious of the negotiations, which cut out the
government of President Ashraf Ghani, who is currently seeking election for a
second term.
"There
are three parties in the conflict, and only two of them now are engaged in
negotiations," she said. "Afghan people deserve to be a part of this
process."
Afghans
under 18 make up around half the estimated population of 37 million, but
Afghanistan's political class does not reflect the country's youth.
A grizzled
crew of old-school warlords and bickering elders still dominate the political
scene, focused on consolidating power instead of strengthening national
governance.
Khurram
said she is helping to organise a "youth jirga" -- a meeting in which
young people from all over the country can come together and brainstorm ways to
influence any peace process.

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