Kabul, Sep 15 (DPA) On the billboards dotting war-ravaged Kabul ahead of Saturday’s parliamentary elections, photographs of young candidates outnumber those of the elders who have traditionally dominated the country’s political scene.
Although there is no official breakdown of the candidates’ ages, election officials said more than half of the 2,556 candidates running for the 249 seats of the Wolesi Jirga, or lower house of parliament, are under 30.
Traditionally, young people, particularly women, are not allowed to express their views on important national matters in the presence of their elders.
Tribal elders have always represented the people in their areas, but many young candidates said those old practices have failed and there was a need for change.
Janan Musazai, 30, running for a Kabul constituency, said around 60 percent of the country’s population was under the age of 25 and wanted real representation in parliament.
‘As a result of 30 years of violence, there has been a rise in political and social consciousness among the young generation of Afghanistan,’ he said.
The 28-year-old candidate Shafiqullah Salim Poya concurred. ‘The young people are sick and tired of politics in this country,’ the Kabul candidate said. ‘The youths are disillusioned with their political leaders, and this is one way of saying that they don’t want to accept the status quo.’
‘By taking part in large numbers in the elections, they are showing that they want change and they want to come and participate in that change,’ he said.
Young men are not alone in vying for seats in parliament. A total of 406 female candidates – mostly young ones – are also running against a long list of influential people, including former warlords, suspected drug barons and local powerbrokers, who dominated the former parliament.
Robina Jalali, 25, a former Olympic runner, said she wanted to enter parliament to ‘stand for the rights of women and young people against lawmakers who want to deny them’.
‘I want to be a voice of young people and the sportspeople in the parliament,’ she said.
But despite their ambitions, seen by some as bringing new hope to the country’s shaky democracy, many of the candidates were quick to recognise the numerous obstacles facing them in the electoral race.
For many of the young male candidates, lack of financial support was the main limiting factor in their campaigns. But female candidates said their presence in the polls was meeting resistance from many conservative groups in Afghanistan’s male-dominated society.
‘Unlike male candidates, we cannot visit any place at any time we want because we are women and people see us differently,’ Jalali said, adding that many of her campaign posters were either torn down or defaced by men who said they did not want to see her on the ballot.
The post-Taliban constitution allocates a quarter, or 68, of the seats in the lower house of parliament for women.
The threats were harsher for Nima Suratgar, another female candidate from Kabul. She said she received scores of abusive e-mails and phone calls after her name appeared on the candidate list.
‘I don’t know who they are, but I keep receiving phone calls and e-mails from people who threaten to kill me unless I quit,’ she said. ‘Their only reason to kill me is that I am a woman and I should not run in the elections.’
Fawzia Gailani, a lawmaker from the western province of Herat who is running for re-election, said the Taliban killed five of her election campaigners after kidnapping them late last month.
The Taliban took responsibility for the killings after they failed to coerce Gailani to withdraw her candidacy.
Despite the threats, all three women said they were determined to stay the course.
‘This is a big test for us female candidates,’ Suratgar said. ‘If we are fearful and quit, then no woman will dare in future to run, so this is a sacrifice that we have to accept and fight for our rights.’