From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A loya jirga (Pashto: لويه جرګه) is a "grand
assembly," a phrase in the Pashto language meaning "grand council."
A loya jirga is a mass meeting usually prepared for major events
such as choosing a new king, adopting a constitution, or discussing
important national political or emergency matters as well as
disputes in the Pashtun areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan.[1] In
Afghanistan, the loya jirga was originally attended the Pashtuns,
but later included other ethnic groups. It is a forum unique among
the Pashtun
tribes of Afghanistan and Pakistan in which, traditionally,
tribal elders meet together.[2]
The words loya (great/grand) and jirga ("council", "assembly", "dispute" or
"meeting") are of Pashto origin. The word Jirga is the one of
primary concept of Afghan law, Afghanwali or famously known as Pashtunwali.
Pukhtoonwali or Pashtunwali is the code of ethics of the Pashtuns,
the Jirga their Parliament or National Assembly and intrepidity and
frankness an essential trait of their character.[3]
The Afghan LOYA JIRGA as Platform of Pashtoonwali. Observing
the salient features of Afghan society, the traditional Afghan
“Jirga” and “Loya Jirga” come first in the traditional political
solution and has been alive since the ancient Aryan period, The
Pashtoons Social Democratic Party.
[4]
History
The Aryan tribes, which came down in intermittent waves from
Central Asia to present Afghanistan and then moved to India (around
1500 BC), tribes practiced a sort of jirga-system with two types of
councils – simite and sabha. The simite (the summit) comprised
elders and tribal chiefs. The king also joined sessions of the
simite. Sabha was a sort of rural council.[5]
It was used over time for the selection of rulers and headmen and
the airing of matters of principle. Islamic tradition has a
not-dissimilar system. From the time of the great Kushan ruler
Kanishka to the 1970s there were sixteen national loya jirgas and hundreds of smaller
ones[6].The
institution, which is centuries old, is a similar idea to the
Islamic "shura", or consultative assembly.[2]
The phrase loya jirga is Pashto and means "grand council". The
institution, which is centuries old, is a similar idea to the
Islamic "shura", or consultative assembly, BBC world.
In the Afghan (Pashtun) society the Loya Jirga is still
maintained and very strongly practiced, mostly in front of tribal
chiefs or with them to solve internal and external tribal problems
or disputes with other tribes.
When the Afghans took the power they tried to legitimize their
power with such a Jirga. While in the beginning only Pashtuns were
allowed to participate in the Jirgas, later other ethnic groups
like Tajiks and Hazaras were allowed to
participate as well, however they were little more than observers.
The member of the Jirgas were mostly members of the Royal Family,
religious leaders and tribal chiefs of the Afghans. King Amanullah Khan
institutionalized the Jirga. From Amanullah until the reign of Mohammed
Zahir Shah (1933-1973) and Mohammed Daoud Khan (1973-1978) the
Jirga was recognized as a common meeting of regional Pashtun
leaders.
The meetings do not have scheduled occurrences, but rather are
called for when issues or disputes arise.
There is no time limit for a Loya Jirga to conclude, and the
meetings often take a long time because decisions can only be made
as a group and arguments can drag out for days. Many different
problems are addressed, like foreign policy, declarations of war,
the legitimacy of leaders, and the introduction of new ideas and
laws.
Afghanistan
Loya jirgas in the history of Afghanistan
include:
- 1707-1709 — Loya jirga was gathered in Shahri
Safa, according to Said Kasim, Rishtia in 1707, but according to
Mir Ghulam M. Ghobar, this loya jirga was gathered in Manja in
1709.[7]
- October 1747 — A jirga at Kandahar was attended by Pashtun
representatives who appointed Ahmad Shah Durrani as their new
leader.
- 1793 — A jirga called by Timur Shah
Durrani, the son of Ahmad Shah Durrani, who wanted to transfer
the capital of the Durrani Empire from Kandahar to Kabul.
- 1880 — A jirga called by Abdur Rahman
Khan.
- September 1928 — A jirga at Paghman, called by King Amanullah, the
third loya jirga of his reign (1919-1929) to discuss reforms.
- September 1930 — A jirga a meeting of 286
called by Mohammed Nadir Shah to confirm his
accession to the throne.
- 1941 — Called by Mohammed
Zahir Shah to approve neutrality in World War II.
- 1947 — Held by Pashtuns in the Tribal Agencies
to choose between joining India
or Pakistan.
- July 26, 1949 — Afghanistan-Pakistan relations rapidly
deteriorated over a dispute, officially declared that it did not
recognize the 1893 Durand Line border any longer between the
two countries.[8]
- September 1964 — A meeting of 452 called by Mohammed
Zahir Shah to approve a new constitution.
- July 1974 — A meeting with Pakistan over the
Duran Line.
- January 1977 — Approved the new constitution
of Mohammed Daoud Khan establishing
one-party rule in the Republic
of Afghanistan.
- April 1985 — To ratify the new constitution of
the Democratic Republic of
Afghanistan.
- September 2001 — Four different loya jirga
movements anticipating the end of Taliban rule. Little communication took place
between each of them.
- The first was based in Rome
around Mohammed Zahir Shah, and it
reflected the interests of moderate Pashtuns from Afghanistan. The
Rome initiative called for fair elections, support for Islam as the foundation of the
Afghan state, and respect for human rights.
- The second was based in Cyprus and led by Homayoun Jarir, a member of
the Islamic Party of his father-in-law, Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar. Critics of the Cyprus initiative suspected that it
served the interests of Iran. The
members of the Cyprus initiative, however, considered themselves
closer to the Afghan people and regard the Rome group as too close
to the long-isolated nobility.
- The most significant was based in Germany, which resulted in the Bonn Agreement
(Afghanistan). This agreement was made under United Nations
auspices, established the Afghan Interim Authority and paved the
way for the later jirgas that established the Constitution of
Afghanistan.
- A lesser initiative based in Pakistan.
Loya jirga of Kabul on June 13, 2002.
- July 13, 2002 — Organized by the interim
administration of Hamid Karzai, with about 2000 delegates,
either selected through elections in various regions of the country
or allocated to various political, cultural, and religious groups.
It was held in a large tent in the grounds of Kabul Polytechnic
from June 11 and was scheduled to last about a week. It formed a
new Transitional
Administration which took office shortly thereafter.
- December 2003 — To consider the Proposed Afghan
Constitution. See 2003 Loya
jirga.
- 2006 — Afghan president Hamid Karzai said that
he and the Pakistani president will jointly lead a loya jirga to
end a dispute over border attacks.[9]
- December 2009, after his disputed re-election,
President Hamid Karzai announced to move ahead with a plan for a
Loya Jirga to discuss the Taliban insurgency. The Taliban
would be invited to take part in this Jirga [10].
Pakistan
On April 29, 2006, former Balochistan Chief Minister Taj
Muhammad Jamali offered to arranged a meeting between President
of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf and a loya jirga
(grand jirga) for peace in Balochistan.[11] A
Grand jirga was held at Kalat in September 2006 to announce
that a case would be filed in the International Court of
Justice regarding the sovereignty and rights of the Baloch people.[12][13][14][15]
See also
References
- ^
http://www.hrw.org/en/node/12296/section/1
- ^ a
b
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1782079.stm
- ^
http://www.khyber.org/culture/pashtoonwalai/jirga.shtml
- ^
http://www.pashtoonkhwa.com/?page=pashtoonkhwa&id=23
- ^ http://khyberwatch.com/nandara/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=382
- ^
http://www.palden.co.uk/palden/p4-afghanistan.html
- ^
http://wolas.beepworld.de/mirwaisneeka.htm
- ^
Agha Amin, Resolving the
Afghan-Pakistan Border Question, Journal of Afghanistan
Studies, Kabul, (accessed December 12, 2009).
- ^
"Musharraf, Karzai to lead
Loya jirga" (PDF). Frontier Post.
October 1, 2006. http://www.ipcs.org/Oct_06_pakistan.pdf.
- ^
"Karzai To Unveil Afghan
Cabinet In Days"
- ^
Daily Times - Leading News
Resource of Pakistan
- ^
"Grand jirga in Kalat decides
to move ICJ". The Dawn Edition. September 22,
2006. http://www.dawn.com/2006/09/22/top4.htm. Retrieved
2007-07-11.
- ^
"Baloch chiefs to approach
International Court of Justice" (PDF). India eNews.
September 26, 2006. http://www.indiaenews.com/pdf/23289.pdf. Retrieved
2007-07-11.
- ^
The Nation, 3 October 2006 Jirga rejects mega projects
- ^
Daily Times, 4 October 2006 Baloch jirga to form supreme council to
implement decisions
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