KABUL It was both a historic moment and a bizarre spectacle. There was the fugitive Afghan militia leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, with a black turban and a beard much whiter than anyone remembered, speaking Thursday via video link from a secret location and then signing a peace agreement as the camera zoomed in on his hands.
There was President Ashraf Ghani, dressed in traditional robes, beaming as he watched the images on a giant screen in his palace and then signed his copy of the accord, which he said would go "fully in force" immediately. "This day starts the subsiding of war in Afghanistan and the beginning of rebuilding it," he said, speaking in Dari.
Seated behind him were aging former mujahideen leaders including allies and enemies of Hekmatyar's who fought the Soviet Union and then one another in a civil war three decades ago.
Making his first public appearance in years, Hekmatyar, who is in his late 60s, was soft-spoken and statesmanlike but vague on details. He said he hoped the agreement would "bring an end to the crisis in this country" and that "no single bullet will be fired, no drop of blood shed" in the transition of power. "I ask all opponents of this government to join this process and pursue their goals through peaceful ways," he said.
Hekmatyar, who has been in hiding for years, did not mention whether and when he would return to Afghanistan, which would require his removal from international terrorist blacklists. But his public appearance seemed to put to rest rumors about whether he actually supported the deal, and his conciliatory rhetoric appeared likely to bolster Ghani's credibility as a peacemaker as he heads to a crucial conference of foreign donors in Brussels on Tuesday. Ghani and his aides have been negotiating for months with Hekmatyar's representatives, hoping to persuade Taliban leaders to lay down their weapons.
"The current generation of Afghans did not start this war. It is up to our older generation to finish it," Ghani said. "This is a grand jihad that Afghanistan desperately needs."
But the flowery words and ritual did not impress members of the Mehrabi family, who were watching the event from their home several miles away. In 1993, at the peak of the civil war, Zarghona Mehrabi was in labor with her first child when the rockets came, exploding among the mud-walled houses in their west Kabul neighborhood.
The shelling came from the south, where Hekmatyar and his Hezb-i-Islami fighters were waging a battle with other militias. Mehrabi delivered her baby in the basement, listening to the sounds until night fell and her husband since deceased could get them to safety in another part of the city.
"When the war was over, we went back and found our house. Only the foundations were left," said brother-in-law Madat Ali, 55, a retired police officer. "Hekmatyar made soft promises today, but we have no hope for this agreement," he said. During the civil war, Hekmatyar and other militia bosses "swore on the Koran that they would stop fighting, and a few days later they started again," Ali recounted. "How can we trust him now?"
Last week, after officials signed a preliminary agreement with Hekmatyar's representatives, other Kabul residents responded with skepticism and weary hope. Many told similar stories of fleeing bombardment, spending years as refugees, and returning after the overthrow of the Taliban regime in 2001 to find the city in ruins and many of the same brutal militia leaders enjoying positions of wealth and political power.
A few activists have openly protested the agreement, denouncing Hekmatyar as the "Butcher of Kabul" and calling it an insult to justice for officials to pardon a wanted terrorist. Other analysts worry that his return could revive old ethnic enmities.
But Hezb-i-Islami, like most of the other Islamist parties that once fought one another, has many officials in the government and representatives in parliament. Supporters say these militia groups have changed with the times, prospered under civilian rule and now have a stake in peace instead of conflict.