Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

Wave Of Targeted Killings Has Afghans Increasingly On Edge – NPR

Fatima Roshanian, a journalist, scaled back her movements after she found her name on three different lists circulating on Afghan social media, claiming to be of people the Taliban want to kill. Kiana Hayeri for NPR hide caption

Fatima Roshanian, a journalist, scaled back her movements after she found her name on three different lists circulating on Afghan social media, claiming to be of people the Taliban want to kill.

KABUL, Afghanistan It's not the risk of contracting COVID-19 that keeps journalist Fatima Roshanian home. It's the murders.

Roshanian scaled back her movements after she found her name on three different lists circulating on Afghan social media, claiming to be of people the Taliban want to kill. On one list, she's number 11.

"They are after people who are well-known, who are against the values of this society, who speak out," she says.

It's not the first time Roshanian has been threatened. She's offended plenty of conservatives in her life in her job as the editor of an Afghan feminist magazine, Nimrokh. It covers topics like sex, virginity, periods, marital affairs all shocking by Afghan standards. But this time, she says, she's taking the threats more seriously, because "you see journalists and other people are being killed everyday, everywhere, on the streets, in their homes, in the bazaars."

Roshanian works with a staff member to wrap their special issue for International Women's day at the Nimrokh office in Kabul. Kiana Hayeri for NPR hide caption

Roshanian works with a staff member to wrap their special issue for International Women's day at the Nimrokh office in Kabul.

Over the past six months, shadowy assassins have murdered influential and prominent Afghans, including journalists, human rights activists, judicial workers, doctors and clerics. The killings began escalating last September, when peace talks began between the Afghan government and the Taliban.

It should have been a time marked by hope. Instead, the United Nations said in a February report that more than 700 people had been murdered in targeted killings in 2020. More than 540 were wounded. The U.N. noted it was a 45% increase in the number of civilian casualties compared to 2019. So far this year, more than 60 people have been the victims of targeted killings, according to an NPR tally of incidents reported by an Afghan violence monitoring site.

"It has been unprecedented," says Shaharzad Akbar, the chairperson of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission. She says she's never seen anything like the scope of these assassinations, "in terms of how many people have been killed, in a short time period and how it hasn't stopped."

The killed include Faiz Mohammad Fayez, a religious scholar and university professor, gunned down earlier this month as he walked to a mosque for morning prayers. They include the surgeon Dr. Khalil-ur-Rahman Narmgo, who was gunned down in February.

They include prosecutor Mirwais Samadi, shot dead by gunmen while on his way to work; and television presenter Malala Maiwand, killed alongside her driver in December. Three other women from the same station where Maiwand worked were shot dead in March.

In response, one Afghan media rights group has flung up shelters for threatened journalists. "They don't have any safe place, so they come here," says Wahida Faizi of the Afghan Journalists Safety Committee. Faizi says the group is also distributing bullet-proof vests and helping some of those threatened leave the country.

Roshanian has been threatened before, but this time, she says she's taking the threats more seriously. "You see journalists and other people are being killed everyday, everywhere, on the streets, in their homes, in the bazaars." Kiana Hayeri for NPR hide caption

Roshanian has been threatened before, but this time, she says she's taking the threats more seriously. "You see journalists and other people are being killed everyday, everywhere, on the streets, in their homes, in the bazaars."

Identifying the killers

It's not clear who is behind the carnage. ISIS has claimed responsibility for the murders of five women: Maiwand, her three colleagues and a doctor.

The U.S. and other Western nations blame the Taliban. "The Taliban bears responsibility for the majority of this targeted violence," noted a January statement from the U.S. embassy in Kabul signed by the European Union, NATO's senior civilian representative in Afghanistan and the diplomatic missions for 12 Western countries.

Many Afghans agree, like one feminist who requested anonymity because she recently received a death threat over Facebook. She believes it's because she helped women flee their violent husbands.

In an interview with NPR, she said it's no coincidence that the killings stepped up after Afghan peace talks began.

"The Taliban are demonstrating their power," she says, a way for them to flex their muscle in negotiations, while also silencing those who might disagree with them and their hard-line methods. "They are targeting journalists and civil society people who can raise their voice. People who can tell the international community what is happening. They want to shut them up."

The Taliban deny responsibility. "This is a false propaganda of the enemy," said a spokesman, who uses the name Zabihullah Mujahid. He blamed Afghan government intelligence officials for the murders.

Roshanian thinks it's more complicated. She believes the death lists being shared on social media are actually worked up by locals: conservatives, Taliban sympathizers, people with grudges.

She thinks they're doxing for the Taliban revealing the identities of people online in order to entice militants to harm them. "These lists tell the Taliban: these are the people who are making trouble, who are putting new thoughts in women's heads. They identify us so the Taliban can kill us."

Roshanian, who runs the women's magazine, thinks it's more complicated. She believes the death lists being shared on social media are actually worked up by locals: conservatives, Taliban sympathisers, people with grudges. Kiana Hayeri for NPR hide caption

Roshanian, who runs the women's magazine, thinks it's more complicated. She believes the death lists being shared on social media are actually worked up by locals: conservatives, Taliban sympathisers, people with grudges.

Some caution other hands may be at work.

One cleric, Ustadh Abdul Salaam Abed, who survived a bomb blast that struck his vehicle, believes Afghan intelligence officials are also targeting people.

"Intelligence has a direct hand," he says. "There are people in the system who are scared of the nation's voices, scared of the coming peace," he says. He punctuated his conversation with nervous giggles, saying he could hear beeps on the line that he believed were a result of his phone being bugged.

Officials for the Afghan government declined to comment for this story.

Amnesty International recently criticized the government for not moving on the creation of a body that would protect human rights defenders. Other diplomats have said that while the government is investigating these murders, they have done little to communicate with victims' families or the media on the steps they are taking to address the violence.

A mission to intimidate

Akbar, from the human rights commission, says even if the killers are unknown, the intention is clear. "It's a deliberate attempt to kill people or scare them away from the country," she says. "Unfortunately, it has worked."

The killings are already impacting female reporters in particular. Faizi's organization recently published a report noting that more than 300 women one-fifth of all who work in Afghan media have quit their jobs as a result of the killings, and because of insecurities surrounding COVID-19.

They include a young reporter who requested anonymity because out of concern attention would trigger a death threat. She fought her family to become a reporter a profession they said was not honorable for a woman. She found a job, but then the murders began. Fearing for her life, she quit. "Now the world feels dark," she tells NPR. "I am always thinking: what if this is permanent? What if I never work again?"

There's been other secondary victims of these killings, too. Karima Rahimyar, a school teacher and girls education activist, received threats over Facebook. She, defiantly, continues to work. But she pulled her own daughters out of university until the danger passes, or until they can flee. "I'm scared for my daughters," she says.

Roshanian, the feminist magazine editor, now works from home, but her friends urge her to flee. "They all tell me, 'Fatima, the things you are doing right now for this country is useless. It won't impact anyone.'" She responds: "If you are thinking like this, and I start thinking like you what will be left here?"

Hadid reported from Islamabad; Ghani from Kabul.

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Wave Of Targeted Killings Has Afghans Increasingly On Edge - NPR

Former Green Beret survived IED explosion in Afghanistan to own successful San Antonio real estate company – San Antonio Express-News

Among the military memorabilia and team awards displayed at the Levi Rodgers Real Estate Group office hangs a photo that humbles the owner each time he sees it.

Inside the frame, a rugged U.S. Army Special Forces A-team looks out from a distant post in Helmand Province of Afghanistan. The image was taken on Sept. 15, 2009, just hours before a moment that took a devastating toll on Rodgers life.

Each day, the first thing he does is stop at the wall. Then he places a palm below the photo to remember the three soldiers and an Afghan translator who died while riding with him in the vehicle that struck an improvised explosive device.

The former Army Green Beret suffered shattered bones and severe injuries that required two years of surgeries and rehabilitation.

Its important to remember what its all about for me, Rodgers, 43, said with a tremble in his voice. Nothing else is on this wall for a reason.

The memory of the fallen men drives every waking moment.

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His years of military service serve as a team concept for his operation that takes up a third floor suite on Paesanos Parkway. In 2016, Rodgers founded the real estate group thats become one of the leading sales teams in the nation. His 20 employees, including military veterans and spouses, provide more than 50 real estate agents with business opportunities.

Rodgers mission is serving those who have served, but the company reaches out to civilians as well across San Antonio, known as Military City USA.

The whole goal here is by, with, through and for our community, Rodgers said. Just go out and have an impact. I feel when I lay down at night I have a responsibility to everybody thats trusted me. Not just the clients, but to those that work here. Its a huge part of my life.

The veteran-owned company was one of 15 recipients of the 2019 Secretary of Defense Employer Support Freedom Award. The award is the highest U.S. government honor bestowed to employers who go above and beyond for National Guard and Reserve employees.

Rodgers is a Purple Heart recipient and was awarded four Bronze Stars and a Legion of Merit.

His military career began as a 17-year-old high school graduate seeking new vistas beyond Sacramento, Calif. He enlisted in the Army in 1996 and worked as a heavy equipment operator. While deployed to Bosnia, he was curious about a group of armed, bearded men dressed in civilian clothes.

Who are those guys? he asked his squad leader.

Those are Green Berets, came the reply.

Rodgers was intrigued. He researched their mission as elite soldiers and knew this was the path he wanted to pursue. In 1998, he applied and was selected to train at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The training pushed the former high-school athlete to his limits, physically and mentally.

When Rodgers graduated from the year-long program, he said he gained a lifelong commitment to men he could count on no matter what and would drop everything if called upon for help.

On ExpressNews.com: Child sleuth with a heart for animals helps finds missing pets on San Antonios Southwest Side

From 2000 to 2009, Rodgers served on a special forces A-Team that worked in Central and South America. then he was deployed to the Middle East in Iraq and Afghanistan.

When you serve in combat with another human being, the relationships created on the field of battle are hard to replicate, Rodgers said.

That bond was intact on the night the chief warrant officer led a convoy from an Afghan village back to their home base. The ground mobility vehicles were traveling at a fast clip. Then the explosion happened his vehicle had hit an IED. Three team members, Brad Bohle, Josh Mills, Shawn McCloskey, all died. So did Rasool, the young Afghan translator riding in the combat vehicle.

Sgt. Pedro Solis, the teams dog handler, ran to the fiery scene and pulled Rodgers from the wreck as fellow soldiers fired back at the enemy. Solis, from the Southwest Side of San Antonio, recalled that his team leader was still conscious, giving commands.

Forty percent of Rodgers body was burned. He had internal damage. Both of his legs and back were broken. He was flown to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany and then to the Brooke Army Medical Center burn unit.

He was the lone survivor.

For more than a month, Rodgers was in a medically-induced coma. He went though rehabilitation at the Center for the Intrepid.

His entry into selling homes came from the impact a real estate agent had on his life. He was 22 years old, stationed in North Carolina, when he called real estate agent Gary Langdon to buy a double-wide trailer with a Jacuzzi tub. Thirty seconds after they met, Langdon tore up the contract.

Son, Langdon said, this house is going to depreciate, not appreciate.

Instead, he sold Rodgers a one-story ranch-style house that his family lived in for 12 years. Sale of the home helped the family pay off debt and Rodgers real estate classes.

He found mentors in Samuel Raia and Lawrence Raia, co-founders of Homes Fit for Heroes. Since 2009, the organization has provided free housing to 250 wounded special operations service members and their families while they go through treatment and recovery.

Rodgers and his family were among early recipients of a free, furnished unit at the Vista Ridge Apartments while he recovered at BAMC from his injuries. When he heard the news he wanted to personally thank the founders. Four months after he was out of the hospital, he met the duo during a military-related trip to New York City.

Knowing about Rodgers extensive injuries, Lawrence Raia, 52, recalled sitting with his cousin Samuel in a bistro, waiting for a man in a wheelchair. When Rodgers walked in with a cane and introduced himself, the men couldnt help but stare, astounded to see him on his feet.

After the 90-minute meeting, the Raias became Rodgers confidants, sharing their business acumen and helping him evaluate different opportunities.

Hes taken his chapter in civilian life and paid it back, Lawrence Raia said during a phone conversation. He helps them (veterans) buy homes in a way that Gary Langdon helped him. Its been a singular honor to be a part of his life and watch him reinvent himself and achieve what hes achieved.

On ExpressNews.com: High school football player partners with sign language interpreter to excel on the gridiron

Rogers retired from the Army in October 2012. Every goal he accomplishes is with the thought that he doesnt want to waste his life.

Its not just my story, Rodgers said. I feel its a duty and everything Im doing is for those who didnt make it. Im committed to this and its what Im here for, the families and their sacrifice.

The team photo on the wall is his memorial to the fallen men and their loved ones he will never forget. Nor can he forget the man who ran to his aid without regard for his own safety.

Today Solis is director of logistics of Rodgers team, still a brother in arms at his side.

vtdavis@express-news.net

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Former Green Beret survived IED explosion in Afghanistan to own successful San Antonio real estate company - San Antonio Express-News

MS Dhonis THIS long-standing, huge international record broken by Afghanistan – Republic TV

Afghanistan, on the back of Najibullah Zadrans 35-ball 72*, defeated Zimbabwe by 47 runs at the Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium in Abu Dhabi on Saturday, March 20. With the win, the Asghar Afghan-led side pocketed the three-match T20I series by a 3-0 margin. Remarkably, captain Afghan broke a coveted captaincy record of former Indian skipper MS Dhoni with his latest win.

Asghar Afghan-led Afghanistan to three wins on the trot to mark a 3-0 series win over Zimbabwe. Interestingly, the win in the third T20I was Afghans 42nd win as the captain of his national side. He overtook MS Dhonis 41 wins as Indian captain to become the most successful T20I skipper in the world.

While MS Dhonis 41 T20I wins came from 72 matches, Afghans 42 victories came from just 52 games. The senior Afghanistan cricketer first led his national side in the truncated format back in 2015. Since then, the veteran has also led Afghanistan to 33 wins in 58 ODIs and two Test wins out of four matches. Overall, Afghan is also the most successful captain in his countrys history across all international formats.

Afghanistan players will now resume their 2021 cricketing commitments in September with a home series in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) against Pakistan. Prior to their international assignments, their players will depart for India for the upcoming Indian Premier League 2021 (IPL 2021) season. Three Afghanistan players, i.e. Rashid Khan, Mohammad Nabi and Mujeeb ur Rahman, are scheduled to take part in the tournament. Interestingly, they will all be playing for the Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) this year.

Stay updated on the latest IND VS ENGnews. From live updates to breaking news, Republic World brings you all the live updates online so that you don't miss out on the IND VS ENG extravaganza.

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MS Dhonis THIS long-standing, huge international record broken by Afghanistan - Republic TV

Why staying in Afghanistan is the least bad choice for Biden – Brookings Institution

Can the United States, under the Biden administration, responsibly end its forever war in Afghanistan?

The White House reportedly has a new idea on how to try, after watching peace talks in Qatar between the Afghan government and the Taliban flounder over the past year. Itis proposingan international summit including Afghan leaders and the Taliban. The initial goal would be to create an interim power-sharing government, which would buy time for more comprehensive peace talks thereafter. This would also allow the United States and NATO to keep their small military footprint in place for a while longer, beyond the May cutoff that some believe the February 2020deal between Washington and the Taliban requires.

Unfortunately, this diplomatic Hail Mary is very unlikely to produce a quick accord. Whatever leverage President Biden can generate over Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, including the implied threat of a quick U.S. and NATO troop departure, the Taliban is unlikely to accept the demand for a 90-day reduction in violence. Its leaders are also unlikely to agree to meaningful power-sharing especially if they sense we are already halfway out the door.

Thus, Biden will still likely have to decide: Do we stay or do we go? We believe that the correct answer is to stay. As difficult as it is to remain in this longest war, the most likely outcome of pulling out of Afghanistan would be very ugly, including ethnic cleansing, mass slaughter and the ultimate dismemberment of the country.

In weighing the United States options, the president certainly needs to bear in mind the costs of the current U.S. deployment 2,500 U.S. troops out of a NATO-mission total of9,000, perhaps $10 billion per year in expense to the U.S. taxpayers, and the prospect of perhaps 10 to 20 American casualties a year if the Taliban resumes its previous use of force against U.S. forces. But Biden also needs to form an expectation of what would likely happen after any NATO departure.

First, if we pull out the remaining U.S. troops, those of other foreign nations will leave, too. NATO depends on the United States for key combat and intelligence capabilities and leadership.

Second, despite the departure of troops, U.S. and NATO military assistance in the form of money and equipment will likely continue to flow to Afghan government forces. After all, why would we abandon them after fighting alongside them for 20 years? Thus, both the Taliban and Kabul will have the wherewithal to maintain the fight. The war will continue, and it will move into Afghanistans cities, which have generally remained under government control throughout the past two decades.

Third, no rapid progress towards a peace accord will occur. Taliban leaders will be more certain than ever that time is on their side. The Ghani government will still believe it has leverage and legitimacy by virtue of its constitution, as well as international diplomatic recognition and financial support. Their fundamental ideological differences remain: The Taliban wants an Islamist emirate, Kabul wants a democratic government.

Fourth, while existing battlefield dynamics already favor the Taliban, those dynamics could be exacerbated after a U.S. and NATO departure with terrible humanitarian consequences. As some cities fall to partial or complete Taliban control, and the Taliban exacts leverage on those it considered collaborators with the regime, there would be powerful incentives for opponents to prevent its infiltration into other cities. Most Pashtun (Afghanistans largest ethnic group) are not Taliban and do not support the Taliban. However, virtually all Taliban are Pashtun. Thus, if you are from a Tajik, Hazara or Uzbek ethnic group, the simplest way to protect yourself is to hunker down above theHindu Kush mountains in the nations north and push out all Pashtun. That is a recipe for ethnic cleansing, and massive human suffering throughout the country.

Fifth, the result of all this would be an enormous refugee strain on neighboring Pakistan, risking instability in that important country of more than220 million. Some might believe Pakistan could prop up a Taliban regime in Afghanistan, much as in the 1990s, but that assumption ignores the Talibans evolution away from Pakistani control, and Pakistans own difficult experience with militancy over the past 20 years. Todays Pakistan probably does not want an exclusively Taliban-run Islamist emirate on its Western flank.

Sixth and finally a small silver lining the new rump Afghanistan in the nations northeast would likely become a friend of the West, much like Kurdistan in Iraq. It would likely welcome not only financial aid but also Western military and intelligence capabilities. Alas, the scale of the terrorism problem would likely have grown a great deal in the meantime, as the Taliban would be even less likely to break with al-Qaeda than it is today, and most or all of the nations southeast would be under its control. Along the way, the Afghanistan wars current tragic death tolls, measured in the tens of thousands a year, would surely have multiplied.

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Why staying in Afghanistan is the least bad choice for Biden - Brookings Institution

Finding peace in and around Afghanistan – The Express Tribune

Numerous geopolitical developments and initiatives of the last few weeks beckon attention. Most are driven by the United States latest national security estimate which places China at the head of American concerns. China is expected to overtake the US as the largest economy of the world in the next decade or so even as it rapidly transforms its military in both capacity and capability with muscle to defend its interests and secure its gains around the globe. Combined, Chinas footprint will expand even further as it enhances her perimeter of security and its regions of influence and her interest expand. Its Belt and Road (BRI) and Silk-Route initiatives are a case in point. Even as US increases its focus on China and extricates itself from trouble-spots where it found itself stuck over decades, it hopes to elicit Chinas support on facing three major challenges to humanity climate change, pandemics and technology disruptions to ease humanity through what shall define the new human age.

Pivot to the East meant focusing on China and its rapid development to a point where it challenged Americas exclusivity. To that end two major disengagements were in order. The Middle East was quite much left to its fate under Trump who clearly suggested that the US had little to do with a civilisation where enmities ran into a thousand years. Trump then followed up with the biggest geopolitical coup of the century by influencing some conservative Arab states into recognising Israel and initiating diplomatic relations between them. Israel will in due course find its anchor in the region for a more persistent presence on the edge of the Persian Gulf just across Iran and project its power with consequent effects. Also, Israels politico-military orientation has been changed from Europe to the Middle East by including it in the CENTCOM area of operation as a key US ally. Over time, in coordination with its new cohorts, it shall replace the US as a minder of its own and key US interest. The US will then be free to move east.

The second disengagement that the US seeks is in Afghanistan. The US has been stuck there for the last 40 years with little to show for. The Afghan war reduced to an unnecessary war as the US looks to opt out without affixing another Vietnam-like ignominy to its name. That is possible if warring factions find some political accommodation. The Doha dialogue is meant to enable exactly that with which Pakistan has handily assisted. A letter by the US Secretary of State to the Afghan President lays it out for him to work out an understanding with the Afghan Taliban to give political stability a fighting chance. Apprehensions exist if Ashraf Ghani is unreservedly committed to the idea of peace through power-sharing between the stakeholders. That alone will enable the social and political equilibrium in Afghan society leading to stability. It is widely understood that perpetuating strife helps Ghani hold onto power.

Both India and Pakistan make the region in which Afghanistan exists and both have had roles to play in this 40-year war in Afghanistan. Pakistan from the word go was an active if indirect participant because of its contiguity especially when the USSR invaded Afghanistan. She became Afghanistans strategic depth as millions arrived as refugees. Pakistan also helped Afghans throw the Soviets out after the latters 10-year occupation of Afghanistan. Following 9/11, the US needed an express entry into Afghanistan which Pakistan enabled. This phase of the Afghan war found Pakistan not only enabling a war against terror but fighting one kinetically as malignance of the war in the neighbourhood overflowed into Pakistan. India, the distant neighbour and a proximate state which has had its own set of problems with Pakistan was mostly the spoiler, either complicating Pakistans efforts at successfully finishing terror off or in inciting anger and reaction within Afghanistan against Pakistan by framing it for supporting the Taliban. She has also found it opportune to meddle in Pakistan using Afghan soil for as long as the strife has persisted. This has only encouraged India to play its demonic role in scuttling every effort towards finding peace. It was thus important that the two, India and Pakistan, first found accommodation between them before they could fully contribute to a search for peace in Afghanistan.

We, thus, see signs of a rapprochement on order between India and Pakistan. In one of my earlier pieces on the subject I had outlined factors which would intrinsically encourage both India and Pakistan to ease things between them from the near-war hype driving their relations. More so India which had kept a very hawkish approach towards Pakistan or on any thought of a possible dialogue between the two. Not now. The two DGMOs spoke, not out of the blue for sure; and the two sides are meant to reconnect on the Indus Waters soon after a prolonged absence from what is meant to be a biannual meet up. Following the thaw Tony Blinken called Moscow to convene a meeting of the five regional nations including Russia, Iran, China, India and Pakistan to assume responsibility as a group to oversee the process of peace and its implementation in Afghanistan. The US has invited itself to the meeting as the key mediator to forging this combined responsibility. India has thus found a backdoor entry to the table from which it had been distanced earlier. Whether this was suitably premised on a seeming rapprochement between the two, only time will tell.

If the group can play even a cursory role in seeming to oversee some sort of peace may be enough cover for the US to exit. Others can then grapple with what is left behind; malign or propitious. If the recent eminence to Quad by Biden and Co will alleviate some Indian concerns about their imagined import it may help ameliorate some of Indias inherent angst in regional interactions and may just tone the rhetoric and animosity down a few decibels against Pakistan. It remains a composite approach by the US to appease tensions in and around Afghanistan while it transfers focus to China and the East. That is Americas new approach to Asia and the Middle East. If it also subsumes what has been a lingering conflict-in-waiting between India and Pakistan so much the better. Perhaps the two peoples can breathe easy while hoping that the imposed behavioural change will lead to fulfilling South Asias promise. Pakistan too has begun to rhyme in the essence of economic security as the more critical component of national security. Perhaps next one would see easing off trade restrictions between the two neighbours.

When may India plug into CPEC though is not only ambitious but will clash with the objectives of the Quad and the newer responsibilities the US will assign India with. For the moment, US will bolster Indias confidence with some military offerings to ease away some of her apprehensions. A more secure India will make a less belligerent India in an environment where coexistence is the order. Afghanistan may too then find peace giving US the opportunity to pivot. Nothing is unrelated.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 19th, 2021.

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Finding peace in and around Afghanistan - The Express Tribune