The Final Hours: An Afghan family’s flight to safety

An Afghan family’s flight to safety

Illustration of a man and a woman holding a child, being questioned by officials with a plane overhead.
Illustration by Susie Ang
This is a story about what happens when you are stateless and powerless—the daily humiliations, the endless waiting, the impossible choices, the dependence on strangers, the danger in every official encounter, the high price of survival, the struggle for dignity.

Safia Noori and Fakhruddin Elham are a young Afghan couple who both served in the Afghan special forces, fighting alongside American troops in Afghanistan. After the fall of Kabul, they fled Taliban persecution in their own country, then escaped to Pakistan, where they lived as refugees with their two small children, waiting for the United States to make good on its promise to bring Afghan allies to this country. Last year, Donald Trump returned to power and broke that promise, closing the doors to resettlement. Around the same time, the Pakistani government stopped renewing the visas of Afghan refugees and began deporting them by the hundreds of thousands. The family became fugitives with no legal status, hiding from the police in Islamabad to avoid being sent back to death or misery in Afghanistan, trying to find a way to safety.

On March 24, this magazine published my story about Safia and Elham. (I gave them pseudonyms for their own protection, but can safely use their real names now.) That day, an acquaintance who leads an international humanitarian organization, and who had brought the family’s plight to the attention of high-level Spanish officials back in January, used my essay to nudge Madrid about the family’s request for asylum, and Madrid nudged its embassy in Islamabad, setting in motion the maddening, dreamlike events that followed.

The next day, on March 25, the Spanish ambassador sent a letter approving the family’s travel to Spain for “international protection.” The embassy instructed Safia to send copies of plane tickets for Madrid, as well as all-important exit permits from the government of Pakistan, before their visas could be issued.

Spain’s positive decision didn’t guarantee anything. The family now had to get out of Pakistan without being caught and deported. This was difficult for Afghans in any circumstance; two wars would make it even harder. The American and Israeli attacks on Iran had shut down commercial flights over much of the Middle East and left only one viable route from Islamabad to Madrid—through Istanbul on Turkish Airlines. The other war, between Pakistan and Afghanistan, received much less international attention, but it had turned Afghan refugees, already a despised underclass around the region, into pariahs in Pakistan. Safia and Elham became enemies of a state that wanted to punish them for the actions of a Taliban regime in Kabul that regarded them as traitors and infidels.

A few days before hearing from the Spanish embassy, Safia and Elham had paid $1,400 to a fixer at a “travel agency” that put them on a waitlist for three-month tourist visas issued through a Pakistani consulate somewhere in Afghanistan. (The official cost for such a visa was $8, but obtaining one the normal way, through Pakistan’s embassy in Kabul, was virtually impossible.) Safia explained to me that this sketchy document would keep them relatively safe from the police while they looked for some way to leave Pakistan, but it wouldn’t be official enough to legalize their status. Also, the $1,400 was just a deposit. Delivery of the visas, not including ones for the children, would eventually cost $3,100—or maybe more. The price fluctuated almost daily, as if visas were being sold like black-market gasoline. Now, with Spain allowing the family to travel to Madrid, the $1,400 was a sunk cost.

The Pakistani government finds ingenious ways to profit off the desperation of Afghan refugees. It requires every foreigner without a valid Pakistani visa to obtain permission to leave the country—a document called, without irony, a “Humanitarian Safe Passage Exit Permit.” Four of them would cost the family $2,650 in fines and fees for overstaying the expired visas that Pakistan refused to renew. Even then, the exit permits weren’t certain. Like most things in Pakistan, they depended on connections and bribes.

First, Elham had to register their 2-year-old son, Yusuf, who didn’t have an entry visa, because he had been born in Pakistan, but who couldn’t leave without being recorded in the national database. This task required Elham to spend a day driving around Islamabad in the car of his Pakistani landlord, who had become a kind of guardian angel to the family because he and Safia were both Shiite Muslims, co-religionists of an oppressed minority. To prevent Elham’s Afghan accent from giving him away at the many police checkpoints, the landlord claimed him as his mute brother.

But even with a Pakistani at his side, Elham was turned away from one registration office after another. “When they checked my documents and saw that I am Afghan, they told me to leave the office and said that this matter was not their responsibility,” he told me later. Finally, the landlord called a friend in the Interior Ministry, who got the matter resolved. But Elham’s day spent wandering through bureaucratic Islamabad, he told me, “truly shows how people take advantage of the suffering of others.”

Pakistan now required all Afghans to pick up their exit permits in person at the Interior Ministry—but this seemed a likely trap for arrest and deportation. The work-around, of course, meant yet another bribe, and on Friday, March 27, Safia and Elham transferred $600 through the “travel agency” to the bank account of a ministry employee. In exchange, they were told, the exit permits would be issued digitally the following Monday.

“I do not trust the government of Pakistan at all, not even one percent,” Safia wrote to me. “But this situation is about bribery, and I know that in such cases, once they receive the money, they usually complete the work. By Monday, everything should become clear.” Meanwhile, the family would shop for suitcases and clothing to prepare for their departure, which seemed more and more like a jailbreak.

I was sending money to their landlord by way of Western Union for their expenses. (When I described the situation to my editors at The Atlantic, they decided to have the magazine reimburse me for some of the money I spent on the family’s travel.) By now I was exchanging a dozen messages a day with Safia and Elham. As they came closer to escape, I found it hard to concentrate on anything other than getting them out. But every day threw an unreasonable, enraging obstacle in their path.

Monday arrived. Safia and Elham waited all day for their exit permits. In the late afternoon the Interior Ministry issued a single permit: for 2-year-old Yusuf. Apparently, the rest were delayed by a computer glitch. Their fixer at the “travel agency” reported that the other permits would come within an hour if the glitch could be solved. If not, then tomorrow. An hour passed. Night fell. Safia and Elham drank coffee to stay awake. “Only when the exit permits finally arrive will my heart become calm and I will be able to sleep,” Safia told me.

The next morning brought no permits. The word now was that they would be sent at two in the afternoon. Two o’clock came and went. The unofficial price had apparently gone up. At 4:30 Safia wrote with alarming news: “They have stopped all exit permits and are not approving them. They said that tomorrow I and all my family members must go in person to the Ministry of Interior, and only then there may be a possibility of approval.” By now just hearing the word Pakistan left Safia trembling. She was, she said, “going crazy from worry.”

I didn’t think it was a good idea for a family of Afghan refugees to show up at the heavily guarded Interior Ministry, which was subordinate to Pakistan’s intelligence service, a rogue agency widely accused of aiding terrorist groups, including the Taliban during the American war in Afghanistan. I reached out to everyone I knew with Pakistani government contacts who could spring the exit permits. A friend managed to reach a top official in the Foreign Ministry, who agreed to help.

But Safia had already made up her mind. Life in Pakistan was unbearable. She would gather her courage and move toward her dreams or be handed over to the Taliban and killed. She was ready to accept either outcome.

The next morning, April 1, the family’s landlord drove them to the white concrete Interior Ministry building. Safia, Elham, and the children went inside the reception hall—a cramped room where two men in civilian clothes sat behind a counter. Safia handed over their passports and receipts showing that they had paid for the exit permits.

According to Safia, as soon as the men realized that these were Afghans standing in front of them, their manner turned hostile. One of them glared at her. “Come back next week,” he told her. “Then your work will be done.”

As politely as possible, Safia explained that their papers were in order, their fines had been paid along with extra “fees,” and they urgently needed the permits so they could leave Pakistan.

The official’s face hardened. “Afghans have no right to speak here,” he said. “Leave the hall.” He threw the family’s papers on the floor.

Safia was 26 years old. The past five years had brought many blows. The loss of her career in the Afghan military after the fall of Kabul, and of any hope for a decent life in her native country. A suicide bombing outside the Kabul airport gate that left scores of corpses all around her in a sewage ditch and barely spared Safia, her husband, and the child in her womb. The family’s flight from Taliban pursuers across Afghanistan, during which they survived on rice, bread, and water and slept in strange houses and mountain caves. Safia’s overwhelming desire in the worst moments to end her own life, which only her husband’s sympathy and the thought of her unborn child prevented. The two weeks Safia spent all alone in a Kabul hospital as she struggled to give birth to their daughter, Victoria, while her family stayed away for their safety and hers. The decision to sell everything she owned, including her wedding dowry, to pay for a black-market passport, then say goodbye to her parents and siblings and escape with her husband and baby into Pakistan. The refugee years that followed—the forms and interviews and medical exams the family was put through as they waited in vain for America to make good on its promise to bring its Afghan allies to safety. Those last months spent hiding from Pakistani police in a sunless room. The daily insults of petty bureaucrats. The waste of her youth, her life.

But instead of breaking, Safia clung with all her strength to the only thing she hadn’t lost.

“I’ve done nothing wrong,” she told the men in the ministry. “I’m not a terrorist. I’m a woman.” She later told me that her voice shook and rose nearly to a shout. “You must not treat me this way. I deserve to be treated like a human being. We’re human beings! Look at my children—what is their fault? You should be happy we’re leaving your country. I’ll file a complaint if you don’t do your job. We won’t leave until you do it!”

She sat down in a chair as if she would never again get up. An hour passed. Then one of the men called her to the counter. “You are very stubborn,” he said, and disappeared with their documents into an inner office. Half an hour later he emerged and handed over the exit permits. “Go,” he commanded.

Safia laughed. “Soon I’ll go, and I will never see this place again.”

Elham was hearing stories of Afghan travelers at the Islamabad airport separated from other passengers by immigration officers, harassed with impossible demands, and shaken down for hundreds, even thousands, of dollars. One family missed their flight to asylum, their exit permits expired, and they were deported to Afghanistan.

I discussed these last-minute risks with an American lawyer named Tom Villalon—a member of a tiny nonprofit called Rescue Afghan Women Now that helps keep dozens of Afghan women who’d served in their country’s military alive in Afghanistan and Pakistan. (Last week, one of them, a widow with two young sons, was arrested and deported to Kabul. Pakistan is now deporting as many as 5,000 Afghans a day.) Villalon had a colleague who knew the brother of a senior Pakistani official, and this man agreed to contact the immigration chief at the airport to ensure that Safia and Elham would be allowed to leave. I can’t tell you the brother’s name, just as I have to keep the landlord’s name out of this story. Among all the grief that Pakistan caused the family, some Pakistanis treated them with extraordinary kindness, and for that they might be punished.

The Turkish Airlines flight was scheduled to depart Islamabad in the predawn hours of Friday, April 10. That night I was with my wife and daughter in Córdoba, in the south of Spain. We had come for a short vacation, but also in hopes of meeting Safia, Elham, Victoria, and Yusuf at the Madrid airport. A picture appeared on my phone: a family selfie inside the terminal, broad smiles; by chance, 4-year-old Victoria was wearing a T-shirt that read ESCAPE. Sometime before midnight in Spain—1:30 a.m. in Pakistan—Elham tried to reach me on WhatsApp, but the call was dropped. A few minutes later a text message came. Turkish Airlines would not let them board the flight.

Their luggage had been weighed, and they were about to receive boarding passes, when two airline employees noticed the family and demanded their passports. One of the employees, a young Pakistani woman, sneered: “Go away, dirty Afghans, damned Afghans. Sit there. No one will allow you to travel.”

When the family didn’t move, the other employee, a Pakistani man who seemed to be the manager, snapped: “The lady is telling the truth. Why don’t you go over there? Didn’t you hear what she said? Do you want us to call the police to force you to leave?” The family abandoned the ticket counter and went to sit down. The manager called Elham back and told him that they couldn’t board their flight without return tickets—to Kabul. Elham displayed their Spanish visas and the letter from the ambassador granting their request to travel to Spain for asylum, but it made no difference.

Elham had spent five years in the Afghan special forces, fighting alongside American troops. Military service had given him a highly respected place in society. Now, to save his family, he had to try to put an American journalist he’d never met on the phone with an airline employee who suddenly had the power to ruin their lives. But the manager continued to insult Elham and refused to talk with me, and it seemed as if the family’s chance at freedom was going to slip away at the very last minute. If they weren’t able to reach safety, I thought to myself, then the world was an utterly hopeless place.

Then Villalon, the American lawyer, discovered that Turkish Airlines had flights from Madrid through Istanbul to Kabul. I got online, bought four fully refundable tickets, and sent them to Safia’s email. Their sudden appearance on her phone seemed to upset the manager, but he had to let the family go. A few minutes later, Safia sent me a message: “My heart has grown very dark toward this place.”

The last station in this gantlet of abuse was immigration. The family was sent to Booth #8, but Booth #8 sent them to Booth #3. Booth #3 was empty. Then Booth #1 called them over. Several officers examined the passports and conferred. Elham overheard enough of their Urdu to realize that the officers were familiar with the names of his family. One of them told Elham. “We’ll check your documents and make sure there’s no problem.”

The children were exhausted and had begun to cry. “There’s no problem,” Elham said. “We paid a lot of money to put everything in order.” And he added—perhaps with a gleam in his eye, since he was about to recover a morsel of all that Pakistan had taken from him: “If you want, I’ll call the brother of the senior official right now.”

“No, no, don’t call. Your documents are fine.”

Passports stamped—the last trace of Pakistan. The family started toward the departure gate, but the immigration officer had one more thing to say.

“If they hadn’t reported your names to us, we wouldn’t have allowed you to leave from here. We would have deported you to Afghanistan tonight.”

“Why?”

Elham would never forget the answer.

“Because you are Afghans.”

On the sidewalk outside the departures hall of Terminal 1 at Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport, a dark-haired little girl in a yellow T-shirt is running toward me with outstretched arms. A minute later, in pictures taken by my daughter, Elham, Safia, Victoria, and Yusuf look impossibly young and hopeful.

And now they live in Madrid. Elham quickly mastered the metro, and Safia is competing with her husband in language acquisition, and Victoria and Yusuf love riding on playground swing sets. The Spanish government provides temporary housing in a neighborhood of outer Madrid, three meals a day, metro cards, Spanish lessons, recreational activities, and school for Victoria, while the family’s asylum request moves through the system. All alone in this strange country, Safia and Elham are determined to learn, work, and build a life for their children.

One day, Elham showed me a picture of a small desktop stand on which he’d placed the flags of Afghanistan and the United States. It made my heart sink. America didn’t deserve his unrequited loyalty. “Why not the Spanish flag?” I asked. After all, Spain had given his family the second chance that America denied them. Elham agreed: He would put a Spanish flag alongside the other two, which, he told me, stood for the bond between us.

When the Trump administration locked out Safia’s family and nearly all refugees, the rest of the world did the same. Pakistan and Iran have deported millions of Afghans back into misery; Canada, Australia, and other countries known for humanitarianism have narrowed the pathway to safety; most of Europe has shut itself off from desperate and oppressed people. Safia’s younger sister, a talented artist and writer, is stuck in Afghanistan, trying to resist a forced marriage to a Talib. Elham’s brother is being held in a Taliban prison because of Elham’s military service. It’s impossible for me to appreciate Spain’s generosity to this family without also thinking of the scale of injustice around the world, the toll of countless humiliations.

At night Safia still dreams of Pakistan. “It is as if our bodies have left, but part of our souls are still trying to escape,” she told me. “Those days left such deep marks on our spirits.” But after many years of only surviving, she said, “little by little I feel that a new chapter is opening before us. For the first time in a long time, alongside all the pain, I can also feel hope. I can feel that maybe life still holds beauty for us.”

The Final Hours: An Afghan family’s flight to safety
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We were doing well when I left

Tom Stevenson
London Review of Books
21 May 2026
Choosing Defeat: The Twenty-Year Saga of How America Lost Afghanistan 
by Paul D. Miller.
Cambridge, 545 pp., £35, October 2025, 978 1 009 61437 5

The United States​ brought the war on terror to practically every part of the world – landing military advisers on the Sulu archipelago in the Philippines, operating black sites in Poland and Romania, filling the cages of Guantánamo Bay. But the challenge to American power presented by the 11 September attacks came from a particular region: what Adam Garfinkle, a future speechwriter for both Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, referred to in 1999 as the Greater Middle East. Iraq would suffer what George W. Bush’s vice president, Dick Cheney, called the ‘full wrath of the United States of America’. Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia were subjected to a drone assassination programme. Iran was placed ‘right at the top of the list’ of America’s enemies by Cheney – even if it took his successors another two decades to get round to attacking it. But Afghanistan occupied a special place. The US would use the country, as Douglas Feith, who served in Bush’s administration, later put it, to ‘send signals to the Libyas, and the Syrias, and the Sudans, and the Iraqs and the Irans’. Once thought of as ‘the other war’ or the ‘good war’, Afghanistan became the forever war. By the time it ended in 2021 at least 175,000 people had been killed, not counting the far larger number of deaths caused indirectly by disease and malnutrition.

The basic story of the war can be told in relatively simple terms. A complacent empire struck at from its furthest periphery sought brutal retribution and enacted a bloody occupation. Eventually it grew tired and withdrew, leaving behind no great transformation. Many of those who had been involved in the war’s inception saw the chaotic Nato withdrawal in August 2021 as a betrayal both of Afghanistan and of the project of American power in the world. There are still eccentrics who believe the occupation failed because the US and its lieutenants were insufficiently committed to terrorising the locals. As with Iraq, the war in Afghanistan is not yet widely acknowledged to have been a crime rather than just a mistake, but even the political establishment in the West sees it as a cautionary tale.

An effort to rehabilitate the memory of the war may therefore seem to have a certain romantic quality. A former CIA officer enlisted in the war effort, Paul Miller is one of the few US officials of that period who focused his career on Afghanistan. From the CIA he made his way to the staff of Douglas Lute, adviser on Iraq and Afghanistan to both George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Between 2007 and 2009 Miller was director for Afghanistan and Pakistan on the US National Security Council, and was in the room when many of the major decisions of the war were taken. He has now set out to rescue its reputation from posterity. In his account, it was embarked on with fine intentions, even if it was conducted with carelessness. It dragged on for two decades and ended in a loss, but only because ‘every president who oversaw the war made major strategic errors’: Bush decided to invade Iraq; Obama announced the timeline for withdrawal during the surge; Trump gave the game away to the Taliban by negotiating that withdrawal; and Biden conducted the coup de grâce. If it hadn’t been for all that, the American adventure in Afghanistan could have been won.

Whether or not a war is winnable depends on its objectives. According to Miller, Afghanistan was ‘a clear-cut just war of self-defence’ which ‘just happened to require liberating an oppressed people’. In common with most accounts of the war, his neglects to mention that in September 2001 Afghanistan was in a state of incipient famine. In 1999 and 2000, the country had suffered drought and crop failures. A joint UN Food and Agriculture Organisation and World Food Programme mission found the ‘almost total failure of the 2001 harvest’, reporting that five million people would require international food shipments to survive. When the bombing campaign began that October the aid agencies were forced to suspend this programme. Médecins sans Frontières warned that ‘the air strikes, lack of aid and onset of winter will only magnify this catastrophe.’ Mass starvation was avoided by the concerted action of relief agencies when the air campaign abated in December 2001. But in September, when the decision was taken to attack, it wasn’t clear that this would be possible. No one seemed to care very much.

Miller argues that carpet-bombing perhaps the poorest country on earth as it faced famine was the only option. The standard argument used to justify the invasion was that the Taliban and al-Qaida were bound together by pact and thus were ‘indistinguishable’. But even if one were to accept that argument, the Taliban had no capacity to resist US action, so America could have ignored it – concentrating instead on trying to capture the al-Qaida leadership. This was never considered. As Donald Rumsfeld, the US secretary of defence, said in December 2001, ‘If you walked in and said “Here is Mr bin Laden” the problem would not go away.’ The invasion was ineffective in targeting al-Qaida’s leaders, who largely survived it and evaded capture. Some were captured at Tora Bora, but bin Laden lived for another decade, until the raid on Abbottabad. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was captured in 2003, not by American soldiers but by Pakistan’s intelligence agency, the ISI, in Rawalpindi. Abu Hamza Rabia and Abu Laith al-Libi were assassinated by drone strikes in Waziristan in 2005 and 2008. Ayman al-Zawahiri survived numerous assassination attempts by drone before he was killed in Kabul in 2022.

Defences of the initial invasion often put great emphasis on the fact that the US had offered the Taliban the chance to surrender. Shortly after the 11 September attacks, the CIA’s Islamabad station chief, Bob Grenier, travelled to Quetta to meet the Taliban leaders Abdul Jalil Akhund and Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, who told him that the Taliban ‘would not risk the destruction of their nation for the sake of one man’. The CIA director at the time, George Tenet, is said to have passed a message via the ISI to the Taliban’s supreme leader, Mullah Omar, to say that the Taliban could avoid war if they gave up bin Laden. Omar refused to do so without proof that he had been responsible for 9/11. In Miller’s version, Bush and Cheney were models of emollience, and the fact that the US began marshalling its proxy forces on 12 September is merely evidence of prudent planning. But the idea that there was a real American attempt to avoid war is challenged by all serious scholarship. The US never entertained any option other than a full attack on Afghanistan. One reason for the Taliban’s obstinacy may have been that they knew what they were dealing with. As Wendy Chamberlin, the US ambassador to Pakistan, put it, ‘there was no inclination in Washington to engage in a dialogue with the Taliban.’ Miller disputes this. But the US certainly knew its demand that the Taliban hand over the al-Qaida leadership would never be accepted. As Bush himself would later write, it was intended to ‘firm up our justification for a military strike’.

The attack on Afghanistan began on 7 October and employed a combination of tactics – aerial bombardment and special forces working with local proxies. The CIA arrived in the Panjshir Valley with guns and cash for the Northern Alliance, a collection of mostly Tajik and Uzbek warlords who had a long history of collaborating with the agency – some of them had been involved in the destruction of Kabul in the 1990s after the fall of the communist regime. CIA officers handed $100,000 in cash to Abdulrab Rasul Sayyaf (who had palled around with bin Laden in the past). The UK Special Boat Service embedded with Abdul Rashid Dostum, whose men would soon herd hundreds of Taliban supporters into shipping containers to be suffocated to death, before bulldozing their bodies into holes in the desert. The notion that the CIA teamed up with Dostum, Fahim Khan and Gul Agha Sherzai to secure the principled liberation of Afghanistan is ludicrous, but Miller never questions it.

The air campaign mirrored the brutality meted out by the US’s local auxiliaries. Miller quotes Ryan Crocker, America’s first chargé d’affaires in Kabul, who described the devastation. ‘Just driving in from Bagram to Kabul, not a building standing ... whole city blocks of Kabul were gone,’ Crocker wrote. ‘It looked like pictures of Berlin in 1945.’ (This description is offered not as a reflection on the attack but to demonstrate the need for reconstruction programmes.) In only two months the US had achieved what it thought was a ‘stunning victory’. As the Taliban leadership withdrew to Pakistan, the CIA rode into Kabul and took over the Ariana Hotel. Tens of thousands of Northern Alliance supporters sought their share of the spoils. The ease of the assault demonstrated the weakness of the Taliban state that was allegedly ‘protecting’ bin Laden, who sought the safety of the Spin Ghar mountains rather than a Taliban bunker.

By early 2002 the US believed it had won the war. Miller thinks in hindsight that the ‘light footprint’ of the early occupation was a mistake. It doesn’t help his argument that the examples he offers of successful state-building by the US and its allies are the Balkans, Sierra Leone and Liberia. The merits and demerits of state-building were much debated. But in 2002 the US wasn’t willing to spend much on Afghanistan (the easy money didn’t start flowing until much later). Miller argues that the US prioritised counterterrorism and set aside ‘virtually no resources’ for roads, schools and hospitals during the first two years of the occupation. Having spent $4.5 billion on three months of war, it set up a paper-thin transitional government on shoestring funds.

The Afghan Interim Administration and the Transitional Administration that succeeded it were dressed up as governments, but in practice they were satrapies dependent on external sponsorship. Hamid Karzai was chosen to lead the administration because of his American connection, his claim to a Pashtun lineage and because unlike Zahir Shah – another possibility – he hadn’t once been king. Days before the invasion the CIA had told Karzai, then in Pakistan, to get on his motorbike and enter the country. With his past support for the Taliban absolved, the Americans gave him a security team. After he was informed by a satellite phone call from Bonn that he would head the new government he started travelling around with American bodyguards. Almost all the political figures in post-invasion Afghanistan had ties of some sort to US intelligence. And as Miller notes, ‘for all intents and purposes, there was no government outside of Kabul and a few provincial capitals well into 2005.’

In a story brimming with failures Miller sees the internationally sponsored government in Kabul as one of the ‘islands of success’, crediting Karzai’s administration with producing ‘a more open society’. Miller praises the new Afghan army and police forces for fighting off the Taliban for more than a decade. But while they were supposed to be building a professional army, US forces were hiring local militia members whenever they needed muscle. America spent billions of dollars on anti-narcotics programmes; the result was a net increase in poppy cultivation. Miller claims to admire the work of the academic Thomas Barfield on the American state-building endeavour. But unlike Miller, Barfield saw that post-invasion Afghanistan was a corrupt paper state dependent on international donations, offering little to the population and subject to the final authority of the US empire. As he put it in 2010, the ‘unexpected measure of goodwill from the Afghan people in 2002 was heedlessly squandered in the coming years by inept policies that failed to bring security to many regions’.

Soon enough the Taliban recovered from its defeat. It started ambushing coalition forces, downing helicopters, attacking the funerals of collaborating clerics and conducting suicide operations at Bagram airbase, withdrawing into tribal Pakistan when necessary. The British army redeployed to Helmand in 2006 in the hope that a reputation destroyed in Iraq might be rescued by fighting the insurgency alongside the reasonable Canadians and Dutch. But in the event they often ended up fuelling the violent conflict they were ostensibly there to prevent. That is, when they weren’t executing farmers in their beds in front of their wives. Somehow this didn’t help eliminate support for the Taliban.

Miller tries to finesse this by arguing that if the occupation forces behaved poorly it is because there were too few of them, and that if there had been more they might have been more professional. But given his claims about the merits of the occupation it’s unclear why he thinks there was an insurgency at all. His view seems to be that the Taliban, by some metaphysical means, conjured up a bitter struggle across the country against an impeccable project. When American planners realised how severe the insurgency was they sent in the marines, who couldn’t speak the local languages, to train Afghan police and soldiers who couldn’t speak English. Young men were plucked from their villages, given a couple of weeks of training and then sent to man rural checkpoints. In the best-case scenario, they answered to the corrupt Ministry of the Interior in Kabul; often they ended up working with the Taliban. Miller says he knew at the time that the situation was ‘dire’. But it’s difficult to square that with his general claim, which is that if the cheques for the phantom Afghan army brigades had arrived a year earlier it would all have been different.

Obama​ entered office in 2009 believing that the situation in Afghanistan could be turned around. The first year of his presidency put paid to that. His two major innovations were the drone campaign in Waziristan and the surge. In February 2009, the US deployed 21,000 more soldiers and another 30,000 arrived in December. At the height of the surge there were 150,000 US and coalition troops in the country. Miller is very critical of Obama’s decision to put a public timetable on the surge (stating that the bulk of US forces would return home in July 2011), which he sees as the hinge point in the whole war. The timetable was intended to send a message to the government in Kabul that it had a limited amount of time to get its act together, but in fact the pre-announcement meant that the Taliban knew when the American push would end. The surge ensured there were plenty of American soldiers around, but it also drew closer attention to the nature of the Afghan government, which was festering in a way that was obvious even to the US officials who visited. When Richard Holbrooke, the US special representative, and Vice President Joe Biden met Karzai they immediately saw the problem. In 2009, Holbrooke and Karzai tried to rig the upcoming elections in different directions. In the resulting mess Karzai remained in place. Miller holds the view that it was a great moral achievement that a certain percentage of women won office in these fraudulent elections – presumably so they could work alongside the CIA assets in the cabinet.

Miller is preoccupied by the reason American officials, and Americans in general, thought of the war in Afghanistan in the way they did. He records that in 2001 the war had near unanimous support in the US, and still had substantial majority support in 2008. But by the end of the surge in 2012 enthusiasm had been replaced by a sense of futility. Miller chalks some of this up to a ‘mood music of pessimism that would swell throughout the war’. But the real reason the Obama administration scaled back its ambitions was the feeling that the whole thing was beyond repair. Though the US is thought to have provided more than $130 billion to the Afghan state between 2002 and 2021, most of it went straight to security forces and much of the rest was siphoned off to accounts in the Gulf and Switzerland. Looked at from this perspective, the war in Afghanistan wasn’t ‘wasteful’ so much as an efficient vehicle for the transfer of public funds to arms companies and contractors.

The American military commanders and political appointees who circled in and out of Afghanistan in those years tended to cling to a common delusion. Miller has interviewed plenty who believe they made great progress when they were there – a sentiment captured in the phrase ‘we were doing well when I left.’ He is kinder to those who opposed withdrawal. Leon Panetta, CIA director and then secretary of defence under Obama, tells Miller it was an achievement that ‘for twenty years we were able to prevent Afghanistan from collapsing and having the Taliban take over.’ Some officials knew how bad the situation was. Miller takes to task Chuck Hagel, Panetta’s successor at the Pentagon, for believing the US was losing while also wanting to withdraw (if the war was being lost, that should have been an argument for persevering). The fate of the surge was another example of a lack of commitment among American political leaders to ‘the moral necessity of victory in a just cause’.

The first time US officials made formal contact with the Taliban was in 2010, when a former aide to Mullah Omar came to Munich. The US insisted the Taliban accept principles (inclusion, pluralism) that it claimed were hallmarks of the administration it had erected in Kabul. The Taliban said it wouldn’t talk to Karzai. It was two years before the talks were picked up again. The second round of negotiations was half-hearted, but it did lead to the establishment of the Taliban office in Doha, which Karzai worried might look like a government in exile. The main problem the US had in dealing with the Taliban was that it had little to offer: its soldiers were already going home in advance of a planned full handover to the Afghan government. But the Kabul administration was already starting to lose territory. Narrow defeats for government forces in 2014 were followed by routs in Kunduz and Helmand in 2015. Obama was soon talking of bringing the war to a ‘responsible conclusion’. Miller credits Peter Lavoy, a veteran of the national security bureaucracy, with persuading Obama not to withdraw in 2016 and to keep 12,000 troops in place.

From then on the occupation was a holding action. Most of the coalition soldiers were doing little fighting, with the exception of American and British special forces death squads, which continued to terrorise the countryside. When Trump entered office it was on a platform that included getting the US out of Afghanistan. But he ended up introducing another 3000 troops and increasing the rate of airstrikes. It wasn’t until September 2018 that he tasked the US special representative Zalmay Khalilzad and Mike Pompeo, the secretary of state, with reopening negotiations with the Taliban. The Doha Agreement signed by Pompeo and Abdul Ghani Baradar in February 2020 stipulated that the US would leave Afghanistan fourteen months later and that the Taliban would not give safe haven to al-Qaida (in addition to whatever was included in a classified annex about anti-terrorism co-operation). Khalilzad, who had been there from the start, knew the US presence had run its course, but seems to have believed that the government in Kabul would persist in some form for longer than it did.

The Taliban began its offensive just after May 2021, the withdrawal deadline in the agreement. The Afghan army nominally had more than 200,000 men and should have been capable of holding the territory Kabul controlled. But the real function of the Afghan army units wasn’t to fight: it was to reinforce the political balance in Kabul. Miller blames the US for withdrawing military supplies to the Afghan helicopter fleet, which is fair enough. Still, there’s no reason to think this would have changed anything. In August the Taliban captured all the provincial capitals, including Kabul, in a matter of days. Ashraf Ghani, who had become president in 2014, fled to Uzbekistan and then to the UAE.

The debacle of the US withdrawal, being closer to us in time, now looms larger than most of the malfeasances of the war itself. The US had to scramble to evacuate more than 100,000 people in two weeks. A suicide bombing at Hamid Karzai airport in Kabul killed 170 Afghans and 13 US troops. In return a US drone strike killed ten Afghan civilians (seven of them children). Miller considers the withdrawal the core defeat of the war and an unnecessary act of abandonment. If the government in Kabul was still unable to govern the country after twenty years, all the more reason to stay. The forever war, he argues, ‘was affordable, sustainable, and successful at the bare minimum goal of keeping the lid on Afghanistan’. He comes down hard on Biden for going through with the withdrawal, and charges him with thinking that the war in Afghanistan was fundamentally similar to the Vietnam War (of which Miller also seems to think Biden was too critical). He makes no mention of the Parthian shot of freezing the assets of Afghanistan’s central bank during yet another humanitarian crisis.

In reality, since the early days of the Obama administration US leaders had often seen Afghanistan as an extravagance they could no longer afford. As early as 2009, the political scientist Robert Jervis argued that the presence of the international coalition was a problem in itself. The Taliban had roots in Afghan society: it was never going to be excluded from the country’s future. ‘Withdrawal without winning’ was the probable result. Jervis argued that if the Taliban simply took over, as was likely, the US would not be threatened to a significant degree. And the supposed reputational damage was exaggerated. Would the US really ‘appear more resolute – and wiser – for fighting in Afghanistan’? If not, why not withdraw?

Despite years of discussion of the prospect, the withdrawal was greeted in much of the American press with hysterical laments over the death of the American empire. Miller is unwilling to reckon with the possibility that the manner of the war’s end revealed something about its nature. He refers to the withdrawal as ‘the Versailles of the war on terror’, a comparison that speaks for itself. But the scarpering retreat can be counted among the war’s less shameful episodes. In April 2023, Biden’s White House published its official version of events, in which it blamed the Trump administration for the loss of territory to the Taliban, and US intelligence agencies for excessively sanguine assessments of the Kabul government. The withdrawal was justified by two conflicting claims. The US ‘had become bogged down in a war in Afghanistan with unclear objectives and no end in sight’, but it had also ‘accomplished its mission in Afghanistan’. The report’s conclusion was more plausible: ‘The speed and ease with which the Taliban took control of Afghanistan suggests that there was no scenario – except a permanent and significantly expanded US military presence – that would have changed the trajectory.’

Because the war dragged on for as long as it did (Afghanistan is officially the longest war in US history), substantial reflections on its legacy appeared quite quickly. In 2021, Carter Malkasian published a major history of the war that made stinging criticisms of practically every facet of the undertaking. His conclusion was that the US had reanimated a brutal civil war and that the international intervention was ‘a blight on the peace and wellbeing of the people of Afghanistan’. Miller is superficially respectful of the breadth of Malkasian’s knowledge and his access to Pashto sources, but still accuses him of adopting the Taliban perspective. Lapsing into the rhetorical style of the early 2000s, he charges Malkasian with believing ‘the United States was an illegitimate, occupying power’ and implying ‘moral equivalence between the mistakes of the American war and the tyranny of Taliban rule’.

Miller himself sees the war in Afghanistan as a classic defeat of the will. If the US and its accomplices had summoned the fortitude, the war could have been won. There is a clear echo here of the idea that the US lost the Vietnam War on the home front – a view popular among former officials involved in its conduct. Perhaps it is more convenient, in both cases, to believe this than to accept that you have helped lead your country into a futile war that killed tens of thousands of people. The US may have ‘fought a selfish war with little regard for the Afghans’. But that was incidental. Another war had been possible. Just think, the US could still be in Afghanistan today.

Miller claims his book is a re-examination of the war and his part in it. But it is closer to an apologia. So much that is relevant to the story is absent. Torture plays little role in his account, despite its centrality to the spirit of those years. The name Salt Pit – a CIA black site near Kabul – does not appear. Neither does the Patriot Act. The only reference to special forces death squads is hidden in brief remarks about green berets ‘kicking down doors and doing night raids and putting bullets into bodies’. As for the role the US played in Afghanistan in the 1980s and 1990s, which created the conditions that attracted al-Qaida, Miller seems to think it better ignored. Only once is some introspection evident, when he admits that, fifteen years into the war, he came to the realisation that the public at home thought of ‘the American war in Afghanistan primarily as a war of retribution’.

American military power coloured by fantasies of retribution is once again being visited on the Greater Middle East. When the US and Israel began their deranged attack on Iran earlier this year, Trump referred to Afghanistan as the kind of debacle typical of his predecessors – one he would avoid. Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defence, stressed that Iran would not be ‘endless’ like Afghanistan but ‘realistic’. Holman Jenkins, a member of the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal, which has strongly supported the war in Iran, noted that even though ‘Afghanistan went on for twenty years’ it did not fatally injure the political prospects of the political leaders who prosecuted it. ‘Trump’s war is looking like a bargain in comparison and, by certain measures, even a victory.’

Who would want to rescue the reputation of the war in Afghanistan? Despite the efforts of some of those involved, its legacy is unlikely to improve with time and scrutiny. But bitter tastes fade. It’s possible to imagine a future in which disaster in Iran flatters by comparison the war in Afghanistan. The war was destructive for Afghanistan, but it wasn’t all that bloody for the home troops. And think of all the civilising we did. The tactics of mass torture and humanitarian bombing campaigns might be needed again. The damage the Afghanistan war did to America’s global position would be insignificant compared with the worst outcomes of the present war in Iran. Perhaps Afghanistan will once again come to be seen as a model rather than a warning.

 

We were doing well when I left
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No Flamingos, but Ducks, Geese and Grebes: Afghanistan joins an international bird census 

The first survey of birds to be carried out by an Afghan organisation since the fall of the Islamic Republic has taken place. It was also the first time that Afghanistan has taken part in the annual International Waterbird Census, a global effort involving 189 countries. A volunteer team, including expert ornithologists, visited six wetland sites, all potentially important stopover sites on the Central Asian Flyway, the mass migration of birds that takes place twice a year, between winter feeding grounds in India/Pakistan and summer breeding grounds in Central Asia and Siberia. That migration had yet to start when the survey took place, but volunteers from a new Afghan conservation NGO, Organization Rewild, assessed resident and over-wintering birds and habitats in places that might provide a safe place for birds to stop and rest – or possibly not, writes AAN’s Kate Clark, given the dangers posed to them by hunters and the drying up of wetlands. 

Waterbirds at Sardeh Dam, Ghazni province. Photo: Organization Rewild, 2026

Traveling across frozen valleys and remote wetlands, the team from Organization Rewild (OR) surveyed six key wetlands, from the reservoirs of the Kabul River to the reed-filled marshes of the Amu Darya floodplains, counted waterbirds, assessed habitat conditions, spoke with local communities about changes they have witnessed over the years, and walked across the dry basin of Ab-i-Estada – once a sanctuary for flamingos and a resting place for the now-lost Sibe­rian Crane of Central Asia. Shepherds spoke of lakes that no longer fill as they once did. Farmers described shifting seasons. Yet in hidden marshes along the Amu Darya, reeds still sheltered wintering birds, reminding the team that nature’s resilience has not disappeared. 
In this way, the volunteer scientists from a new NGO, Organization Rewild[1] began their account of their survey of six Afghan wetlands (read it on this map by clicking on Afghanistan). Afghanistan has been important for migrating birds, a place to rest on their great flight north in the spring and south in the autumn. Yet, over the last few decades, it has become more difficult for the flocks to land safely, as historic wetlands have dried up because of climate change and the extraction of ground water, and habitats and birds threatened by the encroachment of agriculture, pollution and hunting.[2]

The CEO of Organization Rewild, Ayub Alavi, has spent many years in conservation, working mainly with communities to establish protected areas, and in management and planning, including, most recently, setting up Rewild. Surveying birds was a new experience: “Joining the team in the field,” he said, “learning so much, was a joyful experience. I was so happy to get out, to travel and do some fieldwork.” They were fortunate, he said, to have two experienced ornithologists on the team: Mirza Hussain Rezai, who has ten years’ experience in wildlife monitoring and conservation projects, and Sayed Naqibullah Mostafawi, with 20 years’ experience, during which time, he has recorded 600 species of birds in Afghanistan, including the large-billed reed warbler, that had not been seen anywhere for a hundred years (AAN). The fourth team member, Noorullah Ahmadzai, is a para-veterinarian and climate adaptation expert.

The survey was undertaken as part of the International Waterbird Census, which has been carried out every year since 1967. “From coastal areas in northern Europe to tropical estuaries in Asia and Africa,” its website says, “volunteers and professionals alike,” have been joining “this global citizen science effort dedicated to tracking the health of waterbird populations and the wetlands they depend on.” For Organization Rewild, the survey was an opportunity to re-establish baseline information on wetland habitats and their waterbird populations, identify priorities for future wetland conservation and research but also to use the survey to work with Afghanistan’s national environmental authorities about the need for wetland conservation measures.

Organization Rewild’s team at work at Sardeh Dam. Photo: Organization Rewild, 2026.
The wetlands surveyed

Organization Rewild carried out its survey at the start of the year when many lakes and wetlands in Afghanistan are frozen, so they focused on six that they expected to be at least partially clear of ice and suitable for waterbirds. Two are natural wetlands:

Amu Darya Marshes at Sasukkhol (Ai Khanum), Dasht-e Qala district, Takhar province – a floodplain on the Amu Darya;

Ab-e Istada in Nawa district, Ghazni province, an alkaline lake, lying in a large depression created by the Chaman Fault system in the southern foothills of the Hindu Kush, fed largely by groundwater. Two rivers, the Ghazni and Gardez, also drain into Ab-e Istada, but rarely, is there any outflow (ie, it is endorheic). Before the war, the government had designated it a Waterfowl and Flamingo Sanctuary, with guards posted to prevent egg collection or other disturbance.

The other four sites are reservoirs. The first three were built for hydroelectricity and are collectively recognised as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International:

Naghlu Dam in Sarobi district, Kabul province, built in the 1960s on the Kabul River;

Sarobi Dam, a smaller reservoir in the same district, eight kilometres south of Naghlu, where the Panjshir River joins the Kabul River, built in the 1950s;

Darunta Dam near Jalalabad city in Nangrahar province, further down the Kabul River, also dating from the 1960s.

The fourth reservoir was built to ensure water supply:

Sardeh Dam in Andar district of Ghazni province, fed by snowmelt from the mountains to the northeast which flows into the Gardez River (aka Jilga River, aka Sardeh River), built in the 1960s to ensure water supply to the south of Ghazni province.

The Wetlands of Afghanistan, with those surveyed in January 2026 in red. Source: Organization Rewild

The best site, and the one which most surprised the team, was Sardeh Dam, which had not been monitored in the past. It offered, said Alavi “some opportunities for conservation, with acceptable outcomes, provided there were good efforts.” Sardeh supported the highest abundance and concentration of waterbirds recorded during the survey, especially in the shallower, more extensive eastern section, although its margins were being encroached on by farming. A deeper western basin next to the dam has some recreational infrastructure developed along its southern shore, including a pedal boat operation. The team counted 45 different species at Sardeh, many in sizeable numbers – almost 300 common teal, more than 600 mallard and almost 2000 Eurasian coots (see the list of birds at the end of this report for all six sites).

At Sarobi, the team had expected “a good number of birds, but because of net fishing and hunting – human activities,” said Alavi, “the birds couldn’t settle.” While it had the highest concentration of waterbirds of any site monitored in the eastern region, they were in far fewer numbers than at Sardeh, both species (19) and individuals – 32 teal and 18 coots, but still 256 mallard. The team observed little birdlife at Darunta – just 15 species. “Most obvious,” said Alavi, “was a group of black kites (Milvus migrans) roosting along the western side of the reservoir on one of the islands, playing with a piece of plastic – taking it for prey.”

At Naghlu, 12 species were observed, of which only four were waterbirds. At all three of the sites along the Kabul River, said Alavi, the team witnessed “the usual issue with any dam – there’s not been enough maintenance, and we see agricultural run-off, extending into what was wetland.” The result? “A space that was water is now salt, dust and soil.” Water levels were down, and around Sarobi and Darunta what had been marshy wetlands on the margins of the reservoirs were now being farmed. In the dry season, the team’s survey report (seen by the author) said, water from the Kabul River, which first enters Naghlu, is largely “untreated urban wastewater… a major source of pollution affecting the surface water quality of the reservoir and the outgoing downstream flows.”

On its visit to Ab-e Istada (a name that means ‘standing water’), the Rewild team found no ab whatsoever. This wetland had once measured approximately 13,000 hectares, including a surrounding mudflat zone ranging from 0.5 to 7 km deep (Scott). In 2026, said Alavi, Ab-e Istada was “entirely dry. There were no waterbirds at all.” He said that if there was water there in the spring, even temporarily, migrating birds might stop, “but it would be hard to restore its flamingo habitat.” That was a reference to a greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) colony, first mentioned by Babur, founder of the Moghul empire, that the emperor encountered in 1504 on his way from Dera Ghazi Khan to Ghazni and Kabul:

When we still had one körüh to go to Ab-e Istada, we became witnesses of a splendorous spectacle: From time to time, a red glow lit up, almost as the shine of the afterglow. … When we came closer we realized that this were gigantic swarms of wild flamingos.

Babur wrote that there were more than 10,000 or even 20,000 birds. AAN’s Thomas Ruttig cites this (with some interesting questions about translation) and mid-twentieth-century surveys putting the number of flamingos at 1,000 (1965), 4,000 (1966), 5,100, plus 1,000 young birds that had hatched on some of the islands (1969) and 2,900, with almost 12,000 at another site, Ab-e Nawur, also in Ghazni (1970). “Some flamingos were caught for the Kabul Zoo and successfully raised there,” wrote Ruttig, citing German ornithologist, Gunther Nogge. “Apart from the flamingos, some 40 other species of birds were spotted, among them different kinds of cranes and seagulls, herons, spoonbills, brown ibises, geese and ducks.” Historically, bird counts (from 1959 and 1977) at Ab-e Istada and the surrounding area comprised 122 species (cited by conservation biologist, Ahmad Khan).

Ruttig writes of the drying up of this wetland in the 1970s during the terrible drought of 1971, when snow and rain failed across Afghanistan. Even before that, in 1970, the newly built Sardeh dam had blocked one of the tributaries flowing into the wetland, reducing the water supply. That year, the water level dropped low enough for people to wade across to the islands where the flamingos bred. German ornithologists found evidence of hunting, which would have prevented any breeding.

A 2003 visit by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) found the lakebed and inflow rivers completely dry and the water table approximately three metres below surface level. It said that, according to local people, “the lake has dried each year since 1999. In spring 2002 the lake filled for a brief period but was dry again within 10-15 days.” Locals reported that no flamingos had bred successfully for the previous four years. UNEP did observe numerous falcon trappers on the dry flats, looking for saker (Falco cherrug) and peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus), which, it said, could be sold to local dealers for as much as USD 3,400. It also said local people were “active waterfowl and flamingo hunters.” A 2006 survey by Ahmad Khan described a lake of 13,000 hectares, surrounded by 14,000 hectares of mudflats. With good rains, Ab-e Istada may fill temporarily. However, droughts – now occurring more frequently and more severely because of the climate crisis – tube-well extraction of groundwater, encroachment of agriculture and the damming of one of the inflow rivers, suggest this wetland habitat may be lost. When the Rewild team visited, they observed just seven species, none of which were waterbirds. “There were only larks on the dry bed,” said Alavi, “and it was being grazed by sheep.”

The team found a more mixed picture at the Amu Darya wetlands. It comprises, they wrote, “heavily degraded riverine and floodplain wetland systems. At present, only fragmented remnants of these habitats persist, characterized by reedbeds, in­terspersed with stands [of] bushes along [the] riverbanks and on alluvial islands.” The Imam Sahib and Darqad areas have been recognised as Important Bird Areas (IBAs) by BirdLife International and were once designated a Royal Hunting Preserve. The team found one relatively intact area at Sasukhkol in Dasht-e Qala district. It lies at the confluence of the Panj and Kokcha Rivers and comprises approximately 450 hectares of marshland and riparian (river) woodland, in two patches, roughly two and six kilometres, respectively northeast of the Ai Khanoum archaeological site. This is one of the “last relatively intact wetlands … along the Amu Darya River in this region,” said the team, an example of a rare riverside ecosystem, once widespread in the floodplains and valleys of the arid regions of Central Asia. A 2007 survey by Stéphane Ostrowski, Ali Madad Rajabi & Hafizullah Noori for the Wildlife Conservation Society described the area:

With its diverse stands of poplar and willow trees and its shrubs of various genera such as Tamarix, Elaeagmus, and Hippophae, along with its patchwork of tall reed grass communities and grassland clearings, [which] offer oases for resident and migratory wildlife species. The Tugai forest ecosystem is also a resource of great value for water and soil conservation. It has evolved over thousands of years in response to successive periods of harsh and moist conditions. Typically Tugai areas are continuous but often narrow strips of forested areas along river valleys and constitute important corridors for wildlife. 

Yet, often, the 2007 surveyors wrote, tugai areas are the most fertile lands that can be irrigated and most have been converted to agriculture. What is left suffers from logging and grazing. Its destruction, it warns, “leads to an increase in river flow fluctuations, and river-bank erosion. In Afghanistan the last strongholds of this rare and fragile habitat are located on the relatively less accessible islands of the Amu Darya River.” The 2007 surveyors counted 72 species of birds in this area. Two decades later, in 2026, the Rewild team observed 21 species, including 13 waterbirds, but, their report said, the “presence of extensive dense marsh vegetation limited full visual coverage of the … area.”  They thought Sasukhkol could still provide suitable wintering and stopover habitat for waterbirds migrating along the Central Asian Flyway, albeit with some trepidation:

The wetland’s persistence to date has largely been due to the presence of permanently flooded and swampy basins, which have limited land conversion for agriculture and grazing. Extensive reedbeds con­tinue to offer important wintering and roosting habitat for waterbirds. The birds seem to be very calm and not very scared of nearby people. However, this condition is beginning to change, as border-control and trade in­frastructure are being developed in the area, along with the emergence of small-scale gold extraction activities. These developments pose increasing risks of habitat degradation and disturbance. 

Habitat degradation, they wrote, “is approaching critical levels, as much of the surrounding landscape has already been convert­ed to agricultural land and pasture, and large areas of swamp woodland have been cleared.” Artisan goldmining is also changing the land (see AAN’s August 2025 report, with details on goldmining in Takhar). There was one bright spot: “Field observations about [the] tameness of the waterbirds suggest that bird hunting pressure may currently be limited at this site.”

As to the general conclusion of the teams’ survey of eight wetlands, “Compared with reports from the past,” said Alavi, “the situation is not good. The birdlife is under stress and pressure. It’s very difficult to get a full picture because there are many wetlands we’ve not yet been able to visit. There are at least 28 sites that we’d like to visit. But from those we have seen, the picture is really not good.”

List of bird species observed at six wetlands in Afghanistan. Source: Organization Rewild, January 2026
Where are the birds?

Building up a regional picture of habitats and numbers and diversity of species is important for understanding how a phenomenon like the Central Asian Flyway is being affected by human activities, including the changing climate, and how birds may – or may not – be adapting. Alavi conjectured that the migrating flocks might, for example, have learned to avoid stopping on the Shomali plains, famous for its fowlers, and indeed, anywhere south of the Hindu Kush, if they possibly can.

“People play a major role in making it near to impossible for a healthy population of birds to overwinter and breed or stop over.” Those birds that survive trapping and shooting, he said, remember where to avoid and where it is safe to stop. “The birds may now be stopping in higher altitudes, far from communities, and if the weather allows, try to get as far as possible from people.” But, he said, “this needs a more in-depth and thorough assessment.”

The weather, Alavi said, is a crucial factor. Bad weather can mean migrating birds have no choice but to land near people, where there is “very little chance of them surviving.” In March last year, following two nights of heavy rain, he and Rezai had found a single hunter in Bagram district of Parwan province had captured 200 demoiselle cranes in one night. The birds had been forced to land in an area they would normally avoid as unsafe. Alavi and Rezai had been working on a project for the Wildlife Conservation Society, aimed at finding out more about the hunting and trapping of cranes in areas known for high hunting pressure during the migration period (report seen by author).

At the bird market in Kabul, Alavi and Rezai also found that, out of 15 shops they visited, two were selling live cranes – at a price of USD 100 for a pair. They also found three shops in Bagram District selling a total of 18 dead cranes for meat, each priced at about USD 7. In one village in Sayedkhel district, in Parwan province, they observed 13 trapping sites – artificial ponds surrounded by nets, with plastic lures and recordings of crane calls to attract birds in the hope of capturing them alive. Alavi and Rezai concluded that “most cranes taken in the Shomali Plain were captured for the pet trade, and a few were hunted for their meat.” The price of cranes has fallen significantly: in 2017, they were selling for USD 2,500, perhaps because there is less ‘easy money’ in Kabul to spend on luxuries, so less demand, or maybe the bad weather had driven supply up and prices down.

Demoiselle cranes (Grus virgo) that were captured after they were forced to land in bad weather in Bagram district of Kabul province, as they migrated north in spring 2025. Their eyes have been stitched shut to keep them calm and ease their domestication. They were to be sold in a local market, such as the Bird Market in Kabul, as pets. Photo: Ayub Alavi

The people of northern Shomali are famously avid hunters and trappers (see also a previous report by the author on a Bagram shopkeeper’s attempt to sell an inedible Great Black-Headed Gull, (Ichthyaetus ichthyaetus) as “very tasty” meat). The loss of adult and young birds during migration through these areas, write Alavi and Rezai, is thought to have been “the leading factor behind the decline and extinction of the Western Population of the Siberian Crane. Nowadays, the Demoiselle and Eura­sian cranes are the main species [that hunters] target between the last week of March and mid-April.”

An energetic response to a bleak outlook 

Despite the dismal picture for waterfowl and migrating birds presented by Organization Rewild’s survey, Alavi noted one positive – the good cooperation they had received from Afghanistan’s National Environment Protection Agency (NEPA). After they briefed NEPA on the survey, officials suggested they collaborate, for example, by the agency “dedicating staff to join us on field trips.” Alavi also said the head of NEPA suggested they provide NEPA with relevant reports, for example about hunting or conservation, that NEPA could use to lobby central government to better enforce the official ban on hunting (mentioned, for example, by Pajhwok). Better-managed wetland sites, where local communities are centrally involved, could bring benefits, and not just for birds and ecosystems: they can provide pleasant recreation sites, with the potential also for tourism.

Some joint work has now started. In March, ahead of the spring migration, Organization Rewild and NEPA set up a temporary Crane Conservation Taskforce which is carrying out, said Rewild, a media campaign highlighting “the prohibition of hunting, trapping, illegal trade and to avoid disturbance and to provide the safe passage for the cranes during the spring migration season across Afghanistan.” The taskforce has already undertaken field visits to stopover sites for migrant birds and known hunting hotspots. One was to the Shomali plain, lying across parts of Kapisa and Parwan provinces, north of Kabul, which functions, Rewild said, “as a critical migratory bottleneck for numerous bird species, including cranes, as they concentrate in this landscape prior to crossing the Hindu Kush range and continuing northward along the Central Asian Flyway.” It is also, as described previously, famous for its hunters.

The taskforce also visited Ab-e Istada in Ghazni where, Rewild says, the immediate need is to coordinate with the Ministry of Energy and Water and the relevant dam management authorities “to establish and maintain sustainable environmental flow regimes from the Sardeh and Hawz-e-Sultan Dams,” something which is critical to at least “partially restore hydrological conditions necessary for wetland recovery.” There is also a need to understand groundwater dynamics to to enable evidence-based water management and long-term restoration planning.”

One small, good piece of news is that, as of 7 April 2026, “following several days of sustained rainfall and the release of overflow from the Hawz-e-Sultan Dam [upstream of Ab-e Istada], reports indicated the presence of a substantial volume of water in this wetland.”

Alavi also spoke about how much conservation work there is to do. The team is keen to survey other wetlands, and other habitats where Afghanistan is important, such as the western deserts, with their endangered houbara bustards (Chlamydotis undulata), so beloved of Gulf Arab falconers, who have already hunted the species to near extinction in Arabia, but pay to come and hunt them in Pakistan and Afghanistan.[3] The team would also like to monitor vultures that migrate in spring and winter through the Salang Pass – lammergeiers (Gypaetus barbatus), Egyptian vultures (Neophron percnopterus) and griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus) – and work with local communities and government in the Bamyan plateau – important for birds of prey and mammals, and declared a protected landscape by the Republic. “Given the size and type of habitat,” said Alavi, “it would be a unique opportunity.”

Alavi’s experience is in community-based management of natural resources, but the hope is that the wetlands bird survey will be a first step in greater conservation efforts in Afghanistan. It was also important in its own right, the team wrote:

This was more than a bird count. It was a reconnection of Afghanistan to the global flyway, the first renewed national count. It re-establishes Afghanistan’s pres­ence in global waterbird monitoring and provides the first updated baseline in decades for some of the coun­try’s most important wetlands. The data will be shared with national authorities to support better wetland man­agement and conservation planning. 

Alavi recognises that, without funding, they could not replicate the methodology of earlier surveys, but even so, Organization Rewild’s 2026 Afghan wetlands bird survey, though limited, made plain the huge decline in habitats, in the number of species and the number of birds. The four-member team paid to carry out this research from their own pockets. Such voluntary work is unsustainable. Afghanistan certainly has the expert scientists to do far more, but without funding, it will be difficult to match outcomes with that expertise.

Edited by Fabrizio Foschini and Jelena Bjelica


References

References
1 Wetland, as defined by the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, adopted in 1971 in Iran, includes “areas of marsh, fen, peatland, or water, whether natural or artificial, permanent or temporary, with water that is static or flowing, fresh, brackish, or saline, including areas of marine water where the depth at low tide does not exceed six meters.”
2 Organization Rewild (OR) describes itself as a conservation institution that brings together a multidisciplinary team of Afghan conservation professionals with up to two decades of field and technical experience in wildlife conservation, protected area management, ecological monitoring, and community-based natural resource management (CBNRM), supported by an international Scientific Advisory Board providing remote technical guidance. The organization’s work is grounded in applied ecological research, participatory conservation planning, and long-term capacity development at local and national levels.Alavi said a grant of USD 2,000 from the international NGO, Wetlands International, and invaluable help from the Central Asian Conservation Network in connecting them to Wetlands International, had enabled the team to carry out the the wetland surveys and bird counts.
3 Permits to hunt houbaras were reported in the first Emirate, under the Republic (see the author’s Bird Bomber: Police kill ‘dangerous’ houbara bustard, AAN, 5 December 2014), and more recently under the second Emirate (see Amin Kawa Arab Hunters Given Access to Afghanistan’s Endangered Wildlife Under Taliban Sanction, Hasht-e Subh, 16 November 2025, and Fabrizio Foschini’s already cited, Of Hunters and Hunted (2): Falconry, bird smuggling and wildlife conservation).

 

No Flamingos, but Ducks, Geese and Grebes: Afghanistan joins an international bird census 
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Where is one of worst places to be a woman? Afghanistan.

The Conversation
Academic rigor, journalistic flair
Published: May 11, 2026

That’s what most people think when it comes to the topic of the women’s rights crisis under the ruling Taliban in Afghanistan. But this only tells part of the story.

Focusing on the word “rights” hides something more serious underneath: how people live and survive in this situation. What’s unfolding in Afghanistan is not just a women’s rights crisis, but a humanitarian disaster.

It affects how people access health care, education, food systems and basic supports and whether these system can function at all when half the population has been systematically removed from them. It forces families to deal with women’s limited access to work and services, often pushing households into deeper economic and social vulnerability.

The Taliban has steadily removed women from public spaces including work, health care and education. Recently, for example, female health-care workers were stopped at the gates of a United Nations office and banned from entering the facility by Taliban authorities.

These ongoing removals are incrementally creating a system that determines who has the right to exist, to provide assistance and to receive assistance.

What’s happening in Afghanistan is not simply gender discrimination; rather, it’s pushing an entire gender out of public systems altogether. The predicament of Afghan women is less a social problem and more a structural crisis that shapes institutions and everyday life.

Gender apartheid

This is why the situation in Afghanistan is increasingly referred to as a form of gender apartheid rather than a women’s rights crisis. The exclusion of women reveals how institutions are built and will be maintained in the future.

Gender apartheid refers to a situation in which people are banned from certain spaces or activities based on their gender identity.

This discriminatory and violent practice in Afghanistan has been widely documented and heavily reported on, but the situation continues to deteriorate daily.

Its effects are also accumulative, with each restriction reinforcing others and deepening the overall crisis. These systemic rights violations would be increasingly difficult to reverse even if political bodies and the ruling government changed tomorrow.

That’s because removing women from professional spaces leads to schools losing teachers, hospitals losing trained staff and aid networks losing access to half the population. And this loss isn’t temporary; it limits how systems can respond to the growing needs around them.

When women get barred from institutions, the problem isn’t just that these organizations suffer in their service delivery and performance. It also results in the loss of institutional memory — the skills, professional knowledge and experience that is no longer transferred to future generations.

Over time, institutions also scale down or suspend certain services due to a shortage of female workers. As services shrink, significant gaps appear in the networks of care and support leaving entire groups of people without consistent access to support.

The Taliban refusal to allow female workers into UN and UNICEF offices is one of many examples happening today in Afghanistan that ban qualified women from entering places where they can deliver urgent care and assistance.

This effective crackdown on women’s rights is blocking aid and support in a society where it’s desperately needed.

Male workers are also limited in the ways they can assist female patients due to Taliban gender norms and restrictions, so support for women cannot be simply reassigned to them. This affects several aspects of humanitarian aid including health care, food distribution and protection systems.

It also delegates the burden of these unmet needs into households where women must provide unpaid labour and care-giving responsibilities.

Taliban rule consequently delays or prevents life-saving interventions for women and children, a violation of the human right to survive.

It’s not just UN and UNICEF offices where women workers are banned from entry: they’re being turned away at other aid organizations, hospitals, schools and various public institutions in a widespread erosion of human rights. The Taliban has put in place a network of human rights violations across the entire humanitarian system.

Humanitarian aid also depends on access to information and correct data: who is hungry, who is unsafe and who needs protection. In Afghanistan, where women are limited in who they can interact with and where female staff are largely absent from outreach, surveys and home visits, this information becomes incomplete.

Poor data leads to incomplete distribution of assistance and mismatched allocation of aid. As a result, the most vulnerable populations can remain invisible in official assessments.

This invisibility especially affects households headed by women and those living in remote or rural areas with already limited access.

The impact of Aghanistan’s gender apartheid might not be visible to many outside the country, but in the near future, humanitarian systems will break down.

Future generations of female professionals have already been eliminated by the Taliban’s ban of girls from schools.

UNICEF estimates the ban could cost Afghanistan 25,000 teachers and health-care workers. In a country where women are prohibited from receiving care from male providers, banning women from both education and health-care work creates a profound medical emergency.

Read more: The Taliban wages war on women, but their voices roar on the page. Here are 5 essential books by Afghan women writers

Over time, systems will be redesigned without women as providers even as they remain central as recipients. As gender restrictions disrupt the flow of resources, knowledge and care, the capacity to deliver services is declining every day despite high demand. Many women are also pushed into informal or hidden work that is insecure and vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.

Gender apartheid in Afghanistan will not end through recognition alone. Naming systemic terror does not stop it and, without action, repeated exposure to crisis can instead normalize it through compassion fatigue. Humanitarian organizations now face a stark choice: operate under restrictive conditions and risk legitimizing them, or withdraw and leave people without support.

The longer the situation persists, the more the exclusion of women in Afghanistan risks becoming a normalized structure rather than an emergency. The question is no longer only how to restore what’s been lost, but whether systems once dependent on women’s participation can be rebuilt at all.

Where is one of worst places to be a woman? Afghanistan.
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Returned Afghan Migrants Struggle With Poverty and Uncertainty

They say they have neither shelter nor land, and even securing daily food has become an immense challenge.

A number of families deported from Iran and Pakistan in Kabul are complaining about severe living conditions.

They say they have neither shelter nor land, and even securing daily food has become an immense challenge.

Hamid, a deportee from Iran, said: “We returned from Iran, but no one checks on us. There is no one to ask where we came from or whether we have anything to survive on. These days, I work as a shoe shiner just to earn money for bread. There are no jobs at all; I may be forced once again to risk my life and leave the country.”

Meanwhile, some migrants deported from Pakistan report facing similar hardships.

Amir Mohammad, who was deported from Pakistan, said: “We paid 300,000 Afghanis for three houses. We did not take anything from anyone; we simply worked hard in exile and built our lives in that country.”

Mohammad Khan Talibi Mohammadzai, a migrant rights activist, said: “The current Afghan government, in cooperation with international organizations, must increase efforts and assistance to address migrants’ concerns so that the problems and hardships faced by Afghan returnees can be reduced.”

At the same time, the distribution of residential land to returning migrants has accelerated, and in just one week, land has reportedly been allocated to more than 9,000 families.

According to Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate, most of the land has been distributed in Nangarhar, Laghman, and Zabul provinces, while the resettlement process for returnees is continuing.

Another migrant rights activist, Abdul Raziq Adil, told TOLOnews: “Aid from organizations should not be limited merely to survival assistance; it should focus on self-sufficiency for returnees so they can transform from a burden on society into a driving force for the economy. Otherwise, the housing and poverty crisis will reach its peak in 2026.”

In recent years, the forced return of Afghan migrants from Iran and Pakistan has left thousands of families facing serious economic and social challenges.

Experts continue to stress that creating job opportunities and providing sustainable support are essential to preventing rising poverty and renewed migration.

Returned Afghan Migrants Struggle With Poverty and Uncertainty
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Five questions on the status of women’s and girls’ rights in Afghanistan

The Taliban regained power in Afghanistan in August 2021, twenty years after their ouster by U.S. troops. Since then, all the progress for women made over the course of the U.S. occupation has been reversed, resulting in strict, fundamentalist rules, ongoing economic turmoil and severe restrictions on employment and education for women and girls.

Executive director of the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security (GIWPS) Ambassador Melanne Verveer and GIWPS Director of Policy and Programs Kimberly Hart examine the ongoing, systematic oppression in Afghanistan. They discuss how climate and humanitarian crises affect women and girls and explore ways for the international community to bolster support for Afghan women’s resistance and strengthen accountability.

Q. Since the Taliban regained control in 2021, what have been the most significant changes in women’s daily lives, especially in education, employment and freedom of movement? How uniform are these restrictions across different regions?

A. The situation for women and girls in Afghanistan today is the worst in the world. The Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security (GIWPS) ranks Afghanistan #181 out of 181 countries for women’s wellbeing. The Taliban have engaged in systematic oppression regulating every aspect of women’s lives. Women are denied the right to an education, including midwifery training to stem child and maternal mortality. They can’t participate in the workplace outside their homes. They must be accompanied by a male guardian in public. They cannot access outdoor parks or raise their voices in public, even to recite the Quran. The burqa is the mandated dress code. The U.N. reports that nearly 80% of young Afghan women are out of education, employment or training, and the bans on girls education will increase child marriage by 25% and maternal mortality by at least 50%.

Over 100 edicts have been issued to essentially erase half the population, and the Taliban’s recent criminal regulations further violate women’s rights and entrench repression and violence. In a recent promulgation of the penal code, the punishments for abusing an animal are stiffer than those for abusing a woman. In the Taliban’s version of “justice,” a woman is basically considered property, akin to slavery. This is nothing less than gender apartheid.

Women across all of Afghanistan are suffering under this regime. Most of the legal restrictions imposed by the Taliban are national, but women’s experiences of these restrictions, as well as challenges ranging from poverty to the impacts of climate change, vary somewhat by region and in rural versus urban areas due to different local officials, enforcement, cultural norms and economics. A recent analysis of rural women in 12 regions painted a devastating picture of the situation of women, from access to healthcare and clean water to education and jobs, but it also showed variation across regions. Though it is important to note that while there are some unique challenges across different regions, discrimination against women and the suffering women and girls experience is a universal problem in Afghanistan.

Q. How would you assess the current humanitarian situation for women and girls in Afghanistan, particularly in relation to access to healthcare, food security and basic services? 

A blond woman wearing a red jacket and black shirt.
Ambassador Melanne Verveer

A. Afghans are confronting a very serious humanitarian crisis. Food insecurity, the lack of healthcare and the growing lack of essential services have been exacerbated by deep reductions in international assistance and by the poor governance of the Taliban. The U.N. estimates that 45% of the population of Afghanistan is in need of humanitarian aid, while hundreds of millions of dollars worth of aid has been cut by the U.S., other countries and, as a result, the U.N.

This humanitarian crisis impacts all aspects of daily life for many Afghans. During the dry season from November 2025 to March 2026, over 17 million Afghans faced food insecurity. The European Commission has reported that nearly four million children are malnourished—approximately one in five—and about one million need medical treatment to survive. 37% of households lack soap for basic sanitation and hygiene, which can lead to outbreaks of illnesses. Public healthcare facilities are struggling to meet community needs, a problem deeply worsened by the Taliban takeover, and the country has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. As UN Women notes, “Women are living shorter, less healthy lives.” The humanitarian crisis in the country is directly impacting a wide range of universal human rights, from the right to health and the right to water to the right to freedom from discrimination, which is obvious in all aspects of the Taliban’s rule.

These challenges are exacerbated by shocks due to climate change. Afghanistan is one of the most seriously impacted countries by climate change. Recent droughts—exacerbated by warmer climate and a 25-year low in snowfall—and flooding have further robbed Afghans of their livelihoods and access to clean water and food. Kabul is running out of water due to climate change and over-extraction. It is estimated that over 90% of Afghanistan will experience droughts by 2050.

Women and girls are uniquely impacted by all of these humanitarian crises due to social and cultural norms, as well as their erasure from public life and, therefore, economic opportunity and access. And women’s ability to provide services and aid in communities has also been affected, from the ban on UN female personnel to limited internet access for women.

Q. What role could international actors play in addressing these needs within a closed, autocratic, theocratic system like Afghanistan’s? What realistic policy options are available to the international community to improve conditions for women in Afghanistan without exacerbating harm to them? How can other countries and multilaterals balance diplomatic engagement with accountability?

A. One of the most damaging misconceptions by international actors is that in incredibly challenging environments with authoritarian governments, like Afghanistan today, nothing can be done. Far too often, international actors mistake complexity for intractability or futility. There are steps that the international community can take, today and in the near future, to improve the situation for women and girls in Afghanistan and push back on the Taliban’s repressive rule.

A woman with short brown hair and glasses, wearing a red top and pearl necklace.
Kimberly Hart

First, humanitarian assistance is desperately needed. Funding cuts, pushback on efforts targeted to supporting women and lack of support for the multilateral system are all making a bad situation worse. The international community needs to step up its efforts to deliver humanitarian aid for Afghans while putting in place guardrails to ensure that assistance goes to those in need and not the Taliban.

Second, innovative approaches must be used to protect girls’ access to education and women’s access to employment and income, even amidst the challenges. This can range from temporary educational alternatives, including online school and home schools, to fostering opportunities for income generation for Afghan women—for example, connecting Afghan experts with virtual employment opportunities.

Third, the Taliban must be held accountable for their crimes, particularly those committed against women and girls. The pressure must be intensified and the stakes must be raised for the Taliban. The U.N.’s draft Crimes Against Humanity Treaty offers a concrete opportunity to create a new legal category for “gender apartheid.” Apartheid itself is already an international crime, defined as the “inhuman acts committed for the purpose of establishing and maintaining domination by one racial group of persons over any other racial group of persons and systematically oppressing them.” Women and girls are experiencing this same systematic repression and domination, and by establishing a new crime, the Taliban could be held accountable in the future. There are also other legal avenues to pursue justice, including international courts as well as the use of universal jurisdiction. Afghan women recently showed the world the clear legal arguments about crimes against humanity in Afghanistan via a people’s tribunal, and now is the moment for those arguments to be elevated in formal courts around the world. Additionally, sanctions and visa bans should continue to be a key tool to hold Taliban officials accountable.

Fourth, the international community must empower the participation of Afghan women in any peace talks or formal negotiations. It must be clear and unequivocal that no progress can be made without women’s full, meaningful involvement as a prerequisite.

Finally, the international community must continue speaking out against the crimes of this regime and in support of Afghan women and girls. The more time passes, the easier it is for the world to focus on the next global crisis. International actors must never forget and always uphold their commitment to Afghanistan and use every avenue—diplomatic, legal, economic—to pressure the regime while supporting Afghan people. Last year, Russia became the first country to formally recognize the Taliban government; other countries must not follow suit. Non-recognition of the Taliban is essential. We cannot normalize brutal regimes that violate human rights.

All of these steps require investing in solutions that Afghans identify and supporting Afghan-led efforts. And there are many other actions that the international community can take. The international community must demonstrate a clear unwavering commitment to the Afghan people and work to better understand what the needs are and what solutions Afghan themselves have already identified.

Q. There have been reports of Afghan women organizing and resisting restrictions in various ways. What forms of agency or resilience are you seeing among women on the ground, and what risks do they face in doing so?

A. Every day, women inside and outside Afghanistan demonstrate their agency, bravery, commitment and creativity, finding ways to push for their rights and their needs, but it’s not easy, and many take great risks in doing so. Some women are taking great risks in defying prohibitions, including seeking out education, speaking out and documenting human rights abuses and even engaging in protests. There are a range of reported punishments from imprisonment to harassment and even death. Yet despite the challenges, women inside Afghanistan are pushing back and supporting each other.

A group of individuals wearing full-length blue burqas stand or walk in a line outdoors.
A group of women covered in blue burqas walking outdoors in Afghanistan, 2023.

Girls in particular are especially desperate to continue their education. Before the Taliban returned to power, they were enrolled in schools, getting degrees and engaging in all kinds of pursuits, from robotics to sports competitions. Today, the Taliban are snuffing out their dreams, but many are refusing to give up, seeing education as a form of resistance. And education for girls is widely supported in the country: a recent UN Women survey found that 92% of respondents believe that “it was ‘important’ for girls to continue their schooling, with support cutting across rural and urban communities.” Girls are seizing whatever opportunity is available to learn, from secret schools in homes to online opportunities. If discovered, they can pay a heavy price. Sadly, at the same time, suicide rates are rising out of a sense of hopelessness, and roughly 80% of suicide attempts in the country are committed by women.

The Taliban’s brutal repression of women continues every day in Afghanistan, including targeting women themselves as well as their families and loved ones. This manifests both through its broad criminal code and edicts as well as through targeted attacks of former government officials, those seen as Western allies and communities perceived as anti-Taliban. And increasingly, the Taliban is resorting to transnational repression, harassing its critics outside of the country.

Q. In your opinion, are overall conditions for women in Afghanistan any better in 2026 than they were before the U.S. invasion in 2001?

A. This is a challenging question, because the Taliban has been consistent in their oppression of women and girls, both in the first Taliban regime and today. That is why there was great apprehension over the Taliban takeover in 2021, and so many experts on women’s rights warned about the risks. While the Taliban told the world they would be good for women and girls and their good treatment would be consistent with Islam, as Maya Angelou said, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” The Taliban returned to an extremist version of Islam, not condoned in any other Islam-majority country or with many of the teachings of the Quran. The harshest practices have returned and in some ways have gotten even more extreme since the emboldened Taliban took power, with more systematic repression and rollback of key progress made before 2021. As the global backlash on women intensifies today, it only gives more leeway to the Taliban to continue their brutal repression. The world must respond by doubling down on its support for Afghan women and girls and their demands for freedom, dignity and equal rights.

Five questions on the status of women’s and girls’ rights in Afghanistan
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Afghanistan is surrendering its mineral wealth – and its future

Javed Noorani Lynne O’Donnell

The Interpreter
The Lowery Institute
Published 28 Apr 2026  

Afghanistan is giving away its mineral wealth. Through a pattern of deals that export value at the point of extraction, the country is surrendering control over what could – and should – be its greatest hope for a stable and prosperous future.

This is not accidental. Nor is it the inevitable result of geography, decades of war, or even the nature of Taliban rule. It is the outcome of contracts that prioritise immediate cash over long-term management.

Raw ore is being shipped out as Afghanistan signs away its most valuable assets on terms that lock in its own irrelevance.

This is not simply mismanagement. It is a transfer of value. Afghanistan is exporting its resources at the lowest end of the chain, while others – above all China – capture the processing, pricing and strategic leverage that follow.

In a sector defined by control, that is the difference between power and poverty.

Beneath Afghanistan’s mountains sits one of the most concentrated reserves of critical minerals in the world: lithium, rare earths, copper, cobalt – the materials that power batteries, semiconductors, renewable energy and modern weapons.

Afghanistan is behaving as if it is selling gravel, not assets central to the global economy.

Geological surveys by the United States and Afghanistan’s own Ministry of Mines have confirmed nearly 90 occurrences, including more than 30 classified as “critical”.

In another setting, they would place Afghanistan at the centre of the 21st century resource economy. Instead, they are being treated as commodities to be moved quickly and monetised cheaply.

For critical minerals, value is created along the chain – processing, refining, pricing and supply. Lose that chain, and the resource itself matters far less. What is unfolding in Afghanistan is the quiet consolidation of a strategy defined elsewhere – and not in Afghanistan’s interests.

In the four-and-a-half years since returning to power, the Taliban authorities have issued hundreds of mining contracts covering zinc, lead, copper, antimony, and more, with opaque terms, minimal scrutiny, and a focus on immediate returns. Foreign companies – mainly Chinese, but also from Iran, Pakistan and Turkey – secure access, extract ore, and ship it out. Afghanistan is left with little more than environmental damage and marginal returns.

This is not new. Under the former republic, mining contracts were often pushed through under political pressure, with weak oversight and little regard for national benefit. Politicians used their influence to secure rights or protect illegal operations. Kickbacks were common.

That institutional weakness persists, but the stakes have changed.

Critical minerals now sit at the core of economic and military power. China recognised this earlier than most and has built its dominance accordingly. Over recent decades, Beijing has invested in mines abroad while consolidating processing capacity at home. Today, it controls the bulk of refining for the world’s key minerals.

When the United States restricted advanced semiconductor exports, China responded by limiting exports of the key ingredients, gallium and germanium – a reminder that supply chains can be weaponised.

Afghanistan, with world-class reserves, is not playing on those terms. Instead, it is trading away its only real leverage in short-term deals – brokered by a narrow elite – reinforcing China’s hold over processing and pricing while stripping the country of future wealth.

Consider what this looks like in practice. Antimony contracts signed without regard for global demand. Zinc and lead exported as ore rather than processed domestically. The stalled Aynak copper project, where a Chinese state company has failed to deliver on a world-class deposit yet still secures concessions. A lithium-bearing site in Herat, once deemed strategically sensitive, reissued under the guise of a salt mine.

The pattern is consistent: fragmentation, short-termism, and the absence of any coherent effort to link mineral wealth to economic strength or political leverage. Afghanistan is behaving as if it is selling gravel, not assets central to the global economy.

A strategy would mean control – over access, terms and, critically, where value is realised. Afghanistan exercises none of these.

Far from building capacity, these deals lock Afghanistan out of the parts of the market that matter. The global market rewards those who hold processing, technology and pricing power. Afghanistan has none of them.

What is lost is leverage: the ability to negotiate, build industry or choose partners. Short-term gain becomes long-term structural constraint. Afghanistan’s mineral wealth is being converted into dependency. In a sector defined by control, that is not development. It is surrender.

Afghanistan is surrendering its mineral wealth – and its future
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A Marriage I Didn’t Choose: An Afghan girl’s journey into despair and back

After the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan returned to power in August 2021, women and girls were barred from continuing their education beyond grade six. Women were also banned from working in most government jobs and NGOs, leaving many without employment or a way to support themselves. The opportunities that had seemed within reach during the Republican years suddenly vanished, leaving many women struggling to chart a course for themselves. Some families set out to secure their daughters’ futures, often by marriage, and to men they had never met. In this instalment of The Daily Hustle, AAN’s Rohullah Soroush hears from one young woman whose family married her to a man living in Europe. She was sent to live with her in-laws in Afghanistan, despite never having met him. What followed was a life of anguish, before she found her way back to her own family and began to rebuild her life.
A bride arrives in a car at the wedding hall for a mass marriage ceremony in Kabul. Photo: Sahel Arman/AFP, 13 June 2022.

Growing up too fast 

I was born in Mazar-e Sharif into a modest family. We didn’t have much money and we lived in the shadow of financial worries. I grew up knowing that life wasn’t going to be easy. I learned that some kids don’t really get to be children – they have to grow up faster than everyone else and take on responsibilities beyond their years.

Still, our home was filled with love and my parents tried their best to make us happy. They were determined that I should go to school. They said it was the only way for me to have a better life. So I went to school in worn-out clothes, taking the second-hand notebooks the extended family or our neighbours had given my mother for me. Even then, I had dreams. I wanted to stand on my own two feet.

In the afternoon, when I got home from school, I helped my mother with chores around the house. I helped her cook our family meals, cleaned the kitchen in the evenings, and on Fridays helped her with the laundry.

Later, when I was still in high school, I started working at a pharmacy. I learned how to check patients’ blood pressure and give injections when needed. I gave most of my earnings to my mother, but I kept a little for my own expenses. After graduating from high school, I took the university entrance exam. The day I got into university was the happiest day of my life. It felt like everything I’d worked for was finally paying off and my life was moving in the right direction.

Alongside my studies, I worked on a project run by an NGO in our area. The salary covered my college fees and other expenses and I was gaining practical experience for the future.

When everything changed 

Then the Taliban came back and suddenly everything fell apart. The new government banned girls from going to university. Then, they banned women from working for NGOs and I lost my job. Just like that, it was all gone. It felt like the world had gone dark. I stayed at home with nothing to do and no future to work towards. It felt like my life was over.

It was during this time that my family decided I should marry. They told me there was a man who lived in Europe. They said he came from a family of means, that he had a stable job, that he would take me abroad and give me a secure future.

They talked about security, not happiness. No one asked me what I wanted. No one asked if I was ready.

The marriage I didn’t choose 

This is how I agreed to marry a man I’d never seen. It was not my heart’s choice. It was what my parents thought best for me and I went along with their wishes as girls in Afghanistan tend to do.

I don’t blame my family for my misfortune. They thought they’d secured a better future for me – that I’d be happy and eventually go to Europe. Many Afghan families think this way. When someone who lives in the West shows up at their door and asks for their daughter’s hand, families are often blinded by the opportunity and the false hope. So it wasn’t unusual for my family to agree to the match and push me to accept it.

This is how I became a bride, but I felt no joy on my wedding day. After the wedding, my in-laws took me to their house in Kabul. No one welcomed me into that house and that family. There was no warmth, no kindness. From the very beginning, they made it clear that they didn’t like or respect me. They humiliated and abused me – emotionally, sometimes physically. I was expected to serve, to obey and to stay silent. That was my life, day in, day out.

My husband was in Europe and I had to stay in Kabul with his family while I waited for him to come and fetch me. I kept telling myself that he was busy, that he didn’t know how I was being treated by his family. I held on to the hope that one day he’d come, take me away and we’d finally start our life together in Europe.

But the days turned into weeks, then months. I waited for my husband, imagining what he might be like and wondering if he even thought of me. But he never came. I never saw him.

A house without kindness

Life in that house became unbearable. My in-laws treated me harshly. Their words were humiliating and even my small mistakes were met with anger. I learned to move carefully, to speak less, to make myself invisible.

Although my in-laws were rich, they didn’t support me. They didn’t cover my expenses and forced me to work from dawn till dusk to earn my keep. So I started working as a maid in a clothing factory. The factory was noisy and suffocating and everyone was busy meeting their quotas. No one there knew my story. No one seemed to notice my pain. No one asked.

My in-laws wouldn’t let me contact my family. It was the most alone that I’d felt in my life. The situation started to take its toll. I was always tired and I kept getting sick. My spirit was broken and my body was growing weaker by the day, until finally, I was diagnosed with diabetes. I remember going to the doctor by myself, paying the bill out of my meagre earnings and knowing that even my illness was something I had to face by myself. When I got home from the clinic, no one asked after my health. No one cared.

The night it ended 

Then, one night, everything changed suddenly. It was late at night when my in-laws pulled me out of bed and turned me out of the house. They said they didn’t want me living with them anymore. The street was dark and empty. I remember standing there in the dark, shaking, trying to understand what had just happened. I had nothing with me and nowhere to go. That night could have ended very differently, but someone saw me – a kind neighbour who took pity on me and opened the door to their home to me.

The next day, they let me use their phone to call my family and let them know what had happened. They helped me get back to my family and even paid for the bus fare to Mazar-e Sharif.

Finding my way back 

It wasn’t an easy journey. I was physically weak, emotionally exhausted and not sure how my family would react. I knew there would be talk in the family and the neighbours would gossip.

In Afghanistan, it’s not uncommon for a girl to disappear into the family she marries into. It’s not even unusual for her to be mistreated by her in-laws. But when a girl is sent back, tongues will wag. People will look for a reason and often they blame the girl. She must’ve done something, they’ll say in disapproving tones. Rooms will go quiet when she walks in – the silence is damning and pitying all at once.

But when I arrived in Mazar-e Sharif and stepped into my parents’ home, they embraced me. I’d been worried for nothing. For the first time in a long while, I felt safe and I knew I wasn’t alone. With their support, I began again from scratch. It wasn’t easy, but I didn’t lose hope. Being back with my family gave me the strength to start taking small steps to rebuild my life.

Still standing 

Today, I am still standing.

I’ve known hardship, loss, and pain, but I didn’t disappear. I didn’t surrender to what had happened to me.

To other girls and women in Afghanistan, I say this: Stay strong, even when life feels impossible. Don’t lose yourself. If you fall, get back up, because you’re stronger than you think.

Edited by Roxanna Shapour and Kate Clark

 

A Marriage I Didn’t Choose: An Afghan girl’s journey into despair and back
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When Your Back’s Against the Wall: The Shughnan Rebellion of 1925 in the memory of local people

An Afghan proverb, tang amad, ba jang amad sums up the circumstances which led to rebellion in a northeasterly corner of Afghanistan, the poor and isolated Shughnan district of Badakhshan province, a century ago: When your back is against the wall, you will fight back – no matter how weak your side and how unlikely your chances of success. In 1925, the residents of Shughnan, who belong to the tiny and hitherto peaceful Ismaili community, revolted against the oppression of state officials. Ismailis, like other Afghan Shia Muslim communities, had often been subjected to various degrees of discrimination or exclusion from power in the context of the mostly Sunni-dominated polities that asserted their dominance in the region. What made things different this time was that the increased burden of state oppression was an indirect consequence of Amir Amanullah’s reformist policies. Their progressive goals included integrating the country’s different communities and granting the same rights to all its citizens. As often in Afghanistan, the location of the turbulence in a border area considered strategic by international powers resulted in contrasting interpretations of facts. Fabrizio Foschini has pieced together the story of this lesser-known episode based on oral and archival sources.Introduction: exploring the legacy of a fateful decade from a remote corner of Afghanistan
Over the past few years, AAN has published several reports revolving around events or texts from the period between 1919 and 1929, an eventful and at times tumultuous decade in Afghan history coinciding with the reign of King Amanullah.[1] Although occasional in output, the idea of such recurring publications has been grounded in the assumption that the reforms attempted during the so-called Amani decade in both international relations and the internal administration of the country, together with the reactions that they engendered and which culminated with the ejection of the reformist king, continue to be of huge significance for comprehending the contemporary history of Afghanistan. Indeed, many of the points of contention of that era, from national independence vis-à-vis foreign powers to girls’ education and minority rights to tax collection, remain relevant to the politics of the country, largely informing the current debate.
Continuing this series, we offer here a different take on the major topic of the conflict of state vs society by looking at a lesser-known and atypical episode of open rebellion that took place in the northeastern border district of Shughnan in 1925. In the spring of that year, residents took up arms against oppressive local government. After a military expedition was sent from the provincial capital, the rebels were forced to disband and submit, or flee across the border into Soviet territory.

The subject of this report, coming after AAN’s previous study of the Khost Rebellion that took place a year earlier, should not surprise readers. The point contended here is not that the interest in the legacy of the Amani era consists mostly of studying the causes for revolts and the way these were dealt with, but rather that rebellions, as traumatic events, often constitute recorded moments in the otherwise ‘invisible’ history of marginal areas, and thus provide rare glimpses of the material and intellectual life of non-elites in a country’s history, including of subaltern groups such as the Afghan Ismailis.[2] Also, a rebellion in Shughnan can be seen as coming from an unexpected direction, especially in light of the population’s later political and social orientation, which was markedly progressive and pro-government.

Despite being peripheral inside Afghanistan at both the political and economic levels, Shughnan and its adjoining districts were important in their own right to international observers because of their border with Russian-held territories. After the formation of the Soviet Union, previous British concerns about Tsarist Russia’s meddling in that region had turned into fears of communist propaganda spreading among Afghans.

Finally, in the light of what is happening to some border areas of Badakhshan province these days, a comparison can be made about the dynamics of communal mobilisation against a central government perceived as oppressive and unfairly appropriating local resources, although in the name of a better good such as increasing the state’s revenue (and arguably public services) through the exploitation of mines.

A note on methodology 

The bulk of the report consists of a narrative of the events before, during and after the rebellion, as related by people in Shughnan to the author in 2009, contemporary diplomatic material coming mostly from British archival sources and the few academic studies that take into account the impact of Amanullah’s reforms on the region and on the Shughnan rebellion, in particular.

Oral traditions such as those revolving around the Shughnan rebellion of 1925 present some fixed features (words, themes) which are literally handed down through generations of tellers and re-tellers and act as backbones to the narrative, exemplifying its chief meanings and making it easier to remember. Over time, they also, inescapably, come to include broader perspectives, filtered through the later experience of local communities, which come into play in modern interpretations, to enhance or diminish certain aspects and leitmotifs.[3]

Written historical sources such as archival material left by colonial polities active in the areas surrounding Afghanistan have long been considered more authoritative, but come with the same risks of selective emphasis and blindness attached. ‘Hot border’ regions such as Shughnan, especially in times of heightened political tensions and polarisation, such as the advent of Soviet communism in the 1920s that gave a new spin to the Russian threat to British India, regularly increase this blur, requiring a cautious interpretation of even the most precise archival sources.

The peculiarities of a peripheral district

Nowadays, Shughnan is a district of Badakhshan province, fairly large in terms of area but with a population numbering only around 35,000, due to the high-altitude terrain that makes up most of it. The majority of the settlements are found along the Panj Valley, where the river forms the international border between Afghanistan and Tajikistan, a situation common to the other districts of Badakhshan bordering Tajikistan, from Wakhan downstream all the way to Shahr-e Bozorg.

Map of Shughnan district of Badakhshan showing places mentioned in the report together with its location inside Afghanistan and the broader region as they were called in 1925. The district boundaries of Shughnan showed in the map are as of 2018. Map: Roger Helm for AAN, 2026.

Before its definitive annexation to Afghanistan[4] in the 1880s, Shughnan had held a paramount position among the petty principalities of the upper reaches of the Panj and Kokcha river valleys, mostly inhabited by followers of the Ismaili Shia branch of Islam. The Ismailis inhabiting these high mountain areas at the feet of the inhospitable Pamirs were usually comparatively poor and vulnerable communities, their heterodox faith exposing them moreover to the risk of being carried off to the Central Asian slave markets by their Sunni neighbours.[5] The mirs of Shughnan, however, did manage to keep a dignified status in the closed-doors dynastic game of the ruling potentates of the area. They claimed descent from Alexander the Great and intermarried on a regular basis with the (Sunni Muslim) rulers of Faizabad. The latter were the nominal lieges, but the Shughni mirs often intervened in the affairs of Faizabad from a prominent position and their Ismaili faith – the same as their subjects’ – did not seem to have posed a major hurdle to their political and commercial relations with the Sunni-inhabited areas of central Badakhshan.

Things, however, changed with the incorporation of Shughnan into Afghanistan. The last Shughni mir was deposed in 1883, and by the 1920s, the traditional feudal leadership structure of Shughnan had long gone. The Afghan governors of Badakhshan, after an initial soft approach, more in line with pre-existing forms of indirect political control and allegiance, had sought to change local leaders deemed untrustworthy and uncooperative and replace them with their own appointees. Increasingly, these were Muhammadzai Pashtuns or anyway, individuals from outside the region and closely linked to the court in Kabul. This trend accelerated after 1888, when the amir, Abdul Rahman Khan, began to suspect that many northern notables had either conspired with his cousin Ishaq Khan, who that year had staged a revolt against him, or were in communication with Russia and its protectorate in Bukhara, which was then competing with Kabul for influence over Badakhshan and other northern provinces. A new dynamic set in: state repression was now able to reach not only the old ruling families, who were arrested or deported away from their former turfs, but also a broader class of local headmen, called aqsaqal and arbab,[6] or indeed anybody suspected of wielding dangerous influence over the local populations.

When in 1893, the northeastern border in its Shughnan section was finally demarcated following the course of the River Panj, Shughnan lost half its population and most of its territory to Russia. Against the backdrop of general waning local autonomy, the district’s relevance and political weight was particularly diminished. The local leadership void would, in the next few decades, be gradually filled by religious networks composed of pirs (spiritual leaders) and khalifas (their local representatives), who played a major role in organising society, eventually in cooperation with the transnational institutions led by the paramount Ismaili leader, the Aga Khan. Much later, after 1940, Shughnan’s population embraced teaching as a survival strategy and attained high standards of education and the political consciousness that went with it. That contributed to emancipating the people from their district’s poverty and marginality (AAN). In 1925, however, the situation was bleak and, furthermore, the capacity, locally, to lobby Afghan state actors was at a minimum.

Shughnan and the other Ismaili districts in Badakhshan were never able to exploit their arguably strategic location on the border to their advantage. That could, to some extent, have made up for the trauma caused by colonial border-making or even improved their standing and importance at the national level, as some Pashtun tribes along the Durand Line managed to do.[7] Contrary to the broad ‘Frontier’ buffer separating Afghanistan from the settled areas of British India, the border with Russia was not a particularly porous one that easily allowed local communities to benefit from smuggling, raiding or abetting escapees from the other side. Indeed, its demarcation along the Panj River was actually a tragedy for local communities, which saw themselves torn apart, their social connections and viable economies destroyed. However, the demarcation proved rather practical for the purposes of state control. The difference between the two border areas was augmented by the different attitude and balance of power in the Afghan state: the heavily-armed border Pashtun tribes on the one hand and the tiny, poor and vulnerable – from both military and religious perspectives – minorities living along the Panj, on the other.

Who pays for the reforms?

Amanullah is often remembered and celebrated as the king who secured Afghanistan’s complete independence by wresting it from the British in the Third Anglo-Afghan War (1919), or, as Afghans more aptly call it, the War of Independence (AAN). Beyond the fanfare of military glory and diplomatic activism, however, the real meaning of Afghan independence was that, for the first time in forty years, and possibly for the longest span over a much longer period, both before or after Amanullah, the Afghan king, and the state he managed, had to do without a foreign subsidy that guaranteed them a minimum of military superiority over possible rivals or rebels and partially freed them from the need to seriously tax subjects in order to have a budget.

Public finances were not the only revolutionary aspect of Amanullah’s reign. From progressive ideals to his ambition to achieve the fast modernisation, technical and cultural, of a ‘backward’ country, many aspects of his reign aimed to be revolutionary. However, the big changes in store were thus to be financed only through taxation, and direct taxation on agricultural produce was to be the pivotal part of that. There were attempts to revive international trade and, with it, one of the traditionally major sources of income for the Afghan rulers – transit fees and customs. Even so, at least two-thirds of the revenue paid to the Afghan state under Amanullah was derived from taxes on farmers.

It has been estimated that between 1919 and 1929, Amanullah’s decade in power, the tax rate on land increased fourfold and on livestock fivefold, and that up to 45 per cent of the value of the harvest was taken from farmers.[8] Furthermore, contrary to what had happened in the past, payments were to be made largely in cash and not in agricultural products, which entailed greater difficulties and, for the inhabitants of areas with virtually no monetary economy, such as the Ismaili districts of Badakhshan, the frightening risk for farmers of going into debt.

Statistics for 1923 published by the Afghan newspaper Ittihad-e Mashriqi give an idea of the scale of tax revenues in a poor region such as Badakhshan: even excluding Crown lands, out of a total revenue of 1,293,000 rupees, 1,020,000 came from taxes on agriculture and livestock. That sum had increased by 211,000 rupees compared to the previous year, an increase of a sixth. Furthermore, the proportion of taxes paid in cash had already reached almost three to one compared with taxes paid in goods.[9]

Within all peripheral areas, there are different layers of marginality. Some of the residents of central Shughnan, or at least some of those from the district centre of Qalah-e Bar Panj, had in due time been able to forge some relationships with their new Afghan masters. Provision of lodgings, government employment, trade ventures and the occasional intermarriage had contributed to create a minimum of common interests that ran above qawmi divisions.[10] Even though these interests were diluted by those of language and confession, they still proved sufficient to shield a group of local residents from the worst aspects of state power. The degree of such commonality grew thinner as an individual lived further away from the centre of the district. Remote areas may have enjoyed greater quiet due to their isolation in normal times, but would face the brunt of state impositions, entirely unprotected, once these were unleashed.

In the context of the state apparatus’s renewed efforts to expand into rural areas under Amanullah, it is no surprise that the area of Shughnan that fared the worst would be Roshan, the northernmost and most remote part of the district. It was from Roshan – a toponym which carries the ancient Persian root connected to ‘lightening’ or ‘brightening’ – that the spark of the rebellion would ignite.

The rebellion of Mahram Beg

Let us first introduce the eponymous hero of the rebellion. Mahram Beg, hailing from Robat village, the last village of Roshan before Shughnan proper, was in his forties and a man of some local importance. He was already listed among the notables of Roshan by the Afghan functionary and writer Burhanuddin Kushkaki in 1923, and had been appointed around that time an arbab in a village a short distance downstream from his own village, Chasnud-e Payan. There, an alaqadar, a sub-district state official appointed by the central administration and often coming from outside, had been posted, arguably, for the first time. Local oral sources claim this particular official was originally from Wardak.[11] His character plays a major part in the oral history of the rebellion, triggering the action in the first place. In the oral narrative handed down among locals, the mere burden of heavy taxes was not considered a sufficient explanation for the revolt. Rather, the abuse of power by the state was coupled with other types of abuse and oppression couched in terms of immorality, as was relayed to the author:

At the time of Mahram Beg, there was such oppression that he was forced to make the people revolt. He went down to Chasnud-e Payan, where an alaqadar had arrived. The alaqadar exercised power with such tyranny that his men were snatching bread from people’s ovens: “Bring forth the butter!” they would shout, while, meanwhile, they helped themselves, picking the loaf of bread of their choice. Such was the level of tyranny. Then, one evening the alaqadar said to Mahram, who was arbab there, to bring him a woman. Mahram was flustered, he said: “Why, how could I bring you a woman?! You yourself must have nang, some namus [honour] of yours – a sister, your mother…” But the other insisted, adamant: “These arguments don’t touch me.” 

Mahram Beg (or his contemporary impersonator) is here trying to reason with the Pashtun official by playing up specific concepts — namus and nang — that he hopes he may value. The Arabic-origin word namus connects mostly to honour in terms of one’s family’s reputation through the respectability (henceforth seclusion) of its female members. Nang(coming from Middle Persian but quite obsolete in modern Iranian Farsi), refers to honour as well, but more with the nuance of individual pride. Both terms are widely used in Afghan Dari, the language in which the related conversation arguably took place, but hold a special conceptual centrality for Pashtuns as enshrined in Pashtunwali (about which, read this AAN paper). Having failed to connect with his interlocutor on these terms, Mahram feigned compliance:

So, one day Mahram told the alaqadar he was leaving; he was travelling down the valley to get women for him. But instead, he went to a village downstream and sat in an assembly with people whom he had secretly gathered and told them: “Look, that’s how bad things are, how oppressed we are. But now you can decide to help me rebel. If you are with me, we take over Shughnan. 

Those gathered agreed to stage a revolt and Mahram toured nearby villages to enlist men for the action. Wherever there was an arbab he trusted, he would task him with selecting a man and sending him to Chasnud-e Payan, disguised as a woman under a full chador. Then, when he had thus managed to assemble his strike force unnoticed:

[T]hat night, when required to, Mahram introduced fifteen men thus disguised into the alaqadar’s guesthouse for his after-dinner programme, and told them “Go get him and give him a beating.” The alaqadar cried, “What are you doing?!” but those men, burqa-clad as they were, jumped on him and thrashed him with sticks. Then they dragged him outside, put an old furry coat and hat on him, forced him to wear a pair of coarse homespun trousers, tied him to a tree and left him there until morning. The next morning, they strapped him onto an ass, a black ass, and paraded him around. 

The use of a chador as a disguise by warriors is a common expedient in the so-called ayyar literature, once widespread, mostly through oral transmission, across India, Iran and Central Asia.[12] As such, it will return later in the same narrative. However, here it also serves the purpose of making the retribution meted out to the villain, whose chief crime was to threaten the honour of women, more fitting. The theme of the disguise takes on another level of meaning immediately afterwards: the ordeal to which the alaqadar is subjected includes nullifying his exalted status as a state official – likely conveyed by clothes of a different style or superior quality – by having him dressed as a commoner in coarse local fabric. The symbolic reversal of roles and the exposure to public mockery, in many parts of the world, a cliché of peasant rebellions vis-à-vis the powers governing them, is completed by a parody of another major status symbol of the powerful, the mount.

After this early success, with the critical adhesion of some local hunters who provided the only firearms to the war party, Mahram set to conquer, or better, to free Shughnan, the centre of his people’s universe and the logical ultimate target of their action.

Then Mahram and his men marched towards Shughnan. They went to Yarkh and then to Chawid and so on and everywhere people would join them. For weapons, they had only some siahkaman (matchlocks) and the rest had spades and forks. At the time, guns and ammo, nobody had it, only the security forces. So when the rebels reached the district centre of Shughnan, the local garrison and the border guards barricaded themselves into the government fortress, sealing the doors and windows. Mahram told his followers: “Do not attack them now, they’ll eventually surrender, let’s not damage both sides with a fight.” Then, he positioned his men on the hilltop where nowadays the district office is located. 

The stalemate lasted over a week. The few hunting rifles that Mahram’s men had at their disposal were totally ineffective against the stone and mud walls of the government compound. Besides, they lacked any ammunition reserves and had to rely mostly on dry beans as bullets. Mahram not only prevented them from launching a risky attack, but he also sought to keep those inside the fort in check and prevent sallies from their part. He had water boiled over a fire beyond the hilltop, and by heating spades that they would then hit with stones, his men produced loud bangs which sounded a bit like the voice of artillery, which scared the besieged garrison into inaction. With water running scarce, it was a matter of days before they surrendered. Meanwhile, news of the revolt had reached Faizabad, and a military force had been dispatched to suppress the revolt. Probably, this news began to cool local enthusiasm for the revolt, as some residents of central Shughnan who suspected the rebellion could not resist state power indefinitely came to fear the reprisals they would face once government control was re-established[13]

News came that an army was coming from the way of Ishkashim. Mahram asked the people “And what do we do with those?” and they replied “Well, you should go meet them.” “Very well” he said, “I’ll go to Gharan. If I manage, I’ll crush those soldiers. You stay here and do not attack. If the government forces surrender, take them prisoner, but don’t expose yourself in the open.” Then he went to Gharan and selected a narrow spot to set an ambush. When the troops arrived, his men suddenly opened fire and forced them to retreat, they ran back to Ishkashim. 

After the successful ambush,[14] prospects for the rebels were looking more favourable, but treachery was to undo Mahram’s military success. While he was away, says the oral history, a local resident, a man from Bashohr,[15] managed to slip into the government fort at night

He told the government forces there: “Those people don’t have rifles, they’ve got nothing. Mahram has left for Gharan and they only make the sound of guns, don’t let yourself be fooled.” When they did not believe him, he added, “Ok, I’ll have you sent women’s clothes, a chador, right? One of you can put it on and go have a look at how things are.” So, the next day one of the soldiers disguised himself as a woman and went around Mahram’s camp. He saw that the situation was exactly as reported: they had no weapons and only made the sound of a gun from time to time. He went back and reported to his commander, and the next day at dawn, those in the fort rushed out and attacked the camp of the rebels.

Without weapons, how could they resist? They fled, half towards Gharan, to Mahram, and half towards Roshan. The government troops arrived in Bashohr and let their 303. rifles do the talking. They did not make distinctions between those who had fought with Mahram and those who had not. They killed, they arrested, they looted. Then those who had fled towards Mahram ran into him at the springs near Darmarakht. He asked them, “How come you are here?” and they said “We narrowly escaped from their clutches” and they told him what had happened. “Very well” said he. “All that has happened has been out of the will of those people who don’t need freedom, those who don’t cherish freedom. Now it’s up to you. Do as you wish. I jump to the other side. I can’t stay here, there’s no place left for me to go, I’ll cross to the Soviet side of the river.” And then, near Wyar, he jumped into the water and reached the other bank. Many of those who had fled, men and women, followed him: the lucky ones made it, others vanished in the river.

Exit Mahram, pursued by the Russian bear. Detained by the suspicious Soviet authorities for around three years, the unlucky leader of the short-lived revolt would never see his homeland again. Well, not quite literally, as from Khorog, the Russian-held Shughni town just across the Panj, where he was settled for some time, he would be able to do so every day, but he never set foot again on Afghan soil and was eventually given a place of residence in central Tajikistan by the Soviet authorities.

Different was the fate of those who had followed him into exile. Their number is unclear. Boyko, on account of a petition sent to the Soviet authorities by the refugees themselves, gives the staggering number of eight thousand. That would have amounted to virtually all the inhabitants of Shughnan and Roshan put together, according to the data collected by Kushkaki in 1923. The desertion of an entire district constituted a significant problem for the state, especially in a border area, where it could exacerbate political differences or result in external interference, and all the more so in a territory that, because of the extreme environmental conditions, would prove nearly impossible to repopulate. Already, one month after the revolt, Amanullah had issued a general pardon and an invitation to those who had fled to return. According to Soviet sources, some accepted, but it seems not too many, as in the next few months, several Afghan officials travelled to the Soviet side to try and persuade the remaining refugees to return. Even if not comprising the total population, the exodus must have been massive, as it stirred diplomatic activities across the Panj. It is well remembered by people nowadays and forms part of the oral narrative of events connected to the rebellion:

[After the revolt] on this side of the river, nobody was left. Those people remained over there [on the Soviet side] for nine months. To all the government people who went there to look for them, they would say: “No, we don’t come back.” Eventually, there came a person called Mir-e Muqil, he was an arbab in Shiduwj village. So, this man went to the other side and the commanders, the Soviets, they told him: “The people don’t accept it, they won’t come back to your side.” He said: “Well, gather them so that I can speak to them. If it works, fine, otherwise it’s over.” Then all the refugees gathered there, in Khorog. And the Soviet official questioned them: “People, are you going to Afghanistan or are you staying?” And they answered: “With him, we shall go, without him, we won’t.” And the Soviet officer would go like: “How come? Until now, you were saying that you’ll never go back there, that you’d rather be killed here and that this was the place you belonged to!” And so they told him: “This man has done many good services for us back there, he helped us a lot. In Afghanistan, in Shughnan, he is a civil servant, a good man. With him, we can face everything: be it water or fire.” All those people were saying thus. Then they started back with that man; they came back to this side. 

Bazaar in Bashohr area of Shughnan district centre. Photo: Fabrizio Foschini, 2009
The interpretations of events internationally and locally

The Shughnan rebellion of 1925, together with the temporary occupation by Soviet troops of the river island of Urta Tagai later that year, was one major development in the Great Game along the northern Afghan border. For decades, British and Russian agents had been spying on each other’s moves or absence thereof, and after the variation in the game brought about by the 1917 October Revolution and takeover of Central Asian territories by the Soviets, it had developed new categories to interpret old patterns.

The British were, for example, convinced that all unrest inside Afghanistan could be put down to foreign (ie Russian) hidden hands. “During April a local insurrection took place in Badakhshan… It is possible that Russian agents may have been in part responsible for the outbreak,” was the laconic comment by the British envoy in Kabul.[16]

By the mid-1920s, moreover, they had become convinced that the Soviets were actively spreading Marxist propaganda into Amanullah’s kingdom and that the Ismailis, with their seeming absence of religious fanaticism, had easily fallen prey to communist doctrine: “The area affected seems to be in the part of Afghanistan marked for corruption and penetration by the ethnologically-allied Tazik [sic] province recently established on the Russian side.”

From the cold welcome they offered to Marham, we may instead assume that the Soviet authorities, although newcomers to the Great Game, likely followed in the footsteps of their predecessors in most everyday decisions and were equally suspicious of all local leading men, irrespective of which side of the border they came from.

Throughout the 1920s, the Soviets became increasingly suspicious of the links maintained by the Ismaili religious leaders, the pirsand their representatives, the khalifas. Given that their devotees could often be found in faraway villages, they were at the centre of networks through which money and information travelled. The authorities concluded that these were being actively used by British intelligence through the good services of the Ismaili spiritual leader and British subject, the Aga Khan. Oppression of Ismaili pirs and khalifas had already started in the early 1920s and would increase in intensity towards the end of the decade, both to satisfy the hostility of Soviet authorities towards religious leadership, indeed, any leadership rival to their own and to frustrate the ‘machinations of Western capitalism’, to the point that several Ismaili religious leaders would be forced, in turn, to take shelter on the Afghan side to escape arrest by Soviet authorities. “The Sayid inhabitants of Russian Wakhan are alleged to be very badly treated by the Bolsheviks authorities,” said one report of the British political agent in Gilgit in his Diary for September-October 1922. “Their property is being confiscated and distributed among the lay public” (L/P&S/10/973). Another report, from the Intelligence Bureau North-Western Frontier Province n° 14 (week ending 16.07.1928) said: “There has been much religious oppression in Shighnan [sic] and Russian Wakhan and the people, while secretly retaining their Maulai [Ismaili] faith, have been forced to become overt converts to Bolshevism.”

Leaving aside the foreign and often flawed takes on the rebellion, it may also be useful to contrast the oral narrative as told by local people in Shughnan with the official account of the incident given by a state-controlled newspaper, Tulu-e Afghan:[17]

At the beginning of the current year, the inhabitants of Shughnan fell out with the alaqadar of that place regarding the payment of poor-rate on their cattle. At the instigation of certain malefactors, they resisted the payment of the poor-rate. When the local ruler came out to realise that tax and applied force upon the inhabitants, they flatly disobeyed his order, congregated in one place and demonstrated against the civil and military officials of that place. On this occasion, it was the day of the month of Hamal (20th April) that the report on this event was received through the proper channel by Muhammad Suleiman Khan, Naib ul-Hakuma of the Province of Qataghan and Badakhshan. The Governor, who is a perfect man and a true servant to the state, despatched forthwith to Shughnan a committee, composed of certain experienced and influential personages with full instructions to enquire into the causes of the disturbance and to make every effort for its removal. Also he gave orders to the force at Badakhshan to hold themselves in readiness for the march. As soon as the committee in question reached Shughnan, crowds of inhabitants who had besieged the local Government Departments after exchanging shots with the local military dispersed and the malefactors who were the cause and instigators of this trouble fled. To sum all up, the enquiry committee brought necessary arrangements into force. The deserters returned to their place, the quarrel and dispute came to an end and all submitted to Government. Peace and order began to reign supreme on every side and the matter was settled without any further trouble and loss of life and property.

Both narratives recognise one common key point – the role of the local authorities. The role they played in unfolding of events, however, is told very differently by the Kabul newspaper and local people. They are mirror opposites of the other. The weak link where the chain of social peace in Shughnan was broken in that April of 1925 lay precisely in the part taken by the Afghan provincial authorities. The new tax burden fell heavily on rural areas, but even more so, it disrupted social customs. The dependence on taxes collected from rural areas and the drive for modernisation inherent in Amanullah’s political project led him to reform the district administration at the same time as he launched his tax reforms. In 1921-22, a travelling commission had mapped the entire national territory to establish new tax rates based on products and soil type. Until then, this had been the prerogative, at the local level, of the old aqsaqal class, who, deprived of their role as village administrators, nevertheless retained the informal role of providing the provincial governor with tax data on their territories, agreeing on the quotas that individual families had to pay and supervising the delivery of the tribute.[18]

This function, which the aqsaqals, as members of the old local elites, carried out in a manner that was as conciliatory as possible with the needs of what ultimately remained their patronage network, was taken over at the sub-district level by the alaqadars, the state officials appointed by the central administration, who were also often outsiders. The loss of control over local relations with the state apparatus, previously managed through traditional, albeit hierarchical, mechanisms via the mediation of the aqsaqals, was as intolerable to the peasants as the increased tax burden itself, to which it was, in fact, closely linked. This was probably one of the underlying reasons for the Shughnan uprising in 1925. The presence of ‘foreign’ district authorities was not entirely new, nor was it a characteristic only of Amanullah’s reign. Certainly, their predatory behaviour towards the population could have justified an even earlier violent reaction, but as long as they had been assisted by local figures in the exercise of power, abuses had been, if not avoided, at least mitigated.

Things would actually worsen for Shughnan in the years following the reform. In the words of an Indian Muslim, a Shia doctor from Calcutta who visited the region a few months after the rebellion: “All officials are Kabulis. No official knows when he may be ‘axed’, consequently bribery and extortion are relied on to bring in as much money in as short a time as possible. Taxes are very heavy. Every tree, animal and field is taxed twice a year. Any criminal can escape punishment by payment. Only the poor are punished.”

The importance of residents having the possibility to access and connect with local authorities to shield their households from excessive burdens and survive becomes apparent from some of the leitmotifs in the history of the revolt of Mahram Beg, as related across Shughnan. Unlike the state media, which sought to highlight the loyalty, efficiency and generosity of the provincial officials appointed by the government, people in Shughnan chose to remember those arbabs, that is, intermediaries whom they had chosen or who, anyway, had come from among their ranks, who would stand up and risk everything to try and shield them from state oppression.

With the elimination of the residual role held by the aqsaqals in assessing taxes, the last vestiges of the social structure of the indigenous elites in Shughnan had disappeared. Only the arbabs remained as potential leaders around whom to rally. Their status was hardly exalted or idealised. Their tasks, in fact, consisted mainly of organising the accommodation and meals of visiting state officials or military personnel, and representing the village before the institutions. This association with the state could bring small economic benefits if one sought them, but not necessarily respectability within the community, as it often led to accusations of corruption and partiality. Hence, the people’s choice of remembering those arbabs who did what they were expected to do, honestly, or who had played an outstanding role – one by starting a rebellion against external officials who transgressed social norms and decency and another by successfully mediating the homecoming of the exiled Shughni people.

Conclusions

Among the modern public of Shughnan, well-educated and (although it took longer than British colonial officials presumed) often left-oriented, today’s re-telling of the 2025 revolt causes a curious series of re-positionings. There is but little sympathy or nostalgia for the autonomous Shughnan before the Afghan annexation, as that era is widely associated with the feudal rule of the mirs and thus viewed negatively from many perspectives. Moreover, Shughnis generally hold a high opinion of Amanullah and praised his reformist attempts and political ideals. However, the poverty and helplessness experienced by the local population at that time amply justify, in their eyes, the need for Mahram to revolt. More recent periods of oppression and destitution, especially during the early times of the mujahedin takeover after 1991, have, moreover, left an indelible mark on the collective memory of the population. For example, during discussions with the author, people in Shughnan sometimes linked the revolt of 1925, in spirit, to a series of revolts staged by local people in 1996-97. They were aimed at throwing off the yoke of the most predatory of the mujahedin commanders, who came from the Sunni central area of Badakhshan and had established themselves as authorities in the district: the parallels, from the Shughnis’ perspective, were clear.

The attention of a small community may be focused on extraordinary times of strife and activism and these events may be fixed in its collective memory. However, the long-term truth about Shughnan is that, like its neighbouring Ismaili districts, it has, since its annexation to Afghanistan and especially since its remarkable achievements in education, proved one of the most peaceful and law-abiding areas of the country. It continues to be so, even in the face of increasing difficulties, such as the restrictions on female education which have seriously damaged its teacher economy, and the growing reports of discrimination towards Ismailis by at least some among the IEA officials (Hasht-e Subh).

But beyond the heroes and symbols that are passed down through generations in a community’s oral history lie always the roots and material causes of the actions that immortalised them. Those very causes that spurred the people of Roshan and Shughnan to rebel a century ago, namely the oppressive behaviour of the authorities imposed from the outside and the lack of local lobbying power to negotiate with a seemingly all-powerful government, are today found in many parts of Afghanistan. Centralising attempts, pushed through with haste and force, can easily cause grave imbalances when, in many Afghan rural areas, the local balance of power and established relationships of reciprocity help people cope with fragile economic conditions. Not to stray away from the banks of the Panj, the continuing tensions and clashes (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty) downstream of Shughnan in the gold-mining districts of Badakhshan and Takhar[19] are clear proof that Afghanistan’s central governments, even a hundred years later and no matter what common good or best ideal they claim has motivated their actions, are still unable to consider these border areas as anything but up for grabs.

Edited by Kate Clark and Jelena Bjelica


References

References
1 AAN has published not only on Amanullah’s grand tour of Europe and the civil war that put an end to his reign, but also on Amanullah’s relations with Central Asian principalities, on the architectural heritage from that period and on some literary works produced in those years, both fiction and non-fiction.
2 The term ‘subaltern’ can be broadly defined as indicating groups inside a polity which are relegated to an inferior status because of their ethnicity, religious affiliation, class or gender, and thus denied voice and agency in politics and society. First introduced by Antonio Gramsci in the 1920s, it has been popularised in historiography starting from the 1980s by a group of scholars mostly focusing on Indian colonial and post-colonial history. Despite the subsequent debate on the limits of its applicability, the author finds its use in relation to the Ismailis of the Pamir and the Hindu Kush as particularly fitting in the light of the politically and economically marginal areas they inhabit, their heterodox religious affiliation and the multiple cultural hegemonic centres (Sunni-dominated indigenous powers, British and Russian colonial officials, Western explorers) by which they have been objectified in the available historical sources – often following a centuries-old tradition portraying Ismailis in a highly-stereotyped fashion (on this, see Farhad Daftary, The Assassins Legend: Myths of the Ismailis, Tauris, 1995).
3 In the author’s experience, the obvious existence of such processes at play, at least in an educated and politically self-aware context such as today’s Shughnan, allowed for self-questioning and interpretation by the very interviewees and local fellow-listeners, rather than resulting in a mere alteration of the contents.
4 The principality of Badakhshan, and thus those connected to it by loose links of vassalage such as in Shughnan, had once already fallen under Afghan sovereignty when the troops of Ahmad Shah Durrani entered Faizabad in the early 1750s. The area had, however, slipped out of the control of Kabul a few decades later and had remained largely independent – despite suffering repeated raids from the Uzbek rulers of Kunduz – until the reign of Sher Ali (1869-79). After 1873, the rulers of Faizabad were replaced by an Afghan governor, but it took until the reign of Abdul Rahman (1880-1901) for the change to be applied to the Ismaili principalities too.
5 From a doctrinal point of view, enslaving fellow Muslims was prohibited, hence the preference by Sunni raiders for targeting if not non-Muslim, at least heterodox communities such as the Ismailis. However, even marginal Sunni communities such as the Kirghiz of the Pamirs or the Chitralis were at risk of kidnap and being ‘marketed’ as Siahposh Kafirs (the then not-yet converted inhabitants of today’s Nuristan). The mirs of Shughnan themselves occasionally engaged in selling slaves, Ismaili, Sunni and non-Muslim.
6 Although the Uzbek-origin term aqsaqal (white beard) is identical with its Pashto (spingir) and Dari (rishsafed) counterparts, the role of such individuals had traditionally represented in Badakhshan a more formalised position, that of a village administrator on behalf of the local ruler, compared to that of spingiri or rishsafedan in many other parts of Afghanistan, where the terms more often refer just to senior members of the local council. Arbab is also used in many parts of Afghanistan and more closely refers to individuals agreed upon by the community and the state to act as representatives and middlemen.
7 The Pashtun tribes living on the border with British India (which was then progressively encroaching on former Afghan territories) suffered heavily throughout the second half of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th century – militarily, economically and socially. They bore the brunt of colonial wars and reprisals, seeing their normal trade and pastoralist routes disrupted and being left with an increasingly polarised, militant and underdeveloped society as a result of the constant state of conflict and of colonial policies that prioritised security and containment. If communities from both sides of the Durand Line suffered from the violence that this process engendered (the long-term results of which are still haunting the region), some tribes from the Afghan side were eventually able to extract some benefits from the Afghan state by virtue of their special position as keepers of the border, such as being exempt from taxes and compulsory military service.
8 Amin Saikal, Modern Afghanistan: A History of Struggle and Survival, Bloomsbury Academic, 2004, p278.
9 Diaries of the Kabul military attaché WAK Fraser, 1922-24 (L/P&S/10/1085), India Office Record, British Library.
10 Qawm points on one hand to an immediate solidarity group often based on kinship (family, clan) and more rarely on other shared identities (professional guild, religious affiliation, village) not altogether unrelated to the practice of intermarriage; on the other, it can refer to a broader community based on regional or ethnolinguistic characters when at a more political or national level.
11 A scholar who researched the rebellion mostly drawing on Russian sources named the alaqadar as Tahir Muhammad Khan. Boyko, Vladimir, ‘On the Margins of Amanullah Era in Afghanistan: The Shughnan Rebellion of 1925’, International Journal of Central Asian Studies, vol 7,2002, p79.
12 Ayyars (robbers, rogues, considered by some scholars to approach in the popular conscience of Central Asia and Iran the idealisation of social ‘Robin Hood’ bandits in many European pre-modern societies) have become the unconventional heroes of many collections of tales, such as the Adventures of Amir Hamza. Standing beside – or confronting – more conventional heroes, such as the kings and their paladins borrowed from historical chronicles and epic lore, ayyars resort to a more down-to-earth type of tactics and weapons, way beyond the rules of honour and fair fight, thus playing a trickster role akin to that of ninjas in Japanese samurai literature.
13 There is hardly a division between Roshan and Shughnan proper that would have acted as a rationale for the failure of the rebellion in the district centre. In older times, Roshan had always been a constituent part of Shughnan, although usually it was administered by the eldest son of the mir, acting as viceroy, and allowed some degree of autonomy. People of the two areas speak the same language, hold the same religious tenets and devotional affiliations and most importantly, regularly intermarry. Any trace of such a divide would also probably have vanished in popular memory, given that later political vicissitudes and social transformations further strengthened the common identity between the two halves of Shughnan. The divide here is more one of proximity – in terms of allegiance but also of spatial location, to state power – with its pros and cons depending on their particular situation, something that is typical and very relevant across Afghanistan up to today.
14 The place of the ambush, Gharan, is the area that separates the southernmost villages of Shughnan from Ishkashim. It is only sparsely populated as, here, the Panj valley closely resembles a gorge, with very limited amounts of horizontal expanses before it widens up again before Ishkashim. The road on the left bank, the Afghan side, climbs up to mid-slope, away from the riverbed, and becomes at points a narrow path that a group of men can only cross in single line and with caution. The people of Shughnan used to call this passage ‘their father’ on account of the protection it offered from the danger of invading troops.
15 Bashohr, where the unnamed traitor lived, is one of the hamlets making up the district centre of Shughnan. As it commanded a good view over the besieged government buildings, it was the place that Mahram had selected to put up his camp.
16 Minister in Kabul’s Summary of Events from February to July 1925 (L/P&S/10/1051).
17 Translation of an article from the Tulu-i-Afghan n°40, 07-06-1925 (L/P&S/11/258), file 1667.
18 Holzwarth, Wolfgang, ‘Segmentation und Staatsbildung in Afghanistan: Traditionale sozio-politische Organisation in Badakhshan, Wakhan und Sheghnan’, in Grevemeyer and Greussing, Revolution in Iran und Afghanistan, 1980, pp179-181.
19 For recent reporting of clashes, see Abdul Hamid Hakimi, Taliban Gold Rush Turns Deadly, Putting Spotlight On Chinese-Backed Mining, Radio Azadi, 11 January 2026. For a comprehensive assessment of gold mining and its politics in Takhar and Badakhshan see Fabrizio Foschini, The Mining Sector in Afghanistan: A picture in black and gold, AAN, 30 August 2025.

 

When Your Back’s Against the Wall: The Shughnan Rebellion of 1925 in the memory of local people
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Afghanistan Crisis Deepens as Calls Grow for U.S. to Release Frozen Funds

by Bharat Dogra

CounterCurrents.org

Floods, landslides and storms have aggravated the already serious humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. Earlier drought conditions had troubled many farmers and villages. In 2023 a series of earthquakes killed thousands of people and caused other massive damage, particularly in Herat.

Outbreak of Iran war on February 28, as well as preceding disturbances, further increased the problems of Afghanistan by causing trade disruptions on land routes. Earlier these were aggravated on the other long border also due to prolonged hostilities with Pakistan. When there are disturbances on the land borders with two main neighboring countries, the problems of a landlocked country like Afghanistan can be imagined. In the course of recent hostilities with Pakistan, there have been several airstrikes on Afghanistan. One of these on March 16 resulted in a great tragedy as a very large number of people died or were injured in the Omid de-addiction center; according to the Afghanistan government nearly 400 persons died in this attack. Other estimates mention a lesser number, but the number of dead and injured persons has been quoted at very high levels in most estimates.

Pakistan and Iran have also expelled a very large number of refugees from Afghanistan, forcing them to return to their home country at a time when it is already faced with a serious humanitarian crisis. According to recent estimates, over 5 million refugees have returned from Pakistan and Iran during the last 30 months or so. Thus while in most serious humanitarian crisis situations we see refugees going out in large numbers, here we see a reverse situation of over 5 million people returning.

According to a recent United Nations report dated March 9, 2026 at least 17.1 million persons needed humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan (this was a very conservative estimate and the figure had been deliberately kept low keeping in view a serious shortage of resources).  For this 1.71 billion dollars were estimated to be needed but at the time of preparing this report only about 10% of this budget had been arranged.

The situation in Afghanistan deteriorated with the departure of US forces in August 2021 as many development aid and humanitarian aid programs of the USA and its allies were stopped while many sanctions were also imposed. Thus assistance as well as salaries of a large number of people stopped at a time when weather conditions were also very adverse. A national drought was declared in 2021, the worst in the last 30 years or so. In June 2023 UN-OCHA reported that the World Food Program had to cut food assistance to 8 million food-insecure people here due to fund constraints.

Hence several factors have combined together to create a situation in which the need for the USA to speed up the transfer of 7 billion dollars of Afghanistan held there for several years have increased. This urgency has increased further in the increasingly difficult conditions of 2026.

This transfer should not be delayed any longer. If the delay is due to apprehensions of any of this being put for dangerous uses, then a UN committee of persons known to be entirely sympathetic to the needs of the people of Afghanistan and committed to peace can be set up and on the basis of their monitoring these funds can be transferred for meeting humanitarian and development needs over a period of about two years, with at least 2 billion dollars being sent more or less immediately to meet urgent needs. Let us also not forget the basic fact that these are Afghanistan funds.      .

In June 2022 the International Federation of Red Cross had said that 70% of the people here are unable to meet essential food and non-food needs. Earlier in 2022 the UN Secretary General had expressed concern at the “epic  humanitarian crisis on the verge of a development catastrophe.”

In late April 2022, several independent human rights experts linked to the United Nations said, in a joint statement released by the United Nations Human Rights (Office of the High Commissioner), that in this country with a total population (then) of about 42 million, about 23 million needed food assistance while as many as 95% had insufficient food consumption. They said that the growing humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan had put at serious risk the lives of more than half of the country’s population, with disproportionate impact on women and children.

These UN linked human rights experts expressed very serious concern at the freezing of Afghanistan central bank assets by the USA which has led to denial of funds for essential help needed by people immediately. They put forward a very clear demand, “We call on US government to take into serious consideration the growing humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan and to re-assess its decision to block the Da Afghanistan Bank’s ( DAB’s) foreign assets.” The need for this is even higher today.

The decision to freeze assets (as well as imposition of other sanctions by the USA and its allies), apart from denying funds for urgent relief and disrupting essential banking functions, has also led to several indirect and wider adverse impacts. As the statement of UN-linked human rights experts further stated, in the prevailing conditions “humanitarian actors face serious operational challenges due to the uncertainty caused by banks’ zero risk policies and over-compliance with sanctions.” Thus on the one hand it becomes more difficult to take relief to the weaker sections, and on the other hand middle class members including those used to living earlier on more or less regular salaries are being pushed into poverty.

Soon after the US army left in a hurry and the Taliban seized power in 2021, the US froze Afghan Central Bank assets worth 7 billion dollars while its allies froze assets worth an additional 2 billion dollars, apart from imposing other sanctions.

Following growing appeals and demands to de-freeze these assets, the USA announced in September 2022 to make available half the frozen assets—about 3.5 billion dollars– to a foundation for utilization in Afghanistan while the remaining half was diverted to help the 9/11 victims. This diversion has been criticized as being highly unfair, even by some representatives of 9/11 victims who have publicly stated that they do not want funds which are meant for the most highly distressed people of Afghanistan.

Has at least the other half been utilized for preventing hunger and starvation in Afghanistan? As a report by Sarah Lazare writing for ‘In These Times’ (in mid-December 2022) revealed, on the basis of interviews with two of the trustees who were supposed to handle the use of 3.5 billion dollars for helping the people of Afghanistan, in the 3 months following the ‘de-freeze’, these were not used for this purpose and immediate prospects for these being used to help the people did not appear to be bright at all.

A Reuters report dated July 21, 2023 by Jonathan Landay and Charlotte Greenfield stated—A US funded audit of Afghanistan’s Taliban run central bank failed to win Washington backing for a return of bank assets from a $3.5 billion Swiss-based trust fund.

Meanwhile there were also reports that substantial parts of the diverted funds were also being cornered to a significant extent by rich lawyers and lobbyists instead of really reaching the 9/11 victims.

UN humanitarian help officials in Afghanistan have been struggling with increasing shortage of funds. The UN is facing difficulties this year to collect its target of $ 1.7 billion for Afghanistan based humanitarian assistance work while only 10% of this had been arranged till early March. Compare this with $ 7 billion held by the USA and some additional funds held by its close allies very unjustly at a time when Afghanistan is passing through one of its worst crisis periods.

In such conditions the distress of the people of Afghanistan is likely to further escalate sharply. Already there have been reports ( published in The Guardian, UK, and elsewhere) of a booming kidney sale market as some desperate people have even been forced to sell their kidneys to feed an international, substantially illegal market for organs. There are reports of kidney sale price declining by a half or more and still more people willing to sell even at this low price. Hence a campaign for justice should be stepped up substantially to ensure that the entire 7 to 9 billion dollars are returned to Afghanistan for priority use to reduce hunger and other distress. In addition the humanitarian assistance and development effort should be stepped up significantly.

Afghanistan Crisis Deepens as Calls Grow for U.S. to Release Frozen Funds
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