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  • 6
    Mar
    2012
    6:21am, EST

    Afghan artists use graffiti to depict violence and injustice of women's lives

    Mohammad Ismail / Reuters

    A graffiti piece by Shamsia Hassani and Qasem Foushanji on a wall in Kabul, March 5, 2012.

    Reuters reports from Kabul — Encased in a head-to-toe burqa, the image depicts a distraught woman slumped on a cement stairwell, the work of Afghanistan's first street artists who use graffiti to chronicle violence and oppression.

    The female-male duo surreptitiously spray-paint the crumbling and dilapidated walls of buildings in the capital city, abandoned and destroyed during 30 years of war that still rages today.

    Talking of her woman on the steps, Shamsia Hassani, 24, said: "She is wondering if she can get up, or if she will fall down. Women in Afghanistan need to be careful with every step they take."

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters, file

    Shamsia Hassani signs one of her works in Kabul on Dec. 19, 2010. A group of women in burqas rises from the sea to symbolise cleanliness, while further down the factory wall a bus with no wheels and crammed with passengers is a stark comment on war-torn Kabul's appalling public transport.

    The somber depictions of Afghan women on Kabul's rutted streets offer rare public insight into their lives, still marred by violence and injustice despite progress in women's rights since the Taliban was toppled over a decade ago.

    In an abandoned textile factory, Hassani spray-painted a wall with six willowy figures in sky-blue burqas, who rise out of the ground like ghosts.

    "In three decades of war, women have had to carry the greatest burdens on their shoulders," Hassani, who also works in the faculty of fine arts at Kabul University, told Reuters. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    11 comments

    It's a start I suppose. I can't imagine the prison they live in. I suppose they are so sheltered from the world that most women in Afghanistan do not know there is a different way. The women who I find most annoying are the ones from the oil rich nations that come to the west to enjoy the hard fough …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, afghanistan, women, central-asia, kabul, world-news, arts, graffiti, shamsia-hassani
  • 2
    Mar
    2012
    4:25am, EST

    Insurgent clash with Pakistan troops kills at least 33, officials say

    By Mushtaq Yusufzai, NBC News producer in Islamabad, and Reuters

    ISLAMABAD -- Militants attacked a hilltop army position in volatile northwest Pakistan early Friday, leaving at least 33 dead in the latest skirmish in a campaign in which neither side appears to have the upper hand.

    At least 10 Pakistan army soldiers were killed and seven others injured in the remote Tirah valley of Khyber tribal region, in a militant attack on three security checkpoints. A senior military official in Khyber tribal region said the soldiers killed 23 militants in retaliation.


    "Dozens of militants attacked the three recently established security checkpoints in the area which led to heavy fighting between the two sides," an unnamed military official told NBC News.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Pleading anonymity, he said helicopters had been sent to the mountainous area to bring the bodies and injured soldiers to Peshawar.

    Casualties could not be independently verified and militants often dispute official accounts, Reuters reported.

    Another security official told NBC News the security forces had recently captured important militant positions and made it difficult for the Taliban fighters to easily move from Khyber to Orakzai, Kurram and North Waziristan.

    Several Pakistani military offensives in the tribal regions such as Khyber have failed to crush militant groups.

    Stalemate at the border
    The insurgency is led by the Pakistani Taliban, formally known as the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, which has an active faction in Khyber.

    The military campaign along the entire border region and across several tribal agencies involves more than 100,000 Pakistani troops, but it has effectively reached a stalemate in many areas.

    Formed in 2007, the TTP is an umbrella organization of militant groups allied with the Afghan Taliban and al-Qaida. It pledged to overthrow the Pakistani government after the military stepped up operations against militants five years ago.

    Khyber is one of seven ethnic Pashtun tribal regions along the porous border which have never come under the full control of the state. Militants have taken advantage of the area's lawlessness to set up strongholds.

    Khyber is one of the main land supply routes to Afghanistan for U.S.-led NATO troops, suspended by Pakistan after a cross-border clash in November last year that left 24 Pakistani soldiers dead.

    Meanwhile on Friday, unknown gunmen opened fire at a car and shot dead an inspector of the Intelligence Bureau (IB) in Peshawar.

    An official of the Michani police said Inspector Bashir Khan was traveling in a car along with his son when unidentified gunmen opened fire at him.

    He died on the spot, while his injured son was taken to hospital.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Mushtaq Yusufzai, NBC News producer in Islamabad, and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    19 comments

    Why is Pakistan not outraged over this attack? I guess it's OK for insurgents to kill army folks, but it's not OK for US forces to return fire against Paki army camps when fired upon. Double standard, I suppose.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, central-asia, taliban, militants, insurgency, featured, khyber
  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    6:28am, EST

    Car bomb targeting NATO aid team kills 4 Afghans

    Abdul Malik / Reuters

    Smoke rises in the sky from a suicide car bomb explosion in Lashkar Gah, Helmand province, Afghanistan, on Jan. 26, 2012. Four Afghan civilians were killed and 31 people wounded, said Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor.

    Abdul Khaleq / AP

    A damaged car is seen at the scene of a suicide attack in Lashkar Gah on Jan. 26, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports from KABUL, Afghanistan:

    A suicide car bomber targeting a NATO-sponsored reconstruction team killed four Afghan civilians, including a child, and wounded 31 on Thursday in southern Afghanistan, officials said.

    The bomber detonated his explosives-laden vehicle as a convoy of the NATO team passed by in Lashkar Gah, capital of Helmand province, Daud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said. Three civilian international members of the aid team — two men and one woman — were among the wounded. Read the full story.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Qais Usyan / AFP - Getty Images

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

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    Comment

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, terrorism, central-asia, bomb, world-news, helmand, lashkar-gah
  • 6
    Dec
    2011
    6:53am, EST

    Worshippers run for their lives seconds after blast at Afghan shrine

    Najibullah Musafer / Reuters

    People react seconds after a suicide blast targeting a Shiite Muslim gathering in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Dec. 6, 2011.

    Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images

    Men run away after an explosion during a religious ceremony in Kabul on Dec. 6, 2011.

    NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services report: 

    A suicide bomber attacked a Shiite Muslim shrine in central Kabul, where a crowd of hundreds had gathered Tuesday for the festival of Ashoura, killing at least 54 people and injuring dozens more in an unprecedented sectarian attack.

    The attacker blew himself up in the midst of a crowd of men, women and children. The mosque had been packed with worshippers and many who could not fit inside were outside the building.

    Afghanistan has a history of tension and violence between Sunnis and the Shiite minority but while such attacks have become commonplace in neighboring Pakistan and parts of the Middle East such as Iraq, they have not previously occurred in Afghanistan.

    Click here to continue reading and for the latest updates on the attack.

    See more images in the slideshow Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads.

    Najibullah Musafer / Reuters

    A man carries a wounded boy after a suicide blast targeting a Shiite Muslim gathering in Kabul on Dec. 6, 2011.

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    A woman mourns after a suicide attack in Kabul on Dec. 6, 2011.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    8 comments

    GOD is fixing this world and he is sending his son to do the ground work!!!!!! Will all of you be ready for that night and day???? if not you will still be living in this world together with nothing but yourself to blame and it will be a world a thousand times worse than today!!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, muslim, terrorism, central-asia, religion, kabul, world-news, shiite, featured, suicide-bomb
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