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  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    5:46am, EST

    Tears of joy: The moment an Afghan teen learned of Oscar nomination

    Fawad Mohammadi, the 14-year-old star of a short Afghan film, has been propelled into the Oscar spotlight. The script parallels his own life. NBC's Thanh Truong reports.

    By Kiko Itasaka, Producer, NBC News

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- It is a long way from the grimy, poverty-stricken streets of Afghanistan to the red carpets of Hollywood -- but 14-year-old Fawad Mohammadi is on his way.

    The teenager, who sells chewing gum and maps from the curbside in Kabul, was an actor in "Buzkashi Boys," a film nominated Thursday for an Oscar.

    In a city normally associated with misery, there were tears of joy as Mohammadi learned of the nomination at a small Internet cafe.

    "I'm so happy!" he exclaimed.

    American director Sam Fench called Mohammadi to share congratulations -- and promised to take him to Los Angeles, where the low-budget film is shortlisted in the best live action short film category.

    A 14-year-old Afghan street seller was overcome with emotion when he learned the film Buzkashi Boys, in which he acted, was nominated for an Oscar. Emma Murphy of ITV News reports.

    "I want to see a lot of things there -- Hollywood, and I want to see some actors."

    The glamour of Hollywood is a world away from Mohammadi's daily existence in Kabul, where he sells gum and tourist maps for $3 to $5 on the capital's dangerous roads in order to support his single mother who is raising six sons and one daughter in abject poverty.

    "Buzkashi Boys" tells the story of two boys in Kabul who dream of playing buzkashi, a sport where players on horseback compete to get hold of a headless goat.

    It resonates in Afganistan, where many children live in poverty and surrounded by danger but remain hopeful for their future and that of their nation.

    Mohammadi, discovered on the streets of Kabul, acted for the first and only time in his life. For his efforts, he was paid $1,500 -- a small fortune by Afghan standards.

    2013 boasts the youngest – and the oldest – Oscar nominees ever: 9-year-old Quvenzhane Wallis for "Beasts of the Southern Wild" and 85-year-old Emmanuelle Riva's nomination for "Amour." NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    He used the first $100 to buy food and gave the rest to his mother.

    He has become a celebrity in Kabul, and a source of joy in a place where sadness is the norm. 

    "Some people they know me and when they see me they are so happy," he said. "They want their picture taken with me."

    There was a celebratory meal with friends at the local KFC on Friday, but within hours of learning of the Academy Award nomination, Mohammadi is back on the city's Chicken Street earning money.

    He dreams of being an airline pilot and attends school, but has to keep working to help support his family.

    "This movie shows that Afghans have strength and they work a lot," he said. "It's the real culture of Afghanistan...and also the dreams of Afghans."

    Related stories:
    Troop levels to top agenda for key talks between Obama, Karzai

    Meet Afghanistan's 1st female rapper

    As Taliban regroup, victims battle for 'free' Afghanistan

    94 comments

    Jenny Wernerr Wants to be an airline pilot, huh? three things: 1) 9/11 was perpetrated by Saudis, not Afghanis and 2) Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar 3) Good for him

    Show more
    Explore related topics: entertainment, life, afghanistan, featured, movies, wonderful-world, world, film, kabul, oscar, kiko-itasaka
  • 24
    Dec
    2012
    9:04am, EST

    US civilian killed by Afghan policewoman in 'insider' attack

    Retired Army Col. Jack Jacobs talks to MSNBC's Richard Lui about the killing of a U.S. civilian working for the military outside police headquarters in Kabul.

    By Akbar Shinwari, NBC News

    A U.S. civilian working for the military was killed inside Kabul’s police headquarters when a policewoman opened fire in apparent “insider” attack, officials told NBC News on Monday.

    The man, a member of the International Security Assistance Forces and a logistics adviser to the Kabul police, was severely wounded and died on Monday in the office of the local police chief, according to Mohammad Zahir, head of the criminal investigation department.

    Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    Zahir described the incident as an “insider attack” in which Afghan forces turn their weapons on Western military they are supposed to be working with. 

    What's leading Afghan troops to turn on coalition forces?

    ISAF confirmed to NBC News the victim was one of its civilian employees.

    However, a spokesman for the NATO forces in Afghanistan described the victim to Reuters as "a U.S. police adviser".

    No further details were immediately available.

    Earlier this year, U.S. military officials briefly suspended the training of Afghan Local Police (ALP) in the wake of a deadly series of insider killings, also known as ‘green on blue’ attacks.

    In a separate incident, an ISAF member died following an insurgent attack in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, according to a statement released to NBC News. 

    A blast killed 10 Afghan girls who were collecting firewood in eastern Afghanistan, according to government officials. In a separate incident, two Afghans died in an attack in Kabul. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    253 comments

    If there ever was a country in the history of mankind that needed to be wiped off the Earth it is Afghanistan!

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, featured, military, police, defense, kabul, insider, green-on-blue
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    4:15am, EST

    Bankers suspected of helping kidnap gangs prey on Afghan tycoons

    Mohammad Shoib / Reuters

    A businessman travels with his personal security personnel in Afghanistan's Herat province on Dec. 11.

    By Reuters

    KABUL -- Afghan construction magnate Haji Asadullah Ghaznawi was dragged from his office with a gun to his head and locked up in a slaughterhouse for almost three weeks.

    Ghaznawi was later shocked to discover someone had leaked details of his bank account to the kidnap gang who pulled up in a car in broad daylight in Kabul a year ago and abducted him.

    Violent criminals who gain access to confidential information about Afghan millionaires like Ghaznawi have raised alarming questions about the dangers of doing business in one of the world's poorest and most corrupt countries.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Eight days before I was kidnapped a business partner added one million dollars to my bank account," Ghaznawi said from his luxurious office in the Afghan capital.

    "The kidnappers told me that I had $1 million in my bank. How could they know this?," he asked.

    The leaks, some businessmen allege, are coming from the very people who are supposed to be protecting Afghans and helping them prosper -- intelligence officials, police and bankers.

    Safeguarding Afghanistan's economy is just as important for the troubled South Asian country’s stability as containing the Taliban-led insurgency as NATO combat troops withdraw by the end of 2014.

    Wealthy Afghans fearful of a new civil war or a Taliban push to seize power have already been sending vast sums of money to banks in the Persian Gulf emirate of Dubai and elsewhere, prompting authorities to impose measures to try and stem the flow.

    Government officials fear bank account scams and kidnappings could accelerate that process, and potentially bring the fledgling economy to its knees.

    Purchased freedom
    Ghaznawi spent 17 days in the basement slaughterhouse, worried about his safety and also troubled that criminals now know exactly how much he is worth. A business partner bought his freedom for $820,000.

    It is a problem that has Afghan entrepreneurs so worried that many are hiring large teams of armed guards to provide around-the-clock protection.

    10 Afghan girls collecting firewood killed in blast

    Afghanistan's banking sector has seen an influx of cash from foreign aid and steady growth in industry and construction, but it remains weak and open to exploitation by criminals.

    Businessmen and top officials from the Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Industry say bank employees are leaking account balances to sophisticated gangs who arrange kidnappings.

    More news about South and Central Asia on NBCNews.com

    "These kidnap gangs have some good connections, they work as teams, they know who the rich people are," said Shir Baz Kaminzada, president of the Afghan Industrial Union, who runs a lucrative printing and packaging firm and travels in a bullet-proof car.

    "Our banks aren't so secure and some bank people, we suspect they're providing information to criminals," he said.

    Some businessmen go further and allege rogue officials from Afghanistan's intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security, are obtaining the financial records of high-rollers. The agency did not respond to interview requests.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    /

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

    Launch slideshow

    UN calls for Afghanistan to protect women from rape, forced marriage

    Lucrative business
    Kidnapping is a lucrative business, with ransoms often in excess of $1 million. Many cases go unreported and most are unsolved.

    "Among our members, we have many kidnap victims and the problem is mostly solved by paying the ransom without involving police," said Ahmad Tawfiq Dawari, a deputy head at the Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

    Facebook takes down Taliban recruiter page

    "They hire 10-15 private guards themselves and it's expensive. When security forces do nothing to stop the kidnappers, how can we trust them to protect us?" he asked.

    Businessmen place the blame squarely on law enforcement agencies. The chief of the Kabul Criminal Investigation, Mohammad Zahir, insists police are cracking down on the gangs and says the leaks most likely came from employees or relatives.

    Slideshow:

    Kevin Frayer / AP

    In southern Afghanistan, the focus of the U.S. war effort, nearly all the Afghan soldiers are foreigners too. Photographer Kevin Frayer shows these soldiers in a series of portraits.

    Launch slideshow

    "These kidnappers had private prisons where they tortured victims if they refused to pay, so we started a fight against them and we've brought this problem to its lowest point," Zahir said, reeling off the names of prominent people rescued and kidnapping kingpins who have been arrested.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    "The government supports us and we're not afraid of anyone," he added.

    Sitting with an associate in his Kabul office, Ghaznawi gets little comfort from such talk and believes businessmen have a bleak future in Afghanistan. He constantly fears that the kidnappers will return.

    EXCLUSIVE: US, NATO behind 'insecurity' in Afghanistan, Karzai says

    "I wanted to shut down my business but my partners convinced me to continue," he said. "Other businessmen know what I went through, why would they put their money and lives at risk?"

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Google+ Hangout from Egypt with NBC News' Ayman Mohyeldin

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    3 comments

    Anyone in any position of power in Afghanistan is not to be trusted. It's all about the money and the drugs. Just nuke the whole sand pile and get it over with.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, featured, nato, kidnapping, kabul, karzai, banking-fraud
  • 10
    Dec
    2012
    8:28am, EST

    Senior female Afghan official shot dead

    Waseem Nikzad / AFP - Getty Images

    Men prepare to pray during the funeral Monday of Nadia Sediqqi in Mihtarlam, Afghanistan.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    JALALABAD, Afghanistan -- Unknown gunmen shot dead a senior female government worker on Monday, officials in eastern Afghanistan said, five months after her predecessor was killed in a bomb attack.

    Violence against women appears to be on the rise in Afghanistan, which activists and some lawmakers blame on what they say is waning interest in women's rights on the part of President Hamid Karzai's government, claims he denies.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Nadia Sediqqi, acting head of the women's affairs department in Laghman province, was killed as she headed to work in the capital Mehtar Lam, said the provincial governor's spokesman Sarhadi Zwak.

    "They shot her as she was getting into a rickshaw," Zwak said of the attack about 93 miles east of Kabul, adding that she worked without bodyguards -- a common situation for female government workers.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

    EXCLUSIVE: US, NATO behind 'insecurity' in Afghanistan, Karzai says

    The U.S. Embassy in Kabul condemned the attack.

    “This attack, especially on Human Rights Day, shows that those who killed Ms. Siddiqi have no respect for human rights or the safety of the Afghan people,” it said in a statement.

    Violence against women
    Afghan women have won back basic rights in education, voting and employment since the Taliban were ousted from power in 2001, but fears are mounting that such freedoms could be traded away as Kabul seeks peace talks with the group.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    /

    More than 10 years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    In a recent interview with NBC News, Afghan President Hamid Karzai denied that violence against women had been on the rise. Instead, he said, incidents of violence were being reported more today than in years past.

    Newlywed beheaded for her refusal to become a prostitute

    “You hear more of violence because there is more awareness of it today because there's more reporting of it today because there is more enforcement of the law against violence today ... not that violence has increased,” he told NBC’s Atia Abawi.

    Still, a 2011 poll by the Thomson Reuters Foundation judged that Afghanistan was the most dangerous country in the world for women, beating on Congo and Pakistan.

    Watch Atia Abawi's full, exclusive interview with Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai in which he discusses the "growing perception" that insecurity in the region is caused by the United States and some of its allies who "promoted lawlessness" and "corruption" in Afghanistan.

    Predecessor also slain
    Sediqqi had replaced Hanifa Safi, who was killed in July by a car bomb that her family blamed on the Taliban.

    Women who pursue careers in ultra-conservative Afghanistan often face opposition in a society where often they are ostracized, or worse, for mixing with men other than husbands or relatives.

    After 10 years of Karzai's rule, has life improved in Afghanistan?

    Safi's son later told Reuters that authorities had ignored repeated requests for protection, echoing greater concerns that the safety of female government workers is not taken seriously by Kabul, despite commitments to better the rights of women 11 years into the NATO-led war.

    NBC News' Atia Abawi, Akbar Shinwari and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    172 comments

    The anus of the world where women are treated like slaves! They will NEVER come out of the stone age until they recognize and support women as equals.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, featured, taliban, hamid-karzai, kabul, nadia-sediqqi
  • 21
    Nov
    2012
    12:33pm, EST

    Piecing together a fractured Afghanistan one limb at a time

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Ehsamullah, 30, left, who lost his leg after being shot with an AK-47 and Hassibullah, 30, right, who lost his after stepping on a mine, practice walking with their prosthetic limbs at the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) orthopedic center on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Afghan National Army commando, Khairuddin Sultan, 21, is helped up by his friend Ala Mohamed who joined the army with him 18 months ago, as an orthopedic specialist molds a cast for his prosthetic legs on Nov. 19. Khairuddin, a double amputee, lost his legs when an IED exploded during a joint operation against the Taliban with U.S. special forces. The IED exploded while he was using a mine detector, sending shrapnel into his outstretched hand and blowing up his legs.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Orthopedic components hang on a wall in a workshop at the ICRC orthopedic center on Nov. 19 in Kabul.

    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) rehabilitation center works to educate and rehabilitate land-mine victims and those with limb related deformities in Kabul, Afghanistan. The center helps its patients transition back into society and assists them in finding employment by offering micro-credit financing, home schooling and vocational training. The clinic itself is unique in that all of the workers are handicapped. The Kabul center has registered over 57,000 patients, with more than 114,000 registered country-wide in all of their centers since its inception 25 years ago.

    -- Getty Images

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Bismillah Gul, 12, suffering from poliomyelitis, is helped by his father Masta Gul, after having traveled from Khost province to get treatment on Nov. 19 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    Khairullah, 10, watches as his brother Zainullah, 18, has a mold cast for a prosthetic arm on Nov. 20 in Kabul. Zainullah, a brick worker, lost his hand six months ago, shaping a brick from mud that contained a mine.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic technician works on a prosthetic arm on Nov. 20 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic specialist checks the mobility of new prosthetic limbs being fitted on a patient on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic specialist fits a new prosthetic limb onto a patient on Nov. 20 in Kabul.

    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

    An orthopedic technician walks past prosthetic limbs being stored for patients on Nov. 20 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    Related content:

    • Relentless Afghan conflict leaves traumatized generation
    • Displaced Afghan children sift garbage for recyclables to sell
    • Afghan women learn literacy through mobile phones
    • Qargha Lake offers respite in war-torn Afghanistan
    • Soldier who lost 4 limbs in Afghanistan returns home to hero's welcome

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Aref Karimi / 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

    3 comments

    Anyone still want to keep fighting war?

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    Explore related topics: health, afghanistan, red-cross, kabul, prosthetics, limbs, land-mines
  • 21
    Nov
    2012
    12:46am, EST

    Two killed in suicide bomb at military compound in Kabul

    Jawad Jalali / AFP - Getty Images

    A destroyed vehicle is pictured at the scene of a suicide attack in Wazir Akbar Khan district of Kabul on Nov. 21, 2012. A suicide bomber blew himself up near a NATO base in Kabul's diplomatic district on Wednesday, hitting a military vehicle and killing two people, police and a military spokesman said.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 1:01 p.m. ET: A suicide bomber killed two Afghan guards outside a foreign-run military compound in the main diplomatic area of the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Wednesday, Interior Ministry officials said, an attack that was quickly claimed by the Taliban.

    "The bomber killed himself in front of the compound. Two people were killed and two more were wounded, all Afghan guards," said Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danesh.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A police official in Kabul told NBC News that the attacker was on foot when he came to the neighborhood in Kabul, where there's a heavy concentration of foreign and NGO offices.

    According to the official, the man was recognized by the security guards. They opened fire on him as the suicide attacker threw the grenades at the guards and then detonated himself.

    There was a second suicide attacker, but he was killed by guards before he could detonate his grenade.

    Dozens of police swarmed to the area, where shattered glass from cars lay on the ground, and cordoned it off.


    It was not immediately clear which foreign forces run the compound, although Afghan security officials said it is U.S.-run. A spokeswoman at the U.S. embassy in Kabul said its security team was investigating the blast.

    The Taliban took responsibility for the attack, which happened at 8.20 a.m. local time, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location.

    Embassy sirens sounded and ambulances could be heard after the blast, which happened in the area where the U.S. and British embassies and the headquarters of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force are located.

    A spokesman for ISAF said the coalition was aware of an explosion and that one of its vehicles had been damaged.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    11 comments

    In Afghanistan, Pakis have backstabbed the US and NATO forces big time. Half of NATO forces deaths are due to ungrateful and backstabbing Pakis. When the NATO forces were entering Kandahar in 2001, Pakis airlifted key al-Qaida, Taliban, ISI and others militants by back door from Kandahar. This inclu …

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  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    8:43am, EST

    Relentless Afghan conflict leaves traumatized generation

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Patients sit inside their ward at a mental hospital in Kabul on November 11, 2012. The war in Afghanistan is creating a generation of people mentally damaged by their exposure to incessant conflict, a buildup of problems which could undermine the country's reconstruction and development efforts.

    Reuters reports — On a low bed in a quiet, all-female hospital ward, a depressed Afghan teenager huddles silently under blankets, her mother close by. In a nearby room are men suffering from schizophrenia, delusions of persecution and power, anxiety and panic disorders.

    As Taliban regroup, victims battle for 'free' Afghanistan

    Among them are some of the unseen victims of the war in Afghanistan: a generation of people mentally damaged by their exposure to incessant conflict.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Ghazia Sadid, 26, a patient suffering from depression, speaks during an interview with Reuters at a mental hospital in Kabul on November 14, 2012.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Aref Karimi / 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

    Ghazia Sadid, a 26-year-old mother, endured depression for years after a family member was killed in a bomb attack, and she fled her home in fear of more violence.

    "I still hear the sounds of explosions. I still remember the fighting, but since I have come here my behavior has changed," she said, speaking at the Kabul Mental Health Hospital, a green-walled building on the outskirts of the city.

    "I was totally lost and my life was over. After two years of treatment, now I love my children," she said. "I loved them then too, but in my imagination I had done something wrong." Read the full story.

    When the war comes home: Watch a video about U.S. soldiers' struggles with PTSD and other mental issues after returning from Afghanistan

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    A patient scribbles on his hand as he sits inside his ward at a mental hospital in Kabul on November 11, 2012.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Patients sit inside their ward at a mental hospital in Kabul on November 11, 2012.

     

     

    9 comments

    Before the followers of Islamic cult set their feet, Afghan and Paki regions were quite prosperous. Muslim extremists can't even tolerating Buddha's statue in Afghanistan. Islamic heroin addiction in both Pakistan and Afghanistan are responsible for the mess! As nicely shown in this article, Muslims …

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    Explore related topics: world-news, health, afghanistan, mental-health, conflict, kabul, central-asia
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    6:19am, EST

    As Taliban regroup, victims battle for 'free' Afghanistan

    Anja Niedringhaus / AP, file

    Zalmai Faizi, a seven-year veteran of the Afghan National Police, last month buried his five-year-old daughter Ennah and 18-year-old son Zalkai after they were murdered by Taliban gunmen.

    By Tazeen Ahmad, NBC News

    The Taliban were driven from power in Afghanistan 11 years ago this week but remain a threat. NBC News spoke to Afghans who have suffered at their hands and looked at what people believe the country's future will hold after NATO troops withdraw in 2014.

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- Zalmai Faizi's two children were playing in his police car when the Taliban assassins pulled up on motorcycles. 

    After having a few words with Faizi's son, the gunmen peppered the vehicle leaving the teenager and his five-year-old sister dead. Faizi rushed out of his house to find his kids in a pool of blood. 

    As a police officer in Afghanistan's eastern Ghazni province, the 40-year-old carries out one of the world's most dangerous jobs. He paid an unimaginable price for his convictions.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I have been getting threats since last year by the Taliban, but I decided not to give it any attention," he told NBC News. "I was not the target because I came home 10 minutes before. They had a chat with my son and then they started firing."

    Faizi believes the Taliban wanted to teach him a lesson and send a message to others: Quit your job or pay a heavy price. He says he ignored the warnings simply because he had no other choice. He needed his monthly salary of $224 and had long-accepted that the job came with some risks. 

    'My only hope'
    Like many of his countrymen, Faizi believes in a secure and safe Afghanistan. Without people like him, Afghanistan could fall into chaos or back into the hands of the Taliban and warlords after NATO troops leave.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Aref Karimi / 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

    He and his wife and their remaining kids are now in a desperate state, in fear for their own lives and catatonic with grief.

    "I have lost my young son and daughter who were my only hope and for whom I had great aspirations," he said through tears.

    Threats from the Taliban are a regular occurrence for all security officials in Afghanistan. The Taliban have sworn to kill anyone who colludes with "evil" Western forces. Faizi's kids were the latest in a long line of victims but such attacks are neither rare nor isolated.

    Analysts believe such incidents -- as well as insider attacks by Afghan security personnel targeting NATO troops -- are part of a Taliban plan to weaken government forces ahead of a comeback when foreign troops leave.

    Joint US-Afghan operations are becoming more common, and so are the risks. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    In the lead-up to the planned withdrawal in 2014, Taliban strategies have become both smarter and more sinister. Just last month, six Afghan policemen were poisoned by their cook. As they lay unconscious they were shot dead by another colleague. The Taliban's fight for survival has become increasingly dirty, driven by a determination that the group will rise again.

    Notorious Taliban leader Mullah Omar remains elusive. Rumors of whether he is dead, alive or insane have gone into overdrive but his 10-year absence from the public stage has not lessened his influence.

    "He remains an important leader and figure for the Taliban, but the Taliban is successful because of middle-level commanders," NBC News terrorism analyst Evan Kohlmann said. "It's like a franchise; it's decentralized enough so that the Taliban are going to be around whether or not there is a Mullah Omar."

    More Afghanistan coverage from NBC News

    He describes the Taliban today as a patchwork of groups spread across large regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan borders, held together by common religious beliefs, social objectives and an opposition to foreign "occupation."

    "At this point, they've put their differences aside in order to unite and fight the Western presence," Kohlmann added.

    Soosan Firooz rhymes about Afghanistan and the many crises its people have faced. In a country where public performance by women is frowned upon, this is no easy feat.  NBC News' Tazeen Ahmad reports.

    Just over a decade ago, the world watched in horror as the Taliban blew up Buddhas in Bamiyan province and shot women at close range in a stadium in Kabul. Kohlmann says they have since, publicly at least, moderated and attempted to change their image so they can engage in the world of diplomacy.

    However, many ordinary people in Afghanistan believe the same medieval attitudes to women and justice are simmering below the surface, along with the Taliban's long-established appetite for unpalatable brutality.

    Jamieson Lesko / NBC News

    When they ruled Kabul in the 1990s, the Taliban forced people who were being executed up on to this diving board and pushed them into the empty pool below.

    Nowhere is this more apparent than in Kabul, where countless cemeteries sprawl across the city with no boundaries, some graves no more than a piece of rock in the ground.

    Within these cemeteries, lie the bodies of thousands of ordinary Afghans killed by the Taliban. It's a stark reminder of the city's dreadful history.

    At a hilltop above one graveyard is an Olympic-sized swimming pool. It was once the scene of heinous acts of cruelty when during the 1990s the Taliban forced people to climb to the top diving board and pushed them into the empty pool to meet a terrible death below.

    Tazeen Ahmad / NBC News

    Some of the graves in Kabul's cemeteries are no more than a piece of rock in the ground.

    Today's Taliban now defend their record on human rights. Whether the people of Afghanistan have forgotten is another story. However, a decade is a long time out of power.

    New tricks
    The Taliban have regrouped, modernized, learned new tricks and taken their battle to many fronts – including the Internet. They use Facebook to gather information and Twitter to spread their propaganda. Every attack is tweeted about immediately with over-inflated claims of how many "invaders" were killed. They've even got an ongoing online spat with ISAF – with each side equally determined to win the war of words.

    Away from cyberspace, some of the most notorious aspects of Taliban ideology have seeped into everyday life.

    In recent months, violence against women has increased dramatically. Afghanistan's Independent Human Right Commission on Tuesday said it has registered more than 3,000 cases of violence against women this year. More than 700 cases have been reported in Herat alone.

    Newlywed beheaded for her refusal to become prostitute

    Others say the numbers are far higher in more remote regions. Women have been burnt, mutilated, decapitated, had acid thrown in their faces, sold, prostituted, raped and used as currency. Not all of this is because of the Taliban, but women's groups say this increase in violence is part and parcel of the Taliban's legacy.

    A suicide bomber, disguised as an Afghan police officer, blew himself up outside a mosque in northern Afghanistan, killing 40 people and wounding more than 50. NBC's Tazeen Ahmad reports from Kabul.

    Despite public declarations to the contrary, the Taliban have not relinquished attempts to derail education for Afghan girls. During the summer, 160 schoolgirls were admitted to hospital in northern Afghanistan after they were poisoned; the police say the Taliban were responsible.

    Razia Jan, a strong-minded and charismatic Afghan-American, runs a girls school about 30 miles from Kabul called the Zubili Education Center. Remarkably, men in the surrounding seven villages have overcome their initial resistance and have now joined forces to become its biggest protectors. But the threat from the Taliban is never far away. Jan speaks cautiously, conscious of drawing too much unnecessary attention.

    Karen Wong / Razia's Ray of Hope Foundation

    Razia Jan's school provides free education to over 350 young girls every day.

    "There are now millions of girls that go to school but education has been and is going to be hurt by the Taliban," she told NBC News. "They are supposed to be students of religion but they are thugs; they are terrorists."

    This hasn't stopped Jan. Her school provides free education to more than 350 young girls daily. "It's such a blessing for them to learn something and go back home. The fathers are so proud," she says.

    Meet Afghanistan's 1st female rapper

    These small signs of hope and bravery can be found across Afghanistan. Gul Jan, a 55-year-old woman from northwest Afghanistan's Shebarghan city is more courageous than most.

    Her husband was murdered by the Taliban -- flogged, whipped and beaten for hours until he collapsed in front of their house.

    Shortly after his death, they forced her out of her home. Determined to survive for her five young children, Gul Jan rebuilt her life and now works as a tailor.  That's no mean feat for a single mother in Afghanistan. She does not mince her words about the Taliban.

    "They are very bad people," she says. "People should go and ask them why they are doing this. This is not our religion."

    In recent months, there have also been reports of 10 separate anti-Taliban insurgencies occurring in remote regions of Afghanistan. However, analysts say these small steps are not indicative of a wider trend, at least not yet.

    NBC's Richard Engel examines America's progress after fighting for more than a decade in Afghanistan. Is there any evidence that the American plan to hand over a credible, stable Afghan government will work?

    But in Kabul, there are other signs of change. The blue burqa, one of the most potent images of Taliban times, is not as ubiquitous as it once was.

    Women across the capital wander around with full faces of make-up -- heads always draped with a shawl as is customary -- but also the flash of a killer heel beneath a long local robe, or the jangle of bracelets as they shop alone or in pairs. The tradition of a male companion has been long-deemed unnecessary.

    PhotoBlog: Afghan women learn literacy through mobile phones

    But as women wander through stores in central Kabul with names like "Life's Good," the shadow of the Taliban is never far away. 

    "For years the Taliban have destroyed Afghanistan. They destroyed lives for girls," Razia Jan added. "But I think they are just cowards hiding in places where nobody can get to them and they come out like a snake and they bite you and then they slither back."

    She then adds with a smile, "I can imagine an Afghanistan that is someday free of the Taliban. It will take awhile, but I think it's possible."

    NBC News' Jamieson Lesko contributed to this report.

    Follow NBC News' Tazeen Ahmad on Twitter.

    As the security in Afghanistan crumbles, 'Nightly' returns to an orphanage that Brian Williams first visited in 2009 to find girls with big dreams who are focused on getting into college.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • As Taliban regroup, victims battle for 'free' Afghanistan
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    128 comments

    The taliban should be shot on sight no questions asked. Haven't we all had and seen enough of this. If I could I'd be there right now taking out as many of these vermin as possible. What good is the greatest military in the world if you keep their hands tied.

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  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    6:10am, EDT

    Officials: 40 killed as suicide bomber attacks Afghan mosque

    According to government officials, a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a mosque in northern Afghanistan, killing 40 people and wounding more than 50. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By NBC News and wire reports

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a mosque in northern Afghanistan on Friday, killing 40 people and wounding more than 50, government and hospital officials said.

    The attack in the town of Maymana, capital of northern Faryab province, came as people were gathering at the mosque to celebrate the Eid al-Adha holiday, said Jawid Didar, spokesman for the governor's office.


    Top provincial officials, including the governor and the police chief, were inside the building when the bomber set off his explosives outside, where a large crowd had gathered, Didar said. The officials were not hurt, but the casualties included police officers and soldiers, he said.

    "There was blood and dead bodies everywhere," Khaled, a doctor who happened to be in the mosque at the time of the blast, told The Associated Press.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "It was a massacre," said Khaled, who like many Afghans uses only one name.

    The death toll soon climbed to 40, with more than 50 people wounded, a spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Information told NBC News.

    Afghan officials told NBC that it was too soon to determine whether Afghan security forces were the primary target of the bomber, or whether the bomber was wearing a uniform of any kind.

    Afghan woman beheaded for refusing to become prostitute

    A spate of so-called insider attacks -- carried out by members of the Afghan police or military -- has undermined trust between international troops and the local army and police, further weakened public support for the war in NATO countries and increased calls for earlier withdrawals.

    Video from the scene showed the motionless bodies of several soldiers and policemen lying next to their vehicles parked on a tree-lined avenue of the city, located about 300 miles northwest of Kabul. On the sidewalk, a number of civilians lay along the mosque's outer wall, some writhing and moaning in pain.

    Intensifying violence
    Friday’s attack appeared to be the deadliest suicide bombing in recent months.

    But violence is intensifying across the country, 11 years into the NATO-led war, sparking concerns over how the 350,000-strong Afghan security forces will manage once most foreign troops leave by the end of 2014.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Aref Karimi / 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

    On Sept. 4, 25 civilians were killed and more than 35 wounded in Nanghar province, and on Sept. 1, 12 people were killed and 47 wounded in a suicide attack in Wardak province.

    The attack came as Afghan President Hamid Karzai urged Taliban insurgents "to stop killing other Afghans."

    In his Eid al-Adha message to the nation, Karzai called on the insurgents to "stop the destruction of our mosques, hospitals and schools."

    Pakistani girl shot by Taliban reunited with family

    The United Nations says that Taliban attacks account for the vast majority of civilian casualties in the war. The insurgents routinely deny that they are responsible for attacks on civilians, saying they target only foreign troops or members of the Afghan security forces.

    On Wednesday, Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar urged his fighters to "pay full attention to the prevention of civilian casualties," saying the enemy was trying to blame them on the insurgents.

    Taliban claims killing of 2 Americans
    Also Friday, the Taliban claimed responsibility for killing two American service members in southern Uruzgan province, in what may have been the latest insider attack against Western troops.

    Joint US-Afghan operations are becoming more common, and so are the risks. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    In an emailed statement, Taliban spokesman Jusuf Ahmadi said a member of the Afghan security forces shot the two men the day before, then escaped to join the insurgents.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    Maj. Lori Hodge, spokeswoman for U.S. forces in Afghanistan, said on Thursday that authorities were trying to determine whether the attacker was a member of the Afghan security forces or an insurgent who donned a government uniform.

    It was the second suspected insider attack in two days. On Wednesday, two British troops and an Afghan policeman were gunned down in Helmand province.

    Sunni radicals target Shiites to fan sectarian flames in Pakistan

    Before Thursday's assault, 53 foreigners attached to the U.S.-led coalition had been killed in attacks by Afghan soldiers or police this year.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    91 comments

    Apparently they have decided not to wait for us to leave before they return to their centuries-old tradition of killing each other.

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  • 13
    Oct
    2012
    2:32am, EDT

    Two foreigners reported missing in Afghanistan, feared kidnapped

    By Reuters

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- Two foreigners, thought to be a Canadian and a U.S. citizen, were reported missing Saturday by a provincial reconstruction team in volatile Wardak, west of Kabul, and were feared to have been kidnapped, Afghan police said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Rumors of the abduction of a man and a woman by either insurgents or criminal gangs have circulated for several days, but U.S. and Canadian diplomats said they were unaware of anyone reported missing.

    "According to the Provincial Reconstruction Team report they had planned to travel from Kabul to Wardak," Wardak police spokesman Wali Mohammad told Reuters.

    "The missing foreigners were in contact until they reached the Kampany area on Kabul's outskirts. After that they lost contact," Mohammad said. "We have information they may have been kidnapped."

    Slideshow: Afghanistan as war begins

    A look at life changing for Afghans as the U.S. launched its war on terror 10 years ago.

    Launch slideshow

    Seven British marines arrested in Afghanistan murder probe

    The kidnapping of foreigners has become relatively common in parts of Afghanistan since U.S.-backed Afghan forces toppled the former Taliban government in 2001.

    NATO-led forces said they were aware of the kidnap reports, but the search for the missing pair was being handled by diplomats and Afghan police.

    US forces based at Kabul International Airport in Afghanistan take part in a memorial service marking the 11th anniversary of the September 11 attacks. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Two US special operations troops killed in Afghanistan fighting

    A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Kabul late on Friday said there was no information on a missing American, but diplomatic officials are often reluctant to talk about kidnappings in hope it could smooth the way for negotiations on a release.

    Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs said it was looking into the reports, but gave no confirmation of a missing citizen.

    In May, two Western female doctors working for a Swiss charity were kidnapped with two Afghan colleagues by insurgent gunmen in northeastern Afghanistan. They were later rescued by NATO special forces soldiers.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Clinton reaffirms support for Libya, emerging democracies
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    43 comments

    I love what MSN wrote under the picture of the man with the rifle. The U.S. is not responsible for the turmoil that has been going on for longer then ten years, and it defiantly did not start when we began going after these evil Islamic terrorists. What we need to do is stop funding to all countries …

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, featured, canada, u-s, nato, kabul, kidnapped
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    10:53am, EDT

    Lessons learned in Afghanistan

    See our full coverage on international hot spots crucial to U.S. foreign policy ahead of elections in our At the Brink series here.

    NBC’s Richard Engel examines America’s progress after fighting for more than a decade in Afghanistan.

    Is there any evidence that the American plan to hand over a credible, stable Afghan government will work? 

    Engel reports from Kabul. 

     


     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, war, kabul, richard-engel, at-the-brink
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    11:06am, EDT

    For US soldiers, repeat deployments 'definitely take a toll'

    The Third Infantry Division is used to being deployed. Now, after multiple deployments to Iraq, the 3rd ID has been sent to Afghanistan for the first time. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    By Lester Holt, NBC News

    KABUL – “How many deployments for you? Iraq, Afghanistan or both?”

    See our full coverage on international hot spots crucial to U.S. foreign policy ahead of elections in our At the Brink series here. And tune in today to special coverage on all NBC News platforms from NBC’s team of anchors and correspondents deployed in five countries across the region.

    In an army that’s been waging war in Afghanistan for 11 years, talking about past deployments is what amounts to small talk on the many bases I’ve visited this past week from Kabul to Kandahar, as well as along the Pakistan border in eastern Afghanistan. Soldiers rattle off the dates and locations of their deployments, and point out fellow soldiers with whom they served.

    The Army’s Third Infantry Division moved its headquarters recently from its home base at Fort Stewart, Ga., to Kandahar, Afghanistan. The move marked the division’s first deployment to Afghanistan, but it’s fifth to a war zone in the last 10 years. 

    The Third Infantry Division made history in 2003 when it kicked off the war in Iraq as the so-called “tip of the spear,” driving up from Kuwait straight into Baghdad in what veterans remember as the “Thunder Run.”

    Sgt. First Class Joseph Aiello says he couldn’t imagine back then that he would be in Afghanistan nine years later, still fighting a war.  When the Iraq war began, he was dating his sweetheart Terri. Today they are parents to three small children. Aiello has been on four of the division's five deployments since 2003.


    “It definitely takes a toll on family,” Aiello told me. He added, however, that worrying about home and family when you are in a war zone has its risks.

    “The minute you lose focus that’s when incidents can start to happen,” said Aiello. “You need to maintain focus while you’re here to do a job and that’s what we will get done.”

    The  Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd touches base with NBC reporters across the Mid-East including NBC's Atia Abawi in Kabul, Martin Fletcher in Tel Aviv, Ali Arouzi in Tehran and Ann Curry from the Syrian border.

    Serving on the home front, too
    Back in Georgia, Aiello’s wife, Terri, makes her own contribution to the war, as a physical therapist assistant helping wounded vets. At home she has become accustomed to living the life of a single mom.

    Photo Blog: Exploring home abroad: Afghan-Americans in Kabul

    “A bad day would be having a stressful day [at work] and then going home and the boys are fighting, Alyssa’s cranky and the homework’s not done,” she said about her three children.

    She’s learned to push ahead alone. “Nothing really changes. It’s just that he’s not there to experience everything with us.” 

    Her sacrifices are not lost on her husband.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    “A lot of people say that the soldiers got a hard job and everything like that. But the way I look at it, sir, is I definitely think the wives have the hardest job in the Army,” Aiello told me.

    ‘No different’
    Aiello is one of only a handful of Third Infantry Division soldiers with the unit today who were part of the original march into Baghdad back in 2003. The division’s pace of deployments over the last 10 years is nothing short of remarkable, but no more remarkable than the multiple deployments that have become the norm for thousands of U.S. service members.

    Eleven years of war have left tens of thousands of service families, like the Aiellos, sharing the void of long and too frequent separations.

    Maj. Gen. Robert Abrams, commanding general of the Third Infantry Division and the International Security Assistance Force’s Regional Command-South, underscored the point.

    “There are others making equal sacrifices across the army, so we don’t see ourselves any different,” Abrams said.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Anwarullah / Reuters

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

    Launch slideshow

    Aiello recalled the long wait for letters from home in those early days following the Iraq invasion. Now he does video chats with his family regularly via Skype, which didn’t exist in 2003.

    On the TODAY Show this weekend, dozens of service members crowded around our broadcast location here at the joint task force headquarters for ISAF in Kabul. Many of them carried signs with pictures of the children whose birthdays, and sweet-16 parties they are missing back home.

    A suicide bomber in Afghanistan kills at least 14 people, including 3 NATO service members, bringing the US death toll on the ground to 2,000 with 20 percent of American combat deaths stemming from insider attacks. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    The international coalition has set the end of 2014 to withdraw most combat forces from Afghanistan. In the meantime, the United States will continue to ask a lot from so few. The troops and the families will wait for them to return one day and stay home for good.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    239 comments

    As long as we pretend to call people heroic for joining the military in a time when our freedoms are not threatened, our young and impressionable youth will continue to join and die for political theater.

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