Afghanistan

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د افغانستان اسلامي جمهوریت
(Da Afġānistān Islāmī Jomhoriyat)
جمهوری اسلامی افغانستان
(Jamhūrī-yi Islāmī-ye Afġānistān)

Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Flag of Afghanistan Emblem of Afghanistan
Flag Emblem
Anthem: Surūd-i Millī
Location of Afghanistan
Capital
(and largest city)
Kabul
34°31′N 69°08′E
Official languages Pashto
Persian (Darī)[1]
Government Islamic Republic
 - President Hamid Karzai
 - Vice President Ahmad Zia Massoud
 - Vice President Karim Khalili
Independence from the United Kingdom 
 - Declared August 8 1919 
 - Recognized August 19 1919 
Area
 - Total 652,090 km² (41st)
251,772 sq mi 
 - Water (%) n/a
Population
 - 2005 estimate 29,863,000
 - 1979 census 13,051,358
 - Density 46/km²
119/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2006 estimate
 - Total $31.9 billion
 - Per capita $1,310
HDI  (1993) 0.229 (n/a)
Currency Afghani (Af) (AFN)
Internet TLD .af
Calling code +93

Afghānistān, officially the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (Pashto language: د افغانستان اسلامي جمهوریت, or Persian language: جمهوری اسلامی افغانستان), is a landlocked country located in the heart of Asia and is variously designated within Central Asia and/or South Asia as well as the Middle East.

Afghanistan is a mosaic of ethnic groups, and a crossroads between the Eastern and Western world. Afghanistan is a country at a unique nexus point where numerous Eurasian civilizations have interacted, traded, migrated through, and often fought, and was an important site of early historical activity.

The region of modern Afghanistan has seen many invaders and conquerors come and go, including the Persian Empire, Alexander the Great, Muslim Arabs, Turkic peoples, Mongol nomads, the British Empire and the Soviet Empire.

Geography

Afghanistan is located in the heart of Asia and specifically upon the geologic Iranian plateau. The country is landlocked and mountainous, containing most of the Hindu Kush.

It is bordered by Pakistan in the south and east, Iran in the west, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and the People's Republic of China in the far northeast. Part of the region bordering Pakistan falls in the disputed Kashmir region which is claimed by India.

The name Afghānistān translates to the “Land of Afghans”. The Pashtun people began using the term Afghan as a name for themselves from at least the Islamic period and onwards. Until the nineteenth century]], the name was only used for the traditional lands of the Pashtuns, while the kingdom as a whole was known as the Kingdom of Kabul. It has religious, ethno-linguistic, and geographic links with most of its neighbours.

At 249,984 square miles (647,500 square kilometers), Afghanistan is the world's 41st-largest country (after Burma). It is comparable in size to Somalia, and is slightly smaller than the United States state of Texas.

Afghan-big.jpg

The terrain comprises mostly rugged mountains — the Hindu Kush and connected ranges — plains in north and southwest, and large areas of sandy desert near the southern border with Pakistan. The highest point is Nowshak, at 24,557 feet (7485 meters) above sea level. The lowest point is Amu Darya at 846 feet (258 meters). Large parts of the country are dry, and fresh water supplies are limited.

Important passes include the Unai Pass across the Sanglakh Range, and the Kotal-e Salang, connecting Kabul with central and northern Afghanistan. The approaches to the Khyber Pass across the Safed Koh are in eastern Afghanistan. Key passages through the mountainous Pakistan border include two from Paktika Province into Pakistan's Waziristan region, plus the Charkai River passage south of Khowst, Afghanistan. The busy Pakistan border crossing at Wesh, connects Kandahar and Spin Boldak, Afghanistan, to Quetta, Pakistan.

The variety of climate is immense. Afghanistan has a continental climate, with hot summers and cold winters. Generally, the climate is dry. The sun shines with splendour for three-fourths of the year, and the nights are clearer than the days. The highlands have a mean temperature of between 50 °F to 60 °F (10 °C and 15 °C). A remarkable feature is an extreme range of temperature within limited periods. The least daily range in the north is during the cold weather, the greatest in the hot. From May to November) this range exceeds 30 °F (17 °C) daily. Waves of intense cold occur, lasting for several days, up to 12 °F below zero (minus 24 °C), rising to a maximum of 17 °F (minus 8 °C). In Kabul the snow lies for two or three months; the people seldom leave their houses, and sleep close to stoves.

The summer heat is great everywhere in Afghanistan. All over Kandahar province the summer heat is intense, and rendered more trying by frequent dust storms and fiery winds. The bare rocky ridges that traverse the country absorb heat by day and radiating it by night, render the summer nights most oppressive. The summer temperature is exceedingly high, especially in the Oxus regions, where a shade maximum of 110 °F to 120 °F (45 °C to 50 °C) is not uncommon. The summer rains that accompany the southwest monsoon in India travel up the Kabul valley as far as Laghman.

Tora Bora Mountains.

Most vegetation is confined to the main ranges and their immediate off-shoots, while on the more distant ranges it is almost entirely absent; in fact, these are naked rock and stone. Large conifers grow on the Safed Koh alpine range itself from 6000 to 10,000 ft (1800 to 3000 meters). Down to 3000 ft (1000 meters) we have wild olive, rock-rose, wild privet, acacias and mimosas. The lowest ridges, especially towards the west, are largely bare.. Their scanty vegetation is almost wholly herbal; shrubs are only occasional; trees almost non-existent. In cultivated districts the chief trees seen are mulberry, willow, poplar, and ash.

Damaging earthquakes occur in the Hindu Kush mountains. Flooding and droughts occur in the south and south-west of the country.

The country's natural resources include gold, silver, copper, zinc and iron ore in southeastern areas, precious and semi-precious stones such as lapis, emerald and azure in the north-east; and potentially significant petroleum and natural gas reserves in the north. The country also has coal, chromite, talc, barites, sulfur, lead, and salt. However, these significant mineral and energy resources remain largely untapped due to the effects of the Soviet invasion and the subsequent civil war.

There are four major rivers in the country: Amu Darya, Hari Rud, the Kabul, and Helmand rivers. There are also several smaller sized rivers and couple of small sized lakes.

Kābul is the capital and largest city of Afghanistan, with population of about three million people. It is an economic and cultural center, situated 5900 feet (1800 meters) above-sea-level in a narrow valley, and wedged between the Hindu Kush mountains along the Kabul River. Kabul is linked with Ghazni, Kandahar, Herat and Mazari Sharif via a long beltway (circular highway) that stretches across Afghanistan. It is also linked by highways with Pakistan to the southeast and Tajikistan to the north.

History

File:GBA8.jpg
Buddhas of Bamyan were the largest Buddha statues in the world, dating back to the first century AD.

Excavation of prehistoric sites suggests that humans were living in what is now Afghanistan at least 50,000 years ago, and that farming communities of the area were among the earliest in the world.

Over the centuries, waves of migrating peoples passed through the region—described by historian Arnold Toynbee as a "roundabout of the ancient world"—leaving behind a mosaic of ethnic and linguistic groups. Between 2000 and 1200 B.C.E., waves of Indo-European-speaking Aryans from the north of Amu Darya are thought to have flooded into northern Afghanistan and then spreading south towards India and west towards Persia, setting up a nation that during the rule of Medes and Achaemenid Persians became known as Aryānām Xšaθra or Airyānem Vāejah.

Later, during the rule of Ashkanian, Sasanian and after, it was called Erānshahr meaning "Dominion of the Aryans", which included large parts of Mesopotamia, the Caucasus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran and modern-day Central Asia (Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and the western part of Pakistan.

It has been speculated that Zoroastrianism might have originated in what is now Afghanistan between 1800 to 800 B.C.E. Ancient Iranian languages, such as Avestan, may have been spoken in this region around a similar time-line with the rise of Zoroastrianism.

File:AlexanderAttackingDarius.jpg
Alexander the Great fighting the Persian king Darius (Pompeii mosaic, from a 4th century B.C.E. original Greek painting, now lost).

By the middle of the sixth century B.C.E., the Persian Empire of the Achaemenids supplanted the Median Empire and incorporated what was known as Persia to the Greeks within its boundaries; and by 330 B.C.E., Alexander the Great had invaded Afghanistan and conquered the surrounding regions. Following Alexander's brief occupation, the Hellenistic successor states of the Seleucids and Greco-Bactrians controlled the area, while the Mauryas from India annexed the southeast for a time and introduced Buddhism to the region until the area returned to the Bactrian rule.

During the first century C.E., the Tocharian Kushans created a vast empire centered in modern Afghanistan and were patrons of Buddhist culture. The Kushans were then defeated by the Sassanids in the third century. The Sassanids ruled up to the seventh century, when Muslim Arab armies conquered the Sassanid Empire following the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah. The Arab Abbasids conquered the northwest section of Afghanistan by the ninth century and administered that region as part of Khorasan.

In the Middle Ages, up to the eighteenth century, the region was known as Greater Khorasan. Several important centers of Khorāsān are thus located in modern Afghanistan, such as Balkh, Herat, Ghazni and Kabul.

The region became the center of various important empires, including that of the Samanids (875-999), Ghaznavid Empire (977-1187), Seljukids (1037-1194), Ghurids (1149-1212), and Timurid Dynasty (1370-1506). Among them, the periods of Ghaznavids of Ghazni, and Timurids of Herat are considered as some of the most brilliant eras of Afghanistan's history. The strong Sunni Ghaznavid Empire prevented the eastward spread of Shiism from Iran, thereby insuring that the majority of the Muslims in Afghanistan and South Asia remain Sunnis.

In 1219, the region was overrun by the Mongols under Genghis Khan, who devastated the land. Their rule continued with the Ilkhanates, and was extended further following the invasion of Timur Lang, a ruler from Central Asia.

In 1504, Babur, a descendant of both Timur Lang and Genghis Khan, established the Mughal Empire with its capital at Kabul. By the early 1700s, Afghanistan was controlled by several ruling groups: Uzbeks to the north, Safavids to the west and the remaining larger area by the Mughals or self ruled by local Afghan tribes.

Coronation of Ahmad Shah Durrani in 1747, the founder of the Afghan Empire and first King of Afghanistan.

In 1709, Mirwais Khan Hotak, a local Afghan (Pashtun) from the Ghilzai clan, overthrew and killed Gurgin Khan, the Safavid governor of Kandahar Province. Khan successfully defeated the Persians, who were attempting to convert the local population of Kandahar from Sunni to Shia sect of Islam. Mirwais held the region of Kandahar until his death in 1715 and was succeeded by his son Mir Mahmud Hotaki. In 1722, Mir Mahmud led an Afghan army to Isfahan (now in Iran), sacked the city and proclaimed himself Shah of Persia. However, the great majority rejected the Afghan regime as usurping, and after the massacre of thousends of civilians in Isfahan by the Afghans – including more than three thousand religious scholars, nobles, and members of the Safavid family – the Hotaki dynasty was eventually removed from power by a new ruler, Nadir Shah of Persia.

In 1738, Nadir Shah and his army, which included four thousand Pashtuns of the Abdali clan, conquered the region of Kandahar; in the same year he occupied Ghazni, Kabul and Lahore. On June 19, 1747, Nadir Shah was assassinated, possibly planned by his nephew Adil Shah. In the same year, one of Nadir's military commanders and personal bodyguard, Ahmad Shah Abdali, a Pashtun from the Abdali clan, called for a loya jirga following Nadir's death. The Afghans gathered at Kandahar and chose Ahmad Shah as their King. Since then, he is regarded as the founder of modern Afghanistan. After the inauguration, he changed his title or clans' name to “Durrani,” which derives from the Persian word Durr, meaning “Pearl.”

By 1751, Ahmad Shah Durrani and his Afghan army conquered the entire present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, Khorasan and Kohistan provinces of Iran, along with Delhi in India. In October 1772, Ahmad Shah retired to his home in Maruf, Kandahar, where he died peacefully. He was succeeded by his son, Timur Shah Durrani, who transferred the capital from Kandahar to Kabul. Timur died in 1793 and was finally succeeded by his son Zaman Shah Durrani.

During the nineteenth century, following the Anglo-Afghan wars (fought 1839-42, 1878-80, and lastly in 1919) and the ascension of the Barakzai dynasty, Afghanistan saw much of its territory and autonomy ceded to the United Kingdom. The UK exercised a great deal of influence, and it was not until King Amanullah Khan acceded to the throne in 1919 that Afghanistan re-gained complete independence over its foreign affairs. During the period of British intervention in Afghanistan, ethnic Pashtun territories were divided by the Durand Line. This would lead to strained relations between Afghanistan and British India – and later the new state of Pakistan – over what came to be known as the Pashtunistan debate.

The longest period of stability in Afghanistan was between 1933 and 1973, when the country was under the rule of Mohammed Zahir Shah. However, in 1973, Zahir Shah's brother-in-law, Sardar Daoud Khan launched a bloodless coup. Daoud Khan and his entire family were later murdered in 1978, when the communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan launched a coup known as the Great Saur Revolution and took over the government.

File:Mohammed Daoud Khan.jpg
Sardar Daoud Khan was President of the Republic of Afghanistan from 1973 to 1978.

Opposition against, and conflict within, the series of communist governments that followed, was considerable. As part of a Cold War strategy, in 1979 the United States government under President Jimmy Carter and National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski began to covertly fund and train anti-government Mujahideen forces through the Pakistani secret service agency known as Inter Services Intelligence, who were derived from discontented Muslims in the country that opposed the official atheism of the Marxist regime. In order to bolster the local Communist forces, the Soviet Union—citing the 1978 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Good Neighborliness that had been signed between the two countries —intervened on December 24, 1979. According to media and official government sources, between 110,000 to 150,000 Soviet troops, assisted by another 100,000 or so pro-communist Afghan troops, were present in Afghanistan. The Soviet occupation resulted in a mass exodus of over five million Afghans that moved into refugee camps in neighboring Pakistan, Iran and other countries. More than three million settled in Pakistan, over a million in Iran and many others in different countries of the world. Faced with mounting international pressure and the loss of over 15,000 Soviet soldiers as a result of Mujahideen opposition forces trained by the United States, Pakistan, and other foreign governments, the Soviets withdrew ten years later, in 1989.

The Soviet withdrawal from the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was seen as an ideological victory in the US, which had backed the Mujahideen through three U.S. presidential administrations in order to counter Soviet influence in the vicinity of the oil-rich Persian Gulf. Following the removal of the Soviet forces in 1989, the US and its allies lost interest in Afghanistan and did little to help rebuild the war-ravaged country or influence events there. The USSR continued to support President Najibullah (formerly the head of the secret service, KHAD) until his downfall in 1992. However, the absence of the Soviet forces resulted in the downfall of the pro-communist government as it steadily lost ground to the guerrilla forces.

File:Evstafiev-afghan-apc-passes-russian.jpg
Soviet troops withdrawing from Afghanistan in 1988.

The result of the fighting was that the vast majority of the elites and intellectuals had escaped to take refuge abroad, a dangerous leadership vacuum thereby coming into existence. Fighting continued among the various Mujahideen factions, eventually giving rise to the rise of warlords. The most serious fighting during this growing civil conflict occurred in 1994, when over 10,000 people were killed in Kabul. The chaos and corruption that dominated post-Soviet Afghanistan in turn spawned the rise of the Taliban, who were mostly Pashtuns from the Helmand province and Kandahar region.

The Taliban developed as a politico-religious force, and eventually seized Kabul in 1996. By the end of 2000, the Taliban were able to capture 95 percent of the country, aside from the opposition (Afghan Northern Alliance) strongholds primarily found in the northeast corner of Badakhshan Province. The Taliban sought to impose a strict interpretation of Islamic Sharia law and were later implicated as supporters of terrorists, most notably by harbouring Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network.

During the Taliban's seven-year rule, much of the population experienced restrictions on their freedom and violations of their human rights. Women were banned from jobs, girls forbidden to attend schools or universities. Those who resisted were punished instantly. Communists were systematically eradicated and thieves were punished by amputating one of their hands or feet. The Taliban managed to eradicate most opium production by 2001.

File:Ahmad shah massoud 3.jpg
Ahmed Shah Massoud was a famous military commander. He fought the Soviets in the 1980s and the Taliban in the 1990s, until he was assassinated by al-Qaeda on September 9, 2001.

Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, the United States launched Operation Enduring Freedom, a military campaign to destroy the Al-Qaeda terrorist network operating in Afghanistan and overthrow their host (the Taliban government). The US made common cause with the Afghan Northern Alliance to achieve its ends.

In December 2001, major leaders from the Afghan opposition groups and diaspora met in Bonn, Germany, and agreed on a plan for the formulation of a new democratic government that resulted in the inauguration of Hamid Karzai, a Pashtun from the southern city of Kandahar, as chairman of the Afghan Interim Authority.

After a nationwide Loya Jirga in 2002, Karzai was chosen by the representatives to assume the title as Interim-President of Afghanistan. In 2003, the country convened a Constitutional Loya Jirga (Council of Elders) and ratified a new constitution the following year. Hamid Karzai was elected President in a nation-wide election in October 2004. Legislative elections were held in September 2005. The National Assembly – the first freely elected legislature in Afghanistan since 1973 – sat in December 2005, and was noteworthy for the inclusion of women as voters, candidates, and elected members.

Hamid Karzai became the President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan in 2004, following an election that was held in the country for the first time in history.

As the country continues to rebuild and recover, by 2007 it was struggling against poverty, poor infrastructure, large concentration of land mines and other unexploded ordinance on earth, as well as a huge illegal opium poppy cultivation and opium trade. Afghanistan also remains subject to occasionally violent political jockeying. The country continues to grapple with the Taliban insurgency, the threat of attacks from a few remaining al-Qaeda, and instability, particularly in the north, caused by the remaining few semi-independent warlords.

Politics and government

Politics in Afghanistan has historically consisted of power struggles, bloody coups and unstable transfers of power. With the exception of a military junta, the country has been governed by nearly every system of government over the past century, including a monarchy, republic, theocracy and communist state. The constitution ratified by the 2003 Loya jirga restructured the government as an Islamic republic consisting of three branches, (executive, legislature and judiciary).

The president is elected directly by the Afghan people to a five-year term, and can be elected no more than twice. The President must be Muslim, an Afghan citizen born of Afghan parents, and should not be guilty of war crimes. The president is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The president has two vice-presidents. President Hamid Karzai was elected in October 2004.

The National Assembly consists of two houses: the Wolesi Jirga (House of the People) and the Meshrano Jirga (House of Elders). The Wolesi Jirga, the more powerful house, consists of a maximum of 250 delegates directly elected through a system of proportional representation. Members are elected on a provincial basis and serve for five years. At least 64 delegates (two from each province) must be women; and ten Kuchi nomads are also elected among their peers. The Wolesi Jirga has the primary responsibility for making and ratifying laws and approving the actions of the president.

The Meshrano Jirga will consist of an unspecified number of local dignitaries and experts appointed by provincial councils, district councils, and the president. The president also appoints two representatives of the physically disabled. The lower house passes laws, approve budgets and ratify treaties – all of which will require subsequent approval by the Meshrano Jirga. The lower house has considerable veto power over senior appointments and policies.

The National Assembly of Afghanistan was elected in 2005. Among the elected officials were former mujahadeen, Taliban members, communists, reformists, and Islamic fundamentalists. Twenty eight percent of the delegates elected were women, three percent more than the 25 percent minimum guaranteed under the constitution. This made Afghanistan, long known under the Taliban for its oppression of women, one of the leading countries in terms of female representation.

All aged 18 and over are eligible to vote. There are more than 70 recognized political parties.

The republic's top court is the Stera Mahkama (Supreme Court). Its nine-members are appointed by the president for 10-year terms. There are also High Courts, Appeals Courts, and local and district courts. Eligible judges can have training in either Islamic jurisprudence or secular law. A system of civil law is described, but no law may contradict the beliefs and provisions of Islam. Courts are allowed to use Hanafi jurisprudence, one of the six branches of Sharia law, in situations where the constitution lacks provisions. Shia jurisprudence is used in cases arising strictly between Shi'ites.

There is also a minister of justice, and a separate Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission established by the Bonn Agreement is charged with investigating human rights abuses and war crimes.

There are 34 provinces.

A national police force of 50,000 is planned. Although the police officially are responsible for maintaining civil order, local and regional military commanders continue to exercise control in the hinterland. Police have been accused of improper treatment and detention of prisoners.

Economy

Afghanistan's economy is recovering from decades of conflict. The economy has improved significantly since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001 largely because of the infusion of international assistance, the recovery of the agricultural sector, and service sector growth. Real GDP growth probably exceeded eight percent in 2006.

Despite the progress of the past few years, Afghanistan is extremely poor, landlocked, and highly dependent on foreign aid, agriculture, and trade with neighboring countries. Much of the population continues to suffer from shortages of housing, clean water, electricity, medical care, and jobs. Criminality, insecurity, and the Afghan Government's inability to extend rule of law to all parts of the country pose challenges to future economic growth. It will probably take the remainder of the decade and continuing donor aid and attention to significantly raise Afghanistan's living standards from its current status, among the lowest in the world. Two-thirds of the population lives on less than US$2 a day.

While the international community remains committed to Afghanistan's development, pledging over $24-billion at three donors' conferences since 2002, Kabul will need to overcome a number of challenges. Expanding poppy cultivation and a growing opium trade generate roughly $3 billion in illicit economic activity and looms as one of Kabul's most serious policy concerns. As much as one-third of Afghanistan's GDP comes from growing poppy and illicit drugs including opium and its two derivatives, morphine and heroin, as well as hashish production. Other long-term challenges include: budget sustainability, job creation, corruption, government capacity, and rebuilding war torn infrastructure.

The economy has suffered greatly from the recent political and military unrest since the 1979 Soviet invasion and subsequent conflicts, while severe drought added to the nation's difficulties in 1998-2001.

The economically active population in 2002 was about 11 million (out of a total of an estimated 29 million). While there are no official unemployment rate estimates available, it is evident that it is high. The number of non-skilled young people is estimated at three million, which is likely to increase by some 300,000 per annum.

One of the main drivers for the economic recovery is the return of over four million refugees from neighbouring countries and the West, who brought with them fresh energy, entrepreneurship and wealth-creating skills as well as much needed funds to start up businesses. What is also helping is the estimated US 2-3 billion dollars in international assistance every year, the partial recovery of the agricultural sector, and the reestablishment of market institutions.

The government had a central budget of only $350 million in 2003 and an estimated $550 million in 2004. The country's foreign exchange reserves totals about $500 million. Revenue is mostly generated through customs, as income and corporate tax bases are negligible.

The plan for Kabul's nine billion dollar future modern urban development project, the City of Light Development.

According to the US Geological Survey and the Afghan Ministry of Mines and Industry, Afghanistan may be possessing up to 36 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, 3.6 billion barrels of petroleum and up to 1325 million barrels of natural gas liquids. Sales of natural gas, first tapped in 1967, peaked during the 1980s at $300-million a year in export revenues (56 percent of the total). Ninety percent of these exports went to the Soviet Union to pay for imports and debts. When Soviet troops withdrew in 1989, Afghanistan's natural gas fields were capped to prevent sabotage by the mujahidin. Energy exports could generate the revenue that Afghan officials need to modernize the country’s infrastructure and expand economic opportunities for the beleaguered and fractious population. Other reports suggest that the country has huge amounts of gold, copper, coal, iron ore and other rich minerals.

The Afghan economy continues to be overwhelmingly agricultural, despite the fact that only 12 percent of its total land area is arable and less than six percent is cultivated. Agricultural production is constrained by an almost total dependence on erratic winter snows and spring rains for water; irrigation is primitive. Relatively little use is made of machines, chemical fertilizer, or pesticides. Grain production is Afghanistan's traditional agricultural mainstay.

Opium became a source of cash for some Afghans, especially following the breakdown in central authority after the Soviet withdrawal. Opium-derived revenues constituted a major source of income for the two main factions. The Taliban earned roughly $40-million per year on opium taxes alone. Opium is easy to produce and transport and offers a quick source of income for impoverished Afghans. Afghanistan has been the world's largest producer of opium for most of the past decade. In 2000, the Taliban banned opium poppy cultivation in part to attract foreign aid and, allegedly, to control the opium market with large existing stockpiles that earned substantially large price increases. While cultivation of opium poppy was virtually eliminated in Taliban-controlled areas, drug trafficking has continued unabated. Later, in 2001, the Taliban reportedly announced that poppy cultivation could resume. Much of Afghanistan's opium production is refined into heroin and is either consumed by a growing regional addict population or exported, primarily to Western Europe. The post-Taliban Afghanistan government enacted counter-narcotics policies and programs.

Exports in 2005 totalled $471-million (not including illicit exports or re-exports). Export commodities included opium, fruits and nuts, hand-woven carpets, wool, cotton, hides and pelts, precious and semi-precious gems. Export partners were the United States 25.3 percent, Pakistan 20.9 percent, India 20.8 percent, and Finland 4 percent. (2005)

Imports in 2005 totalled $3.87-billion. Import commodities included capital goods, food, textiles and petroleum products. Import partners were Pakistan 23.9 percent, United States 11.8 percent, Germany 6.8 percent, India 6.5 percent, Turkey 5.1 percent, Turkmenistan 5 percent, Russia 4.7 percent, and Kenya 4.4 percent.

With a per capita GDP of $1310 in 2006, Afghanistan was ranked 162 out of a total of 181 nations.

Demographics

The population of Afghanistan is divided into a wide variety of ethnic groups. Because a systematic census has not been held in the country in decades, exact figures about the size and composition of the various ethnic groups are not available.[2] Therefore most figures are approximations only.

On a functional level, Afghanistan cannot be subjectively examined under the Western conception of either a state or a nation. The country simply does not operate in any sense of either definition at this time. Both a limited security apparatus and stalled international support have done little to cultivate ancient divisions based on ethnic and religious elements. J. Feiser, Asia Times[3]

Languages

The CIA factbook on languages spoken in Afghanistan is as follows: Persian (officially known as Dari, but known more widely as Farsi) 50% and Pashto 35%; both are Indo-European languages from the Iranian languages sub-family. Pashto and Persian are the official languages of the country. Other languages spoken include Turkic languages (primarily Uzbek and Turkmen) 9%, as well as 30 minor languages 4% (primarily Balochi, Nuristani, Pashai, Brahui, Pamiri languages, Hindko, Hindi/Urdu, etc.). Bilingualism is common.

File:Languages of Afg based.JPG
Languages of Afghanistan ██ 50% Persian (usually of the Dari dialect) ██ 35% Pashto ██ 8% Uzbeki ██ 3% Turkmeni ██ 2% Balochi       2% other (Nuristani, Pashai, Brahui, Pamiri languages, Hindko, Urdu, Hindi, etc.)

According to the Encyclopædia Iranica,[4] the Persian language is the mother tongue of roughly one-third of Afghanistan's population, while it is also the most widely used language of the country, spoken by around 90% of the population. It further states that Pashto is spoken by around 50% of the population.

Ethnic Groups

The pie chart on the left indicates a distribution of Afghanistan's ethnic groups based on recent information gathered by the BBC News agency, the CIA and United Nations reports. An approximate distribution of ethnic groups based on the CIA World Factbook[5] is shown on the right.

File:Demographics of Afghanistan.JPG
Pie chart showing Afghanistan's major ethnic groups.


The Encyclopædia Britannica gives a slightly different list for various ethnolinguistic groups in Afghanistan:[6]

  • 49% Pashtun
  • 18% Tajik
  • 9% Hazara
  • 8% Uzbek
  • 4% Aimak
  • 3% Turkmen
  • 9% other

Based on official census numbers from the 1960s to the 1980s, as well as information found in mainly scholarly sources,[7] the Encyclopædia Iranica gives the following list:[7]

  • 36.4% Pashtun
  • 33.6% Tajik, Farsiwan, and Qezelbash
  • 8.0% Hazara
  • 8.0% Uzbek
  • 3.2% Aimak
  • 1.6% Baloch
  • 9.2% other

Religions

Religiously, Afghans are over 99% Muslims: approximately 74-89% Sunni and 9-25% Shi'a[6][5][8] (estimates vary). There are about 30,000 to 150,000 Hindus and Sikhs living in different cities but mostly in Jalalabad, Kabul, and Kandahar.[9][10] Also, there was a small Jewish community in Afghanistan (See Bukharan Jews) who fled the country after the 1979 Soviet invasion, and only one individual, Zablon Simintov, remains today.[11]

Largest cities

The only city in Afghanistan with over one million residents is its capital, Kabul. The other major cities in the country are, in order of population size, Kandahar, Herat, Mazari Sharif, Jalalabad, Ghazni and Kunduz.

Culture

Afghans display pride in their religion, country, ancestry, and above all, their independence. Like other highlanders, Afghans are regarded with mingled apprehension and condescension, for their high regard for personal honor, for their clan loyalty and for their readiness to carry and use arms to settle disputes.[12] As clan warfare and internecine feuding has been one of their chief occupations since time immemorial, this individualistic trait has made it difficult for foreign invaders to hold the region.

Afghanistan has a complex history that has survived either in its current cultures or in the form of various languages and monuments. However, many of the country's historic monuments have been damaged in recent wars. The two famous statues of Buddha in the Bamyan Province were destroyed by the Taliban, who regarded them as idolatrous. Other famous sites include the very cities of Kandahar, Herat, Ghazni and Balkh. The Minaret of Jam, in the Hari Rud valley, is a UNESCO World Heritage site. The cloak worn by Muhammad is stored inside the famous Khalka Sharifa in Kandahar City.

The people of Afghanistan are prominent horsemen as the national sport is Buzkashi, similar to polo, but instead which a goat carcass is used instead of a ball. Afghan hounds (a type of running dog) also originated from Afghanistan.

Although literacy levels are very low, classic Persian poetry plays a very important role in Afghan culture. Poetry has always been one of the major educational pillars in Iran and Afghanistan, to the level that it has integrated itself into culture. Persian culture has, and continues to, exert a great influence over Afghan culture. Private poetry competition events known as “musha’era” are quite common even among ordinary people. Almost every home owns one or more poetry collection of some sort, even if it is not read often.

The eastern dialects of the Persian language are popularly known as "Dari". The name itself derives from "Pārsī-e Darbārī", meaning Persian of the royal courts. The ancient term Darī – one of the original names of the Persian language – was revived in the Afghan constitution of 1964, and was intended "to signify that Afghans consider their country the cradle of the language. Hence, the name Fārsī, the language of Fārs, is strictly avoided. With this point in mind, we can consider the development of Dari or Persian literature in the political entity known as Afghanistan."[13]

Many of the famous Persian poets of the tenth to fifteenth centuries stem from Khorasan where is now known as Afghanistan. They were mostly also scholars in many disciplines like languages, natural sciences, medicine, religion and astronomy.

  • Mawlānā Rumi, who was born and educated in Balkh in the thirteenth century and moved to Konya in modern-day Turkey
  • Rabe'ah Balkhi (the first poetess in the History of Persian Poetry, 10th century, native of Balkh)
  • Daqiqi Balkhi (10th century, native of Balkh)
  • Farrukhi Sistani (10th century, the Ghaznavids royal poet)
  • Khwaja Abdullah Ansari (11th century, from Herat)
  • Sanā'ī Ghaznawi (twelfth century, native of Ghazni)
  • Jāmī of Herāt (fifteenth century, native of Herat in western Afghanistan),
  • Alī Sher Navā'ī, (fifteenth century, Herat).

Most of these individuals were of Persian (Tājīk) ethnicity who still form the second-largest ethnic group in Afghanistan. Also, some of the contemporary Persian language poets and writers, who are relatively well-known in Persian-speaking world, include Ustad Betab, Qari Abdullah, Khalilullah Khalili,[14] Sufi Ghulam Nabi Ashqari,[15] Qahar Asey, Parwin Pazwak and others. In 2003, Khaled Hosseini published The Kiterunner which though fiction, captured much of the history, politics and culture experienced in Afghanistan from the 1930s to present day.

In addition to poets and authors, numerous Persian scientists have had their origins lie in where it's now called Afghanistan. Most notable was Avicenna (Abu Alī Hussein ibn Sīnā) whose father hailed from Balkh. Ibn Sīnā, who travelled to Isfahan later in life to establish a medical school there, is known by some scholars as "the father of modern medicine". George Sarton called ibn Sīnā "the most famous scientist of Islam and one of the most famous of all races, places, and times." His most famous works are The Book of Healing and The Canon of Medicine, also known as the Qanun. Ibn Sīnā's story even found way to the contemporary English literature through Noah Gordon's The Physician, now published in many languages.

Before the Taliban gained power, the city of Kabul was home to many musicians who were masters of both traditional and modern Afghan music, especially during the Nauroz-celebration. Kabul in the middle part of the twentieth century has been likened to Vienna during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

The tribal system, which orders the life of most people outside metropolitan areas, is potent in political terms. Men feel a fierce loyalty to their own tribe, such that, if called upon, they would assemble in arms under the tribal chiefs and local clan leaders (Khans). In theory, under Islamic law, every believer has an obligation to bear arms at the ruler's call (Ulul-Amr).

Heathcote considers the tribal system to be the best way of organizing large groups of people in a country that is geographically difficult, and in a society that, from a materialistic point of view, has an uncomplicated lifestyle.[12]


Infrastructure

Communications and technology

Afghanistan has rapidly increased in communication technology, and has embarked on wireless companies, internet, radio stations and television channels. Afghan telecommunication companies, Afghan Wireless, Roshan and Areeba, have boasted increase in rapid cellular phone usage. In 2006, the Afghan Ministry of Communications has signed a US 64.5 million dollar agreement with a company (ZTE Corporation) on the establishment of a countrywide fibre optical cable network. This will improve telephone, internet, television and radio broadcast services throughout the country.[16]

Afghanistan's local television channels include:

  • Aina TV
  • Ariana TV
  • Ariana Afghanistan TV
  • Lamar TV
  • Shamshad TV
  • Tolo TV

Transportation

Afghanistan's commercial airlines, Ariana Afghan Airlines, now serves flights to London Heathrow, Frankfurt, Madrid, Rome, Dubai and Istanbul to and from Kabul and Herat. Afghanistan has also improved in vehicle conditions with Toyota, Land Rover, BMW and Hyundai dealerships all over Kabul, and a huge import of fine second-hand vehicles from UAE on display in Kandahar. Afghanistan, however, still is a long way from major modern technological advancements, but is on the fast road to that goal.

Education

In the spring of 2003, it was estimated that 30% of Afghanistan's 7,000 schools had been very seriously damaged during more than two decades of civil war. Only half of the schools were reported to have clean water, while fewer than an estimated 40% had adequate sanitation. Education for boys was not a priority during the Taliban regime, and girls were banished from schools outright.

As regards the poverty and violence of their surroundings, a study in 2002 by the Save the Children Fund said Afghan children were resilient and courageous. The study credited the strong institutions of family and community.

As of 2006, more than four million male and female students are enrolled in schools throughout the country. Primary education is totally free and available for all boys and girls.

Literacy of the entire population is estimated at 36%, the male literacy rate is 51% and female literacy is 21%. Up to now there are 9,000 schools in the country.

Another aspect of education that is rapidly changing in Afghanistan is the face of higher education. Following the fall of the Taliban, Kabul University was reopened to both male and female students. In 2006, the American University of Afghanistan also opened its doors, with the aim of providing a world-class, English-language, co-educational learning environment in Afghanistan. The university accepts students from Afghanistan and the neighboring countries. Construction work will soon start at the new site selected for Balkh University in Mazari Sharif. The new building for the university, including the building for the Engineering Department, would be constructed at 600 acres of land at the cost of US 250 million dollars.[17]

Views of Afghanistan

See also

  • Kabul
  • History of Afghanistan
  • Demographics of Afghanistan
  • List of leaders of Afghanistan
  • Military of Afghanistan
  • Transportation in Afghanistan
  • Communications in Afghanistan
  • European influence in Afghanistan
  • Foreign relations of Afghanistan
  • First Anglo-Afghan War
  • NATO
  • Provincial Reconstruction Team
  • International Security Assistance Force
  • Ariana Afghan Airlines
  • Afghanistan International Bank
  • Afghan Scout Association
  • Golden Needle Sewing School
  • Help Afghan School Children Organization
  • Human rights in Afghanistan
  • Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
  • Taliban
  • Afuganisu-tan
Stamps
  • Postage stamps and postal history of Afghanistan
  • List of birds on stamps of Afghanistan
  • List of fish on stamps of Afghanistan

Literature

  • Ghobar, Mir Gholam Mohammad. Afghanistan in the Course of History, 1999, All Prints Inc. Link
  • Griffiths, John C. 1981. Afghanistan: A History of Conflict. André Deutsch, London. Updated edition, 2001. Andre Deutsch Ltd, 2002, ISBN 0-233-05053-1.
  • Levi, Peter. 1972. The Light Garden of the Angel King: Journeys in Afghanistan. Collins, 1972, ISBN 0-00-211042-3. Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1973, Indianapolis/New York, ISBN 0-672-51252-1.
  • Moorcroft, William and Trebeck, George. 1841. Travels in the Himalayan Provinces of Hindustan and the Panjab; in Ladakh and Kashmir, in Peshawar, Kabul, Kunduz, and Bokhara... from 1819 to 1825, Vol. II. Reprint: New Delhi, Sagar Publications, 1971. Oxford University Press, 1979, ISBN 0-19-577199-0.
  • Rashid, Ahmed (2000) "Taliban - Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia", Yale University Press
  • Caroe, Olaf. 1958. The Pathans (about the ethnic origin of Afghans).
  • Toynbee, Arnold J. 1961. Between Oxus and Jumna. Oxford University Press, London. ISBN B0006DBR44.
  • Wood, John. 1872. A Journey to the Source of the River Oxus. New Edition, edited by his son, with an essay on the "Geography of the Valley of the Oxus" by Henry Yule. John Murray, London. Gregg Division McGraw-Hill, 1971, ISBN 0-576-03322-7.
  • Heathcote, T.A. The Afghan Wars 1839-1999, 1980,2003, Spellmount Staplehurst.
  • Rall, Ted. 2002. "To Afghanistan and Back: A Graphic Travelogue" New York: NBM Publishing.
  • Vogelsang, Willem. 2002. The Afghans. Blackwell Publishers. Oxford. ISBN 0631198415

References and footnotes

  1. Afghanistan, in Encyclopædia Britannica, Online Edition, 2006, (LINK)
  2. BBC News - Afghan poll's ethnic battleground - October 6, 2004
  3. J. Feiser, "The ghost of Greater Afghanistan", published in Asia Times - Central Asia, July 23rd 2003, (LINK)
  4. L. Dupree, "Afghānistān: (v.) languages", in Encyclopædia Iranica, Online Edition 2006, (LINK)
  5. 5.0 5.1 CIA World Factbook
  6. 6.0 6.1 Encyclopædia Britannica - Afghanistan...Link (PDF)
  7. 7.0 7.1 L. Dupree, "Afghānistān: (iv.) ethnocgraphy", in Encyclopædia Iranica, Online Edition 2006, (LINK)
  8. Goring, R. (ed) "Larousse Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions" (Larousse: 1994); pg. 581-58;: Table: "Population Distribution of Major Beliefs", ISBN 0-7523-0000-8, Note: "... Figures have been compiled from the most accurate recent available information and are in most cases correct to the nearest 1% ..."
  9. Hinduism Today: Hindus Abandon Afghanistan
  10. BBC South Asia: Sikhs struggle in Afghanistan
  11. Washingtonpost.com - Afghan Jew Becomes Country's One and Only - N.C. Aizenman
  12. 12.0 12.1 Heathcote, Tony (1980, 2003) "The Afghan Wars 1839 - 1919", Sellmount Staplehurst
  13. R. Farhādī, "Modern literature of Afghanistan", Encyclopaedia Iranica, xii, Online Edition, (LINK)
  14. Afghanmagazine.com - Ustad Khalilullah Khalili - 1997
  15. Afghanmagazine.com - Kharaabat - by Yousef Kohzad - 2000
  16. Pajhwok Afghan News - Ministry signs contract with Chinese company...Link
  17. Pajhwok Afghan News - Pakistan grants $10m for Balkh University...Link

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