30 July 2009

Hearts and Minds

The Taliban just released their answer to the US Counter Insurgency Field Manual. The American version, written in 2006, stressed the reduction of civilian casualties in an effort to win Afghan "hearts and minds" in the war against al-Qaeda, and more recently the Taliban.

The Taliban's new manual, written in Pashto, and titled "Mujahideen Manual" (see the cover above), details its code of conduct for Taliban fighters. In what is good news for civilians and most foreign workers, and bad news for American and ISAF forces, the manual encourages limiting attacks to high profile targets, and lowering civilian casualties.

Al-Jazeera has posted excerpts from the Taliban manual on their site. You can access their story here.

This Old House

Last week my cousin took me to see some of the land in Kabul that my grandfather used to own. It is no longer in the family, but we wanted to take a few photos anyways. While we were there we stopped and saw my uncle's sister, who lives just a block or two away from where the pictures were taken.

25 July 2009

Mantu

This weekend I went over to my cousin's house to help prepare and eat Mantu, one of my favorite traditional Afghan dishes. Mantu is a thin steamed dumpling filled with meat and onions and topped with yogurt, tomatoes, mint, and beans. It is supposedly an Uzbek dish, although I have also found it as far away as Istanbul. One of housemates, who is from Kathmandu, says that something very similar to Afghan Mantu is also eaten in Nepal.

23 July 2009

PowerPoint to the People

As we get closer to the election we've been hosting an increasing number of meetings with national and international observer groups such as NDI, IRI, the US Embassy, and EU-EOM.
As part of the Observer Facilitation Unit, Eng. Tawab Salim and I help coordinate the meetings and assemble the information that will be presented. Above is a picture of our first meeting with international groups; I am busy changing the slide for the PowerPoint I put together for the event.

21 July 2009

Khashe-e-Qaoum

Here I am chatting with two of my uncles in our family's other house in Kart-e-Sakhi. The property, which has been renovated in recent years, belongs to another one of my uncles who lives in the United States.

At the time the picture was taken I was being given an history lesson on my Khashe-e-Qaoum, which is a Dari word for relatives and family. Family relations are difficult to follow being here for just the second time in three years. My uncle did his best, though I did much more laughing than understanding.

19 July 2009

ملا عبد السلام راکتی (Mula Abdul Salam Rakity)

This is Mula Abdul Salam Rakity, one of the forty-one presidential candidates in Afghanistan. Take a closer look at his name for second. See anything familiar? Believe it or not, the "Rakity" is a poor spelling for rocket(y) in English. Apparently, "Rakity" became the mulla's nickname during the Afghan-Soviet War when he was taking down large numbers of Russian aircraft with Stinger missiles. The charming fellow is also known to have spent time fighting alongside the Taliban. The good news for peace-loving Afghans is that he is not considered a serious contender in the elections.

NATOISAFLTCMSFSFSO

From left to right: me; LTC Royal Ripley; a US Foreign Service Officer whose name escapes me; and ........., from the US Embassy's Election Support Team. The photo corresponds to my earlier post about dinner at NATO-ISAF.

18 July 2009

The House in Kart-e-Sakhi

Yesterday my cousin and I went to see my father's old property in Kart-e-Sakhi. It's a small piece of land with mud-brick walls (gil-karee), a few rooms that serve as single-family homes, and a couple of rent-paying shops in the front; one is a bakery (naan-baayi) and the other a regular corner store with smokes and soda. Right now, one of my other cousins lives in one of the rooms and has rented out the rest of the space on a system here called "grao." Instead of paying rent, tenants pay a large fee to the landowner up front, sometimes $20 or $30 thousand. The tenants then get to stay on the property indefinitely until the landowner repays the fee. It's essentially a long-term loan and the interest paid is in the form of the use of a private residence; a pretty good deal for the tenants as long as inflation stays under control. Anyways, here some pics of the exterior. Someday I may own this property myself.


Below is the "corner store."
The front of the building. Bakery is on left, corner store is on right. Look up above at the houses built into the mountain.This is a view of the alley on the side of the building. Again, the houses built into the hillside are amazing.
Below, my cousin, her son and I are standing in front of the bakery. They are built up high with the floor at waist-level to fit the tandoor oven beneath the floor.

17 July 2009

Voter Education


Pictured above are two of the voter education posters being distributed across Afghanistan in advance of the upcoming presidential and provincial council elections. There is actually a professional artist at the Commission that draws and colors each and every one. Because the electoral process is very new to Afghanistan one of the IEC's duties is to educate voters on topics such as who they are voting for, how to vote, and what the polling centers will look like. The extremely low literacy rate, estimated to be around 28 percent, necessitates that widely distributed materials convey their messages using pictures and shapes, instead of words. In addition to printed materials, the IEC also hosts a "190" hotline which Afghans can call to have their election related questions answered. I just completed revising and editing the newest printed FAQ list which is being distributed now. The Commission also sends out teams of civic educators into the provinces--one of which was killed two weeks ago--to educate citizens living far from urban areas.

Shirpoor


Shirpoor is one better known and fasted growing neigborhoods in central Kabul . The fairly small fifteen to twenty block area is famous for its luxurious mansions and $10,000/mo rents. Many foreign companies, UN offices, and famous Afghan warlords all coexist peacefully and take up residence there. Some of the houses contain over forty bedrooms, several fully-equipped kitchens, and small sheds inside high walls that serve as living quarters for the cooks and guards, who often make less than $200/mo. Because of the extreme poverty that exists on every edge of the neighborhood, and the extreme wealth within it, Shirpoor is often given as proof of the international community's ignominious waste and detachment from the very people they are trying to help.
In the top picture you can see recently constructed office buildings that lay just behind a make-shift garbage dump, old Soviet tank remains, and the mud walls of a local resident's house. In the bottom picture is one of the typically ostentatious Shirpoor houses nearing completion.