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In Kabul, many streets have no name and houses often have no number, meaning that postmen already braving the constant threat of suicide bombings must play detective to deliver mail.
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Kabul's $4.90 Chicken: Afghan Street Food Adventure!
In this thrilling culinary journey through Kabul, we uncover one of the city’s best-kept secrets: a whole flame-grilled ...
(Reuters) -- Russia said on Thursday it had accepted the credentials of a new ambassador of Afghanistan, making it the first ...
At night in Kabul, packs of dogs roam the streets. Credit... Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times. By Fatima Faizi and Thomas Gibbons-Neff. Published March 21, 2021 Updated March 22, 2021.
The busy Kabul street looks almost as if nothing has changed. People rush by, as shopkeepers arrange their colorful merchandise, and police direct traffic. There’s one big change, though: There ...
And this is what you’ll find on Kabul streets these days — Kabulis, perhaps 3 million to 4 million of them living in the capital, often with little to do.
"I am always scared going out to do some work," she tells ABC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Ian Pannell, who spoke with Zarlasht through a translator and followed her as she navigated part of a ...
About two dozen women marched in Kabul chanting "bread, work, freedom," "we want political participation" and "no to enslavement," just days before the one-year anniversary of the Taliban takeover.
An Afghan woman begs on the street in Kabul. (file photo) But residents said the number of people begging for survival in the city has soared in the past 18 months.
Groups of armed Taliban fighters held small victory parades in the Kabul streets, hoisting their rifles aloft. A few hundred Taliban supporters gathered in front of the former US Embassy, some ...
Your guess is as good as ours on why, but video circulating on YouTube and other social channels appears to show AK-47-armed Taliban security forces patrolling busy streets in Kabul on rollerblades.
The busy Kabul street looks almost as if nothing has changed. People rush by, as shopkeepers arrange their colorful merchandise, and police direct traffic. There’s one big change, though: There ...