Tajikistan: Seeking Refuge From a Man's War
During the 1991-97 civil war, thousands of women and children fled to Afghanistan to live as refugees. But despite their suffering, many women have now found professional success.
During the 1991-97 civil war, thousands of women and children fled to Afghanistan to live as refugees. But despite their suffering, many women have now found professional success.
In remote Paktika province, women face enormous obstacles getting even basic medical treatment.
The oppressive Taleban regime is long gone, but many Afghan women are still afraid to abandon their burqas.
Eyewitnesses tell how President Karimov’s soldiers finished off the injured as they lay bleeding, and then concealed the corpses.
The government has moved to destroy poppy fields in the east of the country, after failing to come to an agreement with farmers over compensation.
The earthquake survivors of the Hindu Kush will struggle to rebuild their lives.
An Afghan-run project provides a ray of hope for the physically and mentally handicapped.
Unscrupulous loggers are ravaging one of the country's most beautiful woodland regions.
There are growing fears that the Tajik-dominated Northern Alliance is aiming to monopolise the country's fledgling national army.