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Part 1: Freedom
riders People have not
been as relaxed in Kabul for decades, Pepe
Escobar finds as he tours the Afghan capital,
making acquaintance with a former Olympic
wrestler, an interpreter, an impoverished
shopkeeper and a man who served time in a
Taliban jail. But behind the new-found freedom,
the shadows of the past hang heavy.
Part 2: Life is a
movie
Every day thousands of people try to
squeeze into Kabul's tiny movie house, reopened
after five years of Taliban rule. While they
drool over tacky films, far more poignant
stories are revealed by ordinary people who
defied the cultural brutality of the Taliban to
become heroes.
Part 3: Air
Osama Afghanistan's
national carrier Ariana was once a proud
airline, with hundreds of employees, a fine
fleet of aircraft and an extensive network of
routes. But as the country slid into civil war,
occupation and repression, so too did Ariana.
Pepe Escobar charts the decline and reveals how
the Taliban used the airline for their own
purposes, including ferrying some very important
people.
Part 4: Super
defector When the
Taliban abruptly vacated Kabul, their deputy
minister of the interior decided to stay put,
even throwing his hat into the ring with the
incoming Northern Alliance. He has a vision for
Afghanistan, although it does not exactly
coincide with the goals of the alliance's
smooth-talking foreign minister.
Part 5: Afghan democracy in
action The New Great Game
is taking some really wacky twists and turns.
Slowly but surely, the Russian Bear is back in
Kabul - 12 years after its ignominious
end-of-the-Cold War retreat from Afghanistan
after 10 years of occupation. Kabulites couldn't
be more amused.
Part 6: Cultural
holocaust Was it a vision, or a
waking nightmare? The Taliban's grip on power in
Kabul (1996-2001) may have simply melted away.
They are ghosts from a recent and tragic past.
But their legacy as an "administration" remains
- nothing less than a terrifying picture of
desolation, devastation and nothingness.
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