Find This Book
"A veteran journalist and former Afghanistan country director for the
Institute for War and Peace Reporting in the Hague interviews a
cross-section of Afghans who are invariably passionate, articulate, and
free with vivid but sometimes unsettling opinions on the international
conflict that has descended on their homeland. Shopkeepers complain
about the ongoing violence, Taliban leaders boast about their "swift"
and "free" form of justice, and officials try to explain the country's
quandary. Both sexes but especially women tell terrible stories of
injustice, cruelty, and murder. But some evince hope for a brighter
future; female parliamentarian Shukoria Barekzai, though exhausted,
exclaims, "I love to work with the truth." A sophisticated observer,
Eichstaedt (Consuming the Congo: War and Conflict Minerals in the
World's Deadliest Place) steps back frequently to emphasize recurring
themes, and in the obligatory how-to-fix-it finale, he argues
convincingly in support of regional partitioning, but admits that it's
unlikely to happen. These are vivid, mostly sympathetic portraits of
Afghans who have weathered decades of chaos, and though a solution still
seems far-off, Eichstaedt has done a great service by bringing their
perspectives to the American public." (Publishers Weekly)
Current Affairs
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment