The document contains several photographs taken in Afghanistan between 2001-2002 documenting life under and after the Taliban regime. The photographs show a former teahouse in Kabul, Soviet cluster bombs located near an elementary school, bullet-scarred buildings from fighting between rival factions, buildings marked with paint to indicate unexploded ordnance, an old biplane displayed in Kabul that was banned under the Taliban, a victory arch built by the Northern Alliance with an empty niche that previously housed a Buddha statue destroyed by the Taliban, and wrecked planes pushed into a mined area at Kabul Airport.
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2. Former teahouse in a park next to the Afghan Exhibition of Economic and Social Achievements in the Shah Shahid district of Kabul. Balloons were illegal under the Taliban, but now balloon-sellers are common on the streets of Kabul providing cheap treats for children. Teahouse, Afganistan, 2001 by Robert Gwathney
3. Simon was born in Lagos, Nigeria in 1963 and educated in England finishing at Oxford and Bristol Universities with a degree in Philosophy and Sociology. After leaving the Documentary Photography course in Newport, South Wales he worked for far-left publications specializing in work on anti-racist activities and fascist groups, in particular the British National Party. In 1994 he gave up photojournalism in favor of landscape photography.
5. Heavy munitions were brought up to the mouth of the Salang Tunnel by Ahmed Shah Massoud in case he needed to blow the tunnel. These Soviet cluster bombs now lie in the grounds of Olang Elementary School.
6. Bullet-scarred apartment building and shops in the Karte Char district of Kabul. This area saw fighting between Hikmetyar and Rabbani and then between Rabbani and the Hazaras.
7. Near Deh Mazang in the Karte Char district of Kabul, the scene of fierce fighting in the early 1990's between rival Mujaheddin factions. Red paint on buildings indicates the presence of unexploded ordnance. The white 'tick' means it has been cleared.
8. Old biplane on a display plinth at the Exhibition Grounds in Kabul. Fighting birds are a source of great pride to Afghan men, but were banned by the Taliban as un-Islamic.
9. Victory arch built by the Northern Alliance at the entrance to a local commander's HQ in Bamiyan. The empty niche housed the smaller of the two Buddhas, destroyed by the Taliban in 2001.
10. Wrecked Ariana Afghan Airlines jets at Kabul Airport pushed into a mined area at the edge of the apron.