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| Afghanistan | Plants and Animal | Back to Top |
Afghanistan is sparse but various. Common trees in the mountains are evergreens, oaks, poplars, wild hazelnuts, almonds, and pistachios. The plains of the north are largely dry, treeless steppes, and those of the southwestern corner are nearly uninhabitable deserts. Common plants in the arid regions include camel thorn, locoweed and wormwood, a mixture of sagebrush. The wild animals of Afghanistan include 125 mammal species, some of which are nearing extinction. The most seriously endangered are the goitered gazelle, leopard, snow leopard, and Bactrian deer. Other wild animals of Afghanistan include Marco Polo sheep, urials, ibex, bears, hyenas, jackals, and mongooses.
| Afghanistan | Communications | Back to Top |
very limited telephone and telegraph service
Domestic: in 1997, telecommunications links were accomplished between Mazar-e Sharif, Herat, Kandahar, Jalalabad, and Kabul through satellite and microwave systems.
International: satellite earth stations - 1 Intelsat (Indian Ocean) linked only to Iran and 1 Intersputnik (Atlantic Ocean region); commercial satellite telephone center in Ghazni
| Afghanistan | Culture | Back to Top |
The hope and exhilaration felt among Afghans as the last Soviet troops retreated from their nation in early 1989 gave way to frustration within months. Disparate Afghan groups had struggled valiantly against a common enemy, but the extent of the discord and rivalries which characterized their efforts became ominously noticeable.
Islam as a measure of national identity is challenging a century of inroads by secular institutions. orthodox Afghan methods of conflict resolution guided by the spirit of equalitarianism and respect for others are being severely thwarted in an environment surfeited with modern weaponry supplied by outsiders pursuing a numerosity of regional agendas centered on Afghanistan.
The Afghan area thus evolved as a zone of cultural transition with a complex ethnolinguistic population as varied as its geography which encompasses fertile mountain valleys in the east, plains and grasslands in the north, a central mountain core, and deserts and semideserts in the west and southwest. The inhabitants of these different areas take pride in these cultural differentiations and follow their own customs, distinct tribal norms, religious variations, divergent attitudes toward family and gender, and contrasting subsistence life-styles.
| Afghanistan | Defence | Back to Top |
Military branches: NA; note - the military does not exist on a national basis; some elements of the former Army, Air and Air Defense Forces, National Guard, Border Guard Forces, National Police Force (Sarandoi), and tribal militias still exist but are factionalized among the various groups
Military manpower - military age: 22 years of age
Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 6,645,023 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service: males age 15-49: 3,561,957 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - reaching military age annually: males: 252,869 (2001 est.)
| Afghanistan | International Disputes | Back to Top |
support to Islamic militants worldwide by some factions; question over which group should hold Afghanistan's seat at the UN.
| Afghanistan | Economy | Back to Top |
economy of Afghanistan was in shambles. Even in the 1970s, prior to the war, Afghanistan had one of the lowest standards of living in the world; things have declined since then, with the production, trafficking, and movement of drugs and guns as a major hidden part of the economy. As the war and its effects spread throughout the nation in the early 1980s, two separate economies emerged; the urban financial and industrial facilities, tied particularly to the Soviet Union, and the largely independent rural subsistence economy. In 1990 annual income was around to be $714 per person.
Afghanistan began to plan the development of its economy in the mid-1950s, it deficiencyed not only the necessary social organization and institutions for modern economic activities but also managerial and technical skills. The nation was at a much lower stage of economic development than most of its neighbours. Between 1956 and 1979, the nation's economic growth was guided by several five-year and seven-year plans and was aided by considerable foreign assistance, primarily from the Soviet Union and the United States. Roads, dams, power plants, and factories were constructed, irrigation projects carried out, and education broadened.
Afghanistan is an extremely poor, landlocked nation, highly dependent on farming and farm animal raising (sheep and goats). Economic considerations have played second fiddle to political and military upheavals during two decades of war, including the nearly 10-year Soviet military occupation (which ended 15 February 1989). During that conflict one-third of the population fled the nation, with Pakistan and Iran sheltering a combined peak of more than 6 million refugees. In early 2000, 2 million Afghan refugees remained in Pakistan and about 1.4 million in Iran. Gross domestic product has fallen substantially over the past 20 years because of the loss of labor and capital and the disruption of trade and transport; severe drought added to the nation's difficulties in 1998-2000. The majority of the population continues to suffer from insufficient food, clothing, housing, and medical care. Inflation remains a serious problem throughout the nation. International aid can deal with only a fraction of the humanitarian problem, let alone promote economic development. In 1999-2000, internal civil strife continued, hampering both domestic economic policies and international aid efforts. Numerical data are likely to be either unavailable or unreliable. Afghanistan was by far the largest producer of opium poppies in 2000, and narcotics trafficking is a major source of revenue.
| Afghanistan | Education | Back to Top |
Two parallel educational systems function in Afghanistan. orthodox Islamic madrassa found in towns and villages teach children basic moral values and rite knowledge through the study of the Holy Koran, the Hadith, and popular edited religious texts. Higher level madrassa located in Herat, Kunduz, Ghazni, Kandahar and Kabul were known as valuable learning centers. Leading religious leaders also attended famous madrassa in India such as the renowned establishment located at Deoband.
In 1935, education was declared universal, compulsory and free. With its development, the secular system came to be regarded as the principle medium for creating a national ideology and emphasized productive skills while effectively limiting Islamic studies to rite knowledge. By the 1960s, technical education assumed critical importance because of the surge in development. Since 1978, a steady decline has all but demolished the educational infrastructure. Afghanistan in 1996 had the highest illiteracy rate in Asia, for both men and women.
| Afghanistan | Government | Back to Top |
Since 1973 Afghan society has experienced a series of shocks which has shattered its political institutions, devastated the physical infrastructure supporting its economy, decimated and scattered its population, and left open to question its prospects for government and even survival as a national community. There is no longer a monarchy presiding over a confederacy of Pushtun tribes and ruling over several culturally distinct minority communities. Political usurpation, foreign occupation, war and civil war have left Afghanistan in chaos, with a leadership incapable, so far, of initiating a process of recovery.
Afghans now confront neighbors who are awakening to new opportunities. Afghans struggle with the irony that the anarchy which has followed their successful defiance of a superpower could lead to their dissolution as a nation. Interference by neighbors became a major factor in Afghan politics before the Soviet military withdrawal. It became profoundly destabilizing with the collapse of the Kabul Marxist regime in 1992.
Its internal rivalries have become increasingly identified with regional communities which it shares with neighboring nations. Every kilometer of its borders is a product of British or tsarist Russian imperial policy. The writ of those great powers having broken, such historical artifacts could also disappear in a new era of regional tumult and change.
| Afghanistan | History | Back to Top |
Afghanistan's History, internal political development, foreign relations, and very existence as an independent state have largely been determined by its geographic location at the crossroads of Central, West, and South Asia. Over the centuries, waves of migrating peoples passed through the region--described as a "roundabout of the ancient world," by historian Arnold Toynbee--leaving behind a mosaic of ethnic and linguistic groups. In modern times, as well as in antiquity, large armies of the world passed through Afghanistan, temporarily establishing local control and often dominating Iran and northern India.
Although it was the scene of great empires and flourishing trade for over two millennia, Afghanistan did not become a truly independent nation until the twentieth century. The area's miscellaneous groups were not bound into a single political entity until the reign of Ahmad Shah Durrani, who in 1747 founded the monarchy that governed the nation until 1973. In the nineteenth century, Afghanistan lay between the expanding might of the Russian and British empires. In 1900, Abdur Rahman Khan, looking back on his twenty years of rule and the events of the past century, wondered how his nation,
Islam played a key role in the formation of Afghan history as well. Contempt the Mongol invasion of Afghanistan in the early thirteenth century which has been described as resembling "more some brute cataclysm of the blind forces of nature than a phenomenon of human history," even a warrior as formidable as Genghis Khan did not uproot Islamic civilization, and within two generations his heirs had become Muslims.
| Afghanistan | Introduction | Back to Top |
Afghanistan, republic in south-western Asia, bordered on the north by Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan; on the east by China, India, and Pakistan; on the south by Pakistan; and on the west by Iran. Afghanistan is roughly ovoid in shape and has a maximum length, from north-east to south-west, of about 1,455 km and a width of about 730 km. It has an area of 647,497 sq km. The capital and largest city is Kabul.
Official Name -Islamic State of Afghanistan| Afghanistan | Land | Back to Top |
N/A
| Afghanistan | Languages | Back to Top |
The Tajiks, a people of Iranian origin, are the second largest ethnic group in Afghanistan. They live in the valleys north of Kabul and in Badakhshan. They are farmers, artisans, and merchants. The Tajiks speak Dari, also an Indo-Iranian language and the other official language of Afghanistan. Dari is more widely spoken than Pashto in most of the cities. The Tajiks are closely related to the people of Tajikistan.
| Afghanistan | Legal | Back to Top |
Legal system: a new legal system has not been adopted but all factions tacitly agree they will follow Shari'a (Islamic law)
vote: NA; previously males 15-50 years of age
Administrator branch: on 27 September 1996, the ruling members of the Afghan Government were displaced by members of the Islamic Taliban movement; the Islamic State of Afghanistan has no functioning government at this time, and the nation remains separated among fighting factions
Note: the Taliban have declared themselves the legitimate government of Afghanistan; the UN still recognizes the government of Burhanuddin RABBANI; the Organization of the Islamic Conference has left the Afghan seat vacant until the question of legitimacy can be resolved through negotiations among the warring factions; the nation is essentially separated along ethnic lines; the Taliban controls the capital of Kabul and around two-thirds of the nation including the predominately ethnic Pashtun areas in southern Afghanistan; opposing factions have their stronghold in the ethnically various north
Legislative branch: non-functioning as of June 1993
Judicial branch: upper courts were non-functioning as of March 1995
| Afghanistan | Life | Back to Top |
Although variations may exist between ethnic groups and those practicing different modes of subsistence, the family remains the single most valuable institution in Afghan society. Characteristically, In Afghan family parallel and cross-cousin marriages preferred, Authority unconditional in male elders, Inheritance through the male line, and Girl moves to husband's place of residence on marriage. Multiple wives is permitted, but is no longer so widely practiced.
Within families there is a tendency toward respect for age, male or female, reverence for motherhood, eagerness for children, particularly sons, and avoidance of divorce. Rigorously honored ideals emphasizing family cohesiveness through extended kinship networks endow the family with its primary function as a support system.
The core of the family consists of the mother-in-law, the daughters-in-law and daughters, with the senior woman reigning at the top of the power hierarchy within the household. In families with plural wives, each wife has her own room, with her own belongings and furnishings; sometimes her own cooking space is provided. The courtyard provides space for joint household activities and entertainment.
| Afghanistan | organization | Back to Top |
AsDB, CP, ECO, ESCAP, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IOC (inactive), IOM (observer), ITU, NAM, OIC, OPCW (signatory), UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WMO, WToO
| Afghanistan | People | Back to Top |
No comprehensive census based upon systematically sound methods has ever been taken in Afghanistan. Most population statistics rely on estimates and samples. Successive governments have manipulated figures for their own political objectives. UN agencies, hundreds of NGOs, as well as bilateral agencies use different figures to suit their purposes in designing assistance programs. Furthermore, instability caused by the Soviet-Afghan war and the consequent civil war resulted in massive movements of uprooted peoples. These factors also make demographic sampling necessarily imprecise.
The most scientific demographic survey carried out in Afghanistan was also one of the first. Conducted in 1972-74 by the State University of New York for the United States Agency for International Development, in cooperation with the Afghan government, this survey reported a settled population of 10.18 million. It did not cover the entire nation, and the nomadic population was not surveyed. The nomads were separately around at slightly more than 1.1 million.
2001 population estimate was 26,813,000, though the effect of the war—with its casualties and refugees—makes estimating difficult.In 2000 some 80 % of the population lived in rural areas. Of the urban dwellers, likely about half lived in Kabul, the capital city. The nomadic population was around to be about 2.5 million people. During the war with the Soviets the number of Afghan refugees outside the nation escalated dramatically, with as many as 2.7 million to 3 million refugees in Pakistan and another 1.6 million in Iran. About 150,000 Afghans were able to migrate permanently to other countries, including the United States, Australia, India and various European countries.
| Afghanistan | Politics | Back to Top |
Taliban (Religious Students Movement) [Mullah Mohammad OMAR]; United National Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan or UNIFSA [Burhanuddin RABBANI, chairman; Gen. Abdul Rashid DOSTAM, vice chairman; Fahim KHAN, military commander; Mohammed Yunis QANUNI, spokesman]; note - made up of 13 parties opposed to the Taliban including Harakat-i-Islami Afghanistan (Islamic Movement of Afghanistan), Hizb-i-Islami (Islamic Party), Hizb-i-Wahdat-i-Islami (Islamic Unity Party), Jumaat-i-Islami Afghanistan (Islamic Afghan Society), Jumbish-i-Milli (National Front), Mahaz-i-Milli-i-Islami (National Islamic Front)
| Afghanistan | Provinces | Back to Top |
30 provinces (velayat, singular - velayat); Badakhshan, Badghis, Baghlan, Balkh, Bamian, Farah, Faryab, Ghazni, Ghowr, Helmand, Herat, Jowzjan, Kabol, Kandahar, Kapisa, Konar, Kondoz, Laghman, Lowgar, Nangarhar, Nimruz, Oruzgan, Paktia, Paktika, Parvan, Samangan, Sar-e Pol, Takhar, Vardak, Zabol; note - there may be two new provinces of Nurestan (Nuristan) and Khowst
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| Afghanistan | Time | Back to Top |
| Afghanistan | Currency and General Information | Back to Top |
| Afghanistan Afghanis | United States Dollars |
| 1.00 AFA | 0.000210526 USD |
| 4,750.00 AFA | 1 USD |
| Countries Currency Unit | USD/Unit | Units/USD | |
| DZD | Algeria Dinars | 0.0129554 | 77.1877 |
| USD | United States Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| ARS | Argentina Pesos | 0.341293 | 2.93004 |
| AUD | Australia Dollars | 0.533413 | 1.87472 |
| ATS | Austria Schillings ** | 0.0632609 | 15.8076 |
| BSD | Bahamas Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BBD | Barbados Dollars | 0.502513 | 1.99000 |
| BEF | Belgium Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| BMD | Bermuda Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BRL | Brazil Reals | 0.430318 | 2.32386 |
| GBP | United Kingdom Pounds | 1.42399 | 0.702251 |
| BGL | Bulgaria Leva | 0.447293 | 2.23567 |
| CAD | Canada Dollars | 0.627606 | 1.59336 |
| CLP | Chile Pesos | 0.00152392 | 656.202 |
| CNY | China Yuan Renminbi | 0.120813 | 8.27726 |
| CYP | Cyprus Pounds | 1.49883 | 0.667186 |
| CZK | Czech Republic Koruny | 0.0281883 | 35.4758 |
| DKK | Denmark Kroner | 0.117155 | 8.53568 |
| XCD | East Caribbean Dollars | 0.370370 | 2.70000 |
| EGP | Egypt Pounds | 0.217271 | 4.60255 |
| EUR | Euro | 0.870489 | 1.14878 |
| FJD | Fiji Dollars | 0.447227 | 2.23600 |
| FIM | Finland Markkaa ** | 0.146406 | 6.83034 |
| FRF | France Francs ** | 0.132705 | 7.53550 |
| DEM | Germany Deutsche Marks ** | 0.445074 | 2.24682 |
| XAU | Gold Ounces | 301.977 | 0.00331151 |
| GRD | Greece Drachmae ** | 0.00255463 | 391.447 |
| HKD | Hong Kong Dollars | 0.128215 | 7.79939 |
| HUF | Hungary Forint | 0.00358416 | 279.006 |
| ISK | Iceland Kronur | 0.00999868 | 100.013 |
| INR | India Rupees | 0.0205205 | 48.7319 |
| IDR | Indonesia Rupiahs | 0.000102055 | 9,798.61 |
| IEP | Ireland Pounds ** | 1.10529 | 0.904738 |
| ILS | Israel New Shekels | 0.212386 | 4.70841 |
| ITL | Italy Lire ** | 0.000449570 | 2,224.35 |
| JMD | Jamaica Dollars | 0.0210041 | 47.6099 |
| JPY | Japan Yen | 0.00754183 | 132.594 |
| JOD | Jordan Dinars | 1.41057 | 0.708931 |
| LBP | Lebanon Pounds | 0.000660937 | 1,513.00 |
| LUF | Luxembourg Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| MYR | Malaysia Ringgits | 0.263330 | 3.79751 |
| MXN | Mexico Pesos | 0.111007 | 9.00848 |
| NZD | New Zealand Dollars | 0.440474 | 2.27028 |
| NOK | Norway Kroner | 0.113022 | 8.84780 |
| NLG | Netherlands Guilders ** | 0.395011 | 2.53158 |
| PKR | Pakistan Rupees | 0.0166945 | 59.9000 |
| PHP | Philippines Pesos | 0.0196386 | 50.9202 |
| XPT | Platinum Ounces | 510.962 | 0.00195709 |
| PLN | Poland Zlotych | 0.243488 | 4.10699 |
| PTE | Portugal Escudos ** | 0.00434198 | 230.310 |
| ROL | Romania Lei | 0.0000303433 | 32,956.21 |
| RUR | Russia Rubles | 0.0321342 | 31.1195 |
| SAR | Saudi Arabia Riyals | 0.266668 | 3.74998 |
| XAG | Silver Ounces | 4.65692 | 0.214734 |
| SGD | Singapore Dollars | 0.542540 | 1.84318 |
| SKK | Slovakia Koruny | 0.0208441 | 47.9751 |
| ZAR | South Africa Rand | 0.0883340 | 11.3207 |
| KRW | South Korea Won | 0.000759354 | 1,316.91 |
| ESP | Spain Pesetas ** | 0.00523174 | 191.141 |
| XDR | IMF Special Drawing Rights | 1.24862 | 0.800882 |
| SDD | Sudan Dinars | 0.00384615 | 260.000 |
| SEK | Sweden Kronor | 0.0964189 | 10.3714 |
| CHF | Switzerland Francs | 0.593789 | 1.68410 |
| TWD | Taiwan New Dollars | 0.0286531 | 34.9002 |
| THB | Thailand Baht | 0.0230087 | 43.4619 |
| TTD | Trinidad and Tobago Dollars | 0.163399 | 6.12000 |
| TRL | Turkey Liras | 0.000000763622 | 1,309,549.07 |
| VEB | Venezuela Bolivares | 0.00108696 | 920.000 |
| ZMK | Zambia Kwacha | 0.000239866 | 4,169.00 |
| Afghanistan : Geographic coordinates | 33 00 N, 65 00 E |
| Afghanistan : Population growth rate | 3.48% (2001 est.) |
| Afghanistan : Birth rate | 41.42 births/1,000 population |
| Afghanistan : Death rate | 17.72 deaths/1,000 population |
| Afghanistan : People living with HIV/AIDS | N/A |
| Afghanistan : Independence | 19 August 1919 |
| Afghanistan : National holiday | Independence Day, 19 August |
| Afghanistan : Constitution | N/A |
| Afghanistan : GDP | purchasing power parity - $21 billion |
| Afghanistan : GDP - per capita | purchasing power parity - $800 |
| Afghanistan : Electricity - consumption | 480.6 million kWh |
| Afghanistan : Exports | $80 million opium, fruits and nuts etc. |
| Afghanistan : Imports | $150 million capital goods, most consumer goods etc. |
| Afghanistan : Telephones | 29,000 |
| Afghanistan : Mobile cellular | N/A |
| Afghanistan : Radio broadcast stations | AM 7 , FM 1, shortwave 1 |
| Afghanistan : Radios | 167,000 |
| Afghanistan : Television broadcast stations | 10 |
| Afghanistan : Televisions | 100,000 |
| Afghanistan : Internet country code | .af |
| Afghanistan : Internet Service Providers (ISPs) | 1 |
| Afghanistan : Internet users | N/A |
| Afghanistan : Railways | 24.6 km |
| Afghanistan : Highways | 21,000 km |
| Afghanistan : Waterways | 1,200 km |
| Afghanistan : Pipelines | 180 km |
| Afghanistan : Ports and harbors | Kheyrabad, Shir Khan |
| Afghanistan : Merchant marine | N/A |
| Afghanistan : Airports | 46 |
| Afghanistan : Heliports | 2 |
| Afghanistan : Military branches | N/A |
| Afghanistan : Military expenditures | N/A |