Taliban
While some families are still desperate to flee the Taliban’s “hell”—others have a different take on life in Afghanistan two years after the collapse of the U.S.-backed government.
“I never, you know, thought in a million years that will happen in United States,” Abdul Samey Honaryar told The Daily Beast.
The U.S. took a big risk by releasing this infamous Afghan drug lord and Taliban ally. It could very well backfire.
A year after the Taliban’s return, LGBTQ Afghan refugees reveal their desperate journeys to safety, while campaigners demand governments take action to help those still in peril.
The Broadway adaptation of Khaled Hosseini’s bestselling novel features a gay rapist and pedophile villain center stage. If nothing else, “groomer”-obsessed bigots will love it.
Two sisters on the infamous Taliban “kill list” were reunited after miraculous escapes from Afghanistan. Then they got a nightmare call from back home.
Filmmaker Meg Smaker’s documentary, premiering at Sundance, follows jihadists who are going through rehab at Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Nayef Counseling and Care Center.