Book description
Fifteen years ago, southern Afghanistan was in even greater chaos
than it is now. The Russians, who had occupied the country throughout
the 1980s, were long gone. The disparate ethnic and religious leaders
who had united to eject the invaders - the famous mujaheddin -
were at each others' throats. For the rural poor of Kandahar province,
life was almost impossible.
On 12 October 1994 a small group of religious students decided to
take matters into their own hands. Led by an illiterate village mullah
with one eye, some 200 of them surrounded and took Spin Boldak, a
trucking stop on the border with Pakistan. From this short and
unremarkable border skirmish, a legend was born. The students' numbers
swelled as news of their triumph spread. The Taliban, as they now
called themselves - taliban is the plural of talib,
literally 'one who seeks knowledge' - had a simple mission statement:
the disarmament of the population, and the establishment of a
theocracy based on Sharia law. They fought with a religious zeal that
the warring mujaheddin could not match.
By February 1995, this people's revolt had become a national
movement; 18 months later Kabul fell, and the country was effectively
theirs. James Fergusson's fascinating account of this extraordinary
story will be required reading for anyone who wishes to understand the
situation in Afghanistan, now and for the future...
James Fergusson
is a freelance journalist and foreign correspondent who has written for
many publications including the
Independent, The Times,
the
Daily Telegraph,
the
Daily Mail
and
The Economist
. From 1997 he reported from Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan,
covering that city's fall to the Taliban. In 1998 he became the first
western journalist in more than two years to interview the fugitive
warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. His first book,
Kandahar Cockney
, told the story of Mir, his Pashtun fixer-interpreter whom he
befriended and helped gain political asylum in London. From 1999 to 2001
he worked in Sarajevo as a press spokesman for OHR, the organisation
charged with implementing the Dayton, Ohio peace accord that ended
Bosnia's savage civil war in 1995. He lives in Edinburgh and is married
with three children.