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I do miss you here
i understand you my War Queen.
you dont have to be worried anymore
i have to say that honey
These guys are enjoying lunch. They rolled out a carpet and used their propane stove to make chai tea and eat their rice & bread. It's very typical to see truck drivers park their trucks and get out to have lunch together. They're very social and friendly, just like most Afghan people.
Reporting of 64 percent increase in the violence against journalists, a media supporting agency (NAI) called 2014 a deadliest year for reporters in Afghanistan.
In a press conference presenting the annual report of 2014, the NAI director Sediquallah Tawhidi told media that eight journalists were killed in 2014 in Afghanistan.
Tawhidi added these reporters were killed while on duty in the armed attacks and bombings by the insurgents.
"This year we had eight deaths including two foreigners of which one was killed in Kabul and the other one in a southern province," Tawhidi reported.
He added 80 cases of violence against journalists were also recorded in 2014, most of them conducted by the security forces.
Tawhidi asked the National Unity Government (NUG) leaders to fulfill the commitments of supporting media and freedom of expression they made during their election campaigns.
The report comes as recently, a journalist and cameraman for local Metra TV, Zubair Hatami, died of his wounds after being seriously injured in a suicide attack on a French cultural center in Kabul.
Earlier on 16 of this month, the Geneva-based Press Emblem Campaign (PEC) announced that 128 journalists had been killed around the world so far in 2014.
Based on PEC annual report, Gaza is leading the list of most dangerous countries for reporters. The report ranked Afghanistan in seventh dangerous country.
Earlier this year, Sardar Ahmad, a reporter for Agence France-Presse (AFP) was killed along with his wife and their two children in an armed attack on Serena hotel of Kabul.
Gen. John Campbell opens the "Resolute Support" flag during a ceremony at the ISAF headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014. (AP Photo/Massoud Hossaini)
(NEWSER) – The United States and NATO formally ended their war in Afghanistan today with a ceremony at military headquarters in Kabul as the insurgency they fought for 13 years remains as ferocious and deadly as at any time since the 2001 invasion that unseated the Taliban. The symbolic ceremony marked the end of the US-led International Security Assistance Force, which will transition to a supporting role with 13,500 soldiers, most American, starting Thursday. Gen. John Campbell, commander of ISAF, rolled up and sheathed the green and white ISAF flag and unfurled the flag of the new international mission, called Resolute Support. "Resolute Support will serve as the bedrock of an enduring partnership" between NATO and Afghanistan, Campbell said. He paid tribute to the international and Afghan troops who have died fighting the insurgency, saying: "The road before us remains challenging but we will triumph."
As Afghan forces assume sovereignty, the country is without a Cabinet three months after President Ashraf Ghani's inauguration, and economic growth is near zero due to the reduction of the international military and aid juggernauts. The United States spent more than $100 million on reconstruction in Afghanistan, on top of the $1 trillion war. This year is set to be the deadliest of the war, according to the UN, which expects civilian casualties to hit 10,000 for the first time since 2008. This has also been a deadly year for Afghanistan's security forces—army, paramilitary, and police—with around 5,000 deaths recorded so far. Around 3,200 of those have been police. The mission ends with 2,224 American soldiers killed, according to an AP tally, out of a total of some 3,500 foreign troop deaths.
I don't think you will
ever fully understand
how you've touched my life
and made me who I am.
You are an amazing personality
and without you I don't know where I'd be.
Having you in my life
completes and fulfills every part of me.
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