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  • Jawad, who like many Afghans uses just the one name, out playing with an old tyre in the Mikrorayan district of Kabul.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • Shah-do-Shamshira Mosque is known as the Mosque of the King with Two Swords. It was built in the 1920s on the order of King Amanullah’s mother on the site of one of Kabul’s first mosques named in honour of an early Muslim king who died fighting Hindu inva

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • The future home of the Afghan Cash and Carry Superstore on the road between the foreign embassies and Kabul airport.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • Wasteland at the back of shops used as stabling for draught horses. In the distance is the Bala Hissar citadel, now home to an Afghan army base and mooring for one of the American blimps that carry electronic surveillance gear and cameras.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • A watchtower guarding a street of foreign embassies in central Kabul. For the British army these improvised fortifications are called ‘sangars’, although the term is Dari for ‘barricade’ and is one of the few words the British brought home form the Anglo-

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • On the very northern edge of Kabul. A shipping container is re-purposed as home to men working in a yard casting concrete blast walls. Each section, when sold to foreign embassies or the military, fetches $1000 per piece.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • Entrance to the vast City Star Hall complex of wedding halls, on the new bypass out near Kabul Airport.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • A cellphone booster-station built on the wreckage of buildings that once housed a market.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • The whole eastern side of Kabul, for miles along both sides of the Jalalabad Road is one huge logistics yard capable of supplying the foreign military and rapidly growing embassies with everything they might need from a single cup of coffee right through

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • At a music school on Kabul, boys are taught the traditional Afghan instrument the rubab. Difficult to play, it is a skill which nearly became extinct due to the Taliban prohibition on secular music.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
  • Watchtowers on the perimeter of Camp Bastion.

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
  • One of the huge logistics compounds at Camp Leatherneck. A modern, technological army needs hundreds of thousands of different kinds of objects in order to keep it working. A $100m warplane can be grounded for the want of a $1 part. Supplying these things

    Simon Norfolk
    2011
    View by appointment
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