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Mobile Cinemas Showing Films to Afghans

by Open-Publishing - Monday 28 July 2003

By TODD PITMAN

July 27, 2003, washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53618-2003Jul27.html

KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghans who have never seen a film before
will get their chance this summer, courtesy of a French-organized
network of mobile cinemas now traveling across the war-shattered
nation, a United Nations spokesman said.

Caravans of four-wheel-drive vehicles equipped with video
screens, projectors and generators will show three educational
films in eight cities through next month, U.N. spokesman Manoel
de Almeida e Silva said.

The project is run by the French aid group AINA and supported by
the United Nations, the European Union and other donors, Almeida
e Silva said.

Last year, the mobile cinemas played to more than 400,000 Afghans
 80 percent of whom had never seen a film before, Almeida e
Silva said.

Afghanistan, a rugged Asian nation filled with remote mountain
villages that have no electricity and little communication with
the outside world, has been struggling to rebuild after nearly a
quarter-century of devastating warfare.

Almeida e Silva said four-man teams would show the films in
Badakhshan, Kandahar, Jalalabad, Mazar-e-Sharif, Bamiyan, Paktia,
Herat and the capital, Kabul.

The films, produced by the Ministry of Information and Culture,
cover three topics - Afghan artists, cultural heritage and girls’
education.

The former Taliban government, which sought to create an Islamic
state based on its interpretation of Islam, banned girls from
going to school.

The Taliban government was overthrown in a U.S.-led war in 2001,
but girls’ schools repeatedly have been threatened by Islamic
conservatives and some have been burned down.