Thursday, August 28, 2008

Rohullah Nikpai Afghan Olympian’s return to Kabul Afghanistan

Following images are once again courtesy of FARDIN WAEZI @ Thru Afghan Eyes :

[For uptodate current event pictures, please Bookmark his Blog]

So previously we brought you the videos and images from Beijing, where Rohullah Nikpai won Afghanistan’s first Olympic Bronze Medal. Now, courtesy of Fardin Waezi, Photo journalist in Afghanistan, we bring you pictures of Rohullah Nikpai and other Afghan Olympian’s recieving a warm welcome upon their arrival in Kabul Afghanistan.



Rohullah Nikpai swarmed by fans upon his return to Kabul

ohullah Nikpai and other olympian’s motorade on a road cruise around Kabul to share the jubilation with the rest of his country men.

Kam Air (Afghanistan’s privately owned airline company) presents another Cheque to the Champion Rohullah Nipkai.

Rohullah Nikpai recieving a Cheque for $500,000 (AFG D)

Thousands of Afghans gathered at Ghazi stadium to celebrate Afghanistan’s Olympic Medal


Rohullah Nikpai along with Robina Moqimyar. Although she was hoping to return home with a Medal but her presence on a world stage is a Medal to herself and the rest of the Afghan populace.

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Image Copyright:

©FARDIN WAEZI / (thruafghaneyes) / AFGHANISTAN
Address: Shahr-e-Naw Charahe Ansari square opp. Of Ghazna Business Center Kabul Afghanistan House # 15
Cell Phone: 0093 0799 33 50 87

Sarah Rahmani Takesh

SARA Rahmani’s best-selling fashion design last year was a shirt made from a burqa remodelled into a peasant blouse with just a hint of cleavage.

This year the 38-year-old Afghan designer shows off her new season’s success, a jacket made from the black turbans worn by the Taliban and Pashtun men from the south and east of the country.

Ms Rahmani’s company, Sara Afghan, is one of three Kabul fashion labels that operate in an environment far removed from the baby doll fashions sweeping European catwalks.

The majority of women who buy from them locally want tailored clothes that are in keeping with local cultural sensitivities.

“This jacket is very popular,” Ms Rahmani says. “I used to make shirts made from burqa, but I think it is important to change with the season.”


Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Arian Yaqubi is back!

You heard it right! Arian is back with her new show on Pyam-e-Afghan. The show will go on air this Tuesday, the timetable are still to be announced. Arian rose to fame by interviewing several famous afghan celebrities, including Valy, Mozhdah, and Sharif brothers.

Few months ago she announced her resignation from the television, which came as a shock to her viewers. However, after several months now she is back with her brand new show!

Hawa’s Hot Afghani Clothes!

Few nights ago Hawa appeared in a different show on AATV, with her new Afghani clothing. If people watched AATV or not, but that night immense number of callers were throwing more compliments at Hawa, than the actual show or the real host lol. Hawa turned famous with her International Music show, in which she played brand new video clips of different countries singers. she has appeared on several other shows on AATV as well, and surely with her latest show she has risen AATV’s Viewers.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Zohre Esmaeli

Another hot Afghans model Zohra Esmaili, is an aspiring young Afghan supermodel who grew up in Germany and is now currently pursuing a full time professional modeling career in New York, USA.

Now, as I have seen it on many pages of AfghanHa.com, a lot of the site users would leave negative comments and most of those comments stem from a cultural or islamic point of view. But let us face it. A lot of Afghans who grew up in the west, do not have the mentality of you and me. Yes its true, that because of their birth place or their ancestar’s birth place, they are considered Afghan but they embody liberal ideologies of the west, they embrace the western attitude towards life… which is totally fine. Why not.

Who can judge what is wrong or what is not. Who can judge if the Afghan way of living is better than German or vice versa. Just because one is born in an Afghan family or Islamic family does not give us the right to bash someone else because of what they believe in or where they were raised or ….

Infact, once you strip off an individual based on their ethnicity, geographic labelling, religion, material belongings etc… we all become the same. The difference would lie on the premise of whether we are morale or not, whether our actions would lead to hurting someone else or not…whether our integrity and honesty would remain unfaltered or not…

Hence if Zohre Esmaeli is pursuing a modelling career… then good for her ! Who are we to judge !




Naghma’s Daughter as hot as her mother?

AfghanHa bring the hottest rumor going around these days are that Naghma’s daughter will be joining the Afghan music industry very soon. She was last spotted in a concert in Peshawar, where she received more media attention then the singer performing that night. Wether she will join the industry or not is still a matter of time, however one thing is for certain that she will make one hot singer if she does join. Despite the fact that she is daughter of a legendary afghan female singer, Her looks mostly resemble those of Sonali Bendre of Bollywood.

Sediq is back!

Sediq Shubab is back into music industry with his new style. Last year in all his concerts tickets were sold out, and immense number of people left the concert happily. This year the rumor is going around that Sediq is working on his new album, which will be out in market after Eid. Sediq has lately received hardly any media attention, his latest interview aired on BBC. After which he had his second interview with ATN, in which he complained from different television channels. “My fans support is one thing, and appreciating my work by media is another.”

His latest video clip:

Monday, August 25, 2008

Afghan Olympic Medal Beijing 2008 Olympics







CONGRATULATIONS Rohullah Nikpai FOR AFGHANISTAN’S FIRST OLYMPIC MEDAL !!!
TABREEK TABREEK TABREEK
Noor Ahmad Gayezabi said a silent prayer while watching the small family TV with his 13-year-old son. ”Help Nikpai. Help Nikpai. Help Afghanistan.”
Then he watched his country win its first-ever Olympic medal.
Rohullah Nikpai defeated world champion Juan Antonio Ramos of Spain on Wednesday to earn the bronze medal in the men’s under 58-kilogram taekwondo competition, sparking applause, wide smiles and laughter in homes, restaurants and ice cream parlors around the country.
”When I saw that he won, I jumped up and hugged and kissed my son,” Gayezabi said. ”I was crying.”
President Hamid Karzai immediately called to congratulate Nikpai. He also awarded him a house at the government’s expense, said Humayun Hamidzada, the president’s spokesman.
”I hope this will send a message of peace to my country after 30 years of war,” Nikpai said.
The victory led all of Afghanistan’s evening newscasts.
”I am so happy. I cannot express my feelings in words,” said Mohammad Akbar, 33, who watched on a TV at his Kabul pharmacy. ”While I was watching the match I was clapping I was so happy.”
Nikpai, who is 21, started learning the Korean martial art when he was 10 because his brother had found a club in Kabul to train. Not only was it an escape from the daily rigours of life in a country that not been at peace since the 1970s, he turned out to be good at it.
Exceptionally good.
When Gayezabi met Nikpai, they were both living at a refugee camp in Iran during the years of war that embroiled Afghanistan in the 1980s and 1990s. The two competed together on a refugee taekwondo team.
Nikpai came to Kabul four years ago, Gayezabi said. In the mornings he lifted weights and in the evenings he practiced martial arts. In between he earned money cutting hair as a barber.
With success came better training conditions. After being selected for the national team six months ago, he was able to use a special gymnasium.
But in a country where sports take a distant place behind the realities of war, few resources are dedicated to training athletes.
”My training situation is a lot like the situation in my country,” Nikpai said. ”It’s not good.”
Gayezabi had a lucky few hours of electricity that allowed him to watch his former teammate’s victory. He feared he would only be able to listen on the radio since Kabul averages about four hours of municipal electricity a day.
”I was crying because I was remembering back when we were both on the Afghan refugee taekwondo team in Iran,” Gayezabi said.
Only four Afghan athletes came to Beijing, representing a country that had never won an Olympic medal and is sinking ever deeper into war as the Taliban insurgency escalates.
Sprinter Robina Muqimyar - who in 2004 broke the gender barrier on the Afghan Olympic team - was last in a field of 85 women in the 100 metres, with a time of 14.80. She ran with a scarf covering her head.
Teammate Massoud Azizi finished 76th in the men’s 100. He trains in Kabul’s National Stadium, where the Taliban once staged regular public executions, wearing jogging shoes because his spikes won’t dig into the track’s cracked, concrete surface.
But Nikpai, who is 21, has claimed a spot among his sport’s elite.
Afghanistan will get another chance at a medal in taekwondo. Nesar Ahmad Bahave is competing in a heavier weight class.
Hussein Rachmati, a taekwondo teacher who works in the gym where Nikpai trains, said Nikpai prepared for the Olympics with a Korean teacher. He placed second in the World Taekwondo Federation’s qualifying event in Vietnam last year.
Afghans gathered around an ice cream shop TV in Kabul broke out in wide smiles and passed around congratulations to one another after watching Nikpai’s win, said Abdul Wafi, a 28-year-old university student.
”It is wonderful that an Afghan athlete can win a medal in the world Olympics,” said Wafi. ”It is a great achievement for Afghanistan.”
The top U.N. official in Afghanistan, Kai Eide, said the Olympic win shows that the country can compete on the global stage against the world’s best athletes.
”Young people should draw hope and inspiration from this Olympic win,” Eide said in a statement. ”Today, Afghanistan has demonstrated that it can and will succeed in the face of adversity with the determination, commitment and hard work of its most precious resource - the young people of Afghanistan.”
Along with the president’s offer of a house, Nikpai’s bronze medal comes with a cash prize.
Ehsanullah Bayat, chairman of the Afghan Wireless Communication Company, earlier announced that he would award any Afghan athlete who won an Olympic bronze $10,000, along with $50,000 for a gold medal and $25,000 for a silver, said Khalid Andisha, a spokesman for AWCC.
”It is a great victory for Afghanistan,” said Mohammad Sukran, an 18-year-old student. ”In a country like Afghanistan, the only thing we hear about all the time is violence and fighting. This is finally good news for Afghanistan.”