AFGHANISTAN
Broken Promise
Moises Saman
Softbound,
10 ¾" x 8 ½", 128 pages
80 duotone illustrations
2007, Charta
Edited and with interviews by Moises Saman
From the publisher:
Moises Saman, born in Lima, Peru, in 1974, was a Los Angeles college
student when he traveled Chiapas to photograph the aftermath of
the 1995 Zapatista uprising. After graduation he traveled to Kosovo,
and he's been working as a photojournalist ever since. Saman was
one of only a few American photographers to remain in Baghdad
during the 2003 Coalition bombing campaign, when he was arrested
and accused of espionage by the Iraqi secret police. He spent
eight days in prison before being deported to Jordan, after which
he returned to continue his coverage. In this book, he returns
to Afghanistan. The dramatic photographs collected in Afghanistan
Broken Promise track five years of conflict in that country,
and observe the apparent failure of the reconstruction effort:
due to violence and government corruption, all of the large-scale
reconstruction projects outside Kabul are at a standstill, while
high-rise luxury hotels and late-model BMWs can be seen all over
the capital. As before and during Taliban rule, warlords and militias
control whole provinces without regard for human rights. And now
the Taliban itself has been embarking on major offensives again.
Broken Promise observes the lives of Afghan civilians beginning
with the 2001 U.S. invasion and up through the resurgence of violence
in 2006-07. Saman is a full-time photographer for Newsday.
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