Afghanistan's Taliban woos foreign tourists

business2024-05-21 11:44:0236138

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) —

Around 30 men are crammed into a Kabul classroom, part of the debut student cohort at a Taliban-run institute training tourism and hospitality professionals.

It’s a motley crew. One student is a model. Another is 17 and has no job history.

The students vary in age, education level and professional experience. They’re all men — Afghan women are banned from studying beyond sixth grade — and they don’t know anything about tourism or hospitality. But they are all eager to promote a different side of Afghanistan. And the Taliban are happy to help.

Afghanistan’s rulers are pariahs on the global stage, largely because of their restrictions on women and girls. The economy is struggling, infrastructure is poor, and poverty is rife.

And yet, foreigners are visiting the country, encouraged by the sharp drop in violence, increased flight connections with hubs like Dubai, and the bragging rights that come with vacationing in an unusual destination. The numbers aren’t huge — they never were — but there’s a buzz around Afghan tourism.

Address of this article:http://lesotho.shellye-mcdaniel.com/html-33a799223.html

Popular

Not so Cool Britannia! Noel Gallagher gives damning verdict on Keir Starmer

Firefighters to tackle scaffolding dangling outside ruins of fire

India election 2024: Hindu nationalism is mainstream thanks to 10 years of PM Modi

Was Charlie Chaplin's grave once robbed?

Student fatally shot, suspect detained at Georgia's Kennesaw State University

12 students and teacher killed at Columbine to be remembered at 25th anniversary vigil

Key ally of Pakistan's prime minister demands end to ban on social media platform X

AP Week in Pictures: Europe and Africa

LINKS