Masuda sultan biography channels
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Afghanistan/Non-talk Watchlist
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About
[edit]This page contains wikilinks to all of the pages tagged with WikiProject Afghanistan. This is intended to be used with the Related Changes feature. The watchlist for all Afghanistan non-talk pages can be found here, the watchlist for talk pages can be found here.
Pages in WikiProject
[edit]Last updated 03:54, 5 September 2021 (UTC)
- 'Aliabad
- .af
- 055 Brigade
- 1 August 2016 Kabul attack
- 1 July 2019 Kabul attack
- 10 August 2015 Kabul suicide bombing
- 100 Classrooms program
- 11 June 2013 Kabul bombing
- 11 September 2019 Kabul explosion
- 12th ECO Summit
- 13th ECO Summit
- 16 Days in Afghanistan
- 17 August 2019 Kabul bombing
- 17 September 2019 Afghanistan bombings
- 1826–1837 cholera pandemic
- 1842 retreat from Kabul
- 1879 in Afghanistan
- 1888–1893 Uprisings of Hazaras
- 1896 in Afghanistan
- 1897 in Afghanistan
- 1898 in Afghanistan
- 1899 in Afghanistan
- 1900 in Afghanistan
- 1901 in Afghanistan
- 1902 in Afghanistan
- 1903 in Afghanistan
- 1904 in Afghanistan
- 1905 in Afghanistan
- 1906 in Afghanistan
- 1907 in Afghanistan
- 1908 in Afghanistan
- 1909 in Afghanistan
- 1910 in Afghanistan
- 1911 in Afghanistan
- 1912 in Afghanistan
- 1913 in Afghanistan
- 1914 in Afghanistan
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Paul Van Haver – Co-Director
Luc Van Haver – Co-Director
Coralie Barbier – Co-Director
Julien Soulier – Co-Director
Auguste Bas – Producer
Lou Bardou-Jacquet – Manufacture Coordinator
Giuseppe Conti – Grower BE
Gaëlle Birenbaum – Oral communication & Post Manager
Evence Guinet-Dannonay – Designation Assistant
Gaëlle Cools – Content & Agreement Manager
Roxane Hauzeur – Yard goods Product Manager
Diego Mitrugno – Office Manager
Félix Lambot – Line Fabricator BE
Mathieu Perez – Ordinal AD
Benoît Debie – DOP
Letizia Giorgi – 1st Camera Assistant
Cyprien Rigaud – Ordinal Camera Assistant
Glauke Vankeirshilck – Camera Trainee
Bao Debie – Camera Trainee
Simon Moirot – DIT
Emilie Sornasse – Qtake Operator
Xavier Servais – Categorical Grip
Nicolas Baquet – Grip
Lucas Gonzalez – Grip
Nathan Meynsbrughen – Grip
Marco Viera – Grip
Jérémy Tondeur – Grip
Arnaud Hock – Gaffer
Kilian Delcorte – Consolist
Thibault Doens – Electrician
Michael Stolz – Electrician
Abdel Mousshin – Electrician
Alicia Dubois – MUA
Thomas Ruelle – Location manager
Mustapha Amzir – Craft
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People-Powered Journalism
With 20 years of hindsight, to many the U.S. war in Afghanistan looks tragically ill-conceived. But in the wake of 9/11, critics of the invasion, when they were heard at all, were regarded as naïve, even un-American. Amy Goodman ’84, host of the independent TV and radio news hour Democracy Now!, was one of the earliest journalists to focus on the human toll of the war. In January 2002, the show hosted a dialogue between Masuda Sultan, an Afghan-American woman whose family members had recently been killed by U.S. bombing, and Rita Lasar, an anti-war activist who lost her brother in the 9/11 attacks. President George W. Bush invoked her brother’s heroism—he had stayed in the World Trade Center to help his quadriplegic friend—in a speech given after the attacks. “Rita Lasar realized at that moment her brother would be used to justify an attack on Afghanistan,” Goodman recalls. “And she said, ‘Not in my name. Not in my brother’s name.’” The interview was one of the most memorable—and prophetic—moments in Democracy Now’s history, and it reflects what Goodman sees as media’s highest purpose. “It’s that kind of dialogue that will save the world,” she insists.
In 2021, the idea of a live daily news show might seem old-fashioned. But Democracy Now!,