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Luke Harding

Afghan Fundamentalists Raid Girls' Schools

Luke Harding | Guardian | November 1, 2002

"In March, Afghanistan's new education ministry rehired thousands of teachers who had been sacked by the Taliban, including many women who were banned from teaching. But attitudes towards girls' education remain mixed. In the south, much of the conservative Pashtun community remains hostile towards the idea of girls going to school, especially after the age of 10." [more]

Afghan Massacre Haunts Pentagon

Luke Harding | Guardian | September 14, 2002

"Nobody knows exactly how many Taliban prisoners were secretly interred in this mass grave, a short distance from the main road. But there is now substantial evidence that the worst atrocity of last year's war in Afghanistan took place here; most controversially, during an operation masterminded by US special forces." [more]

Analysis: The War in Kashmir Has Already Begun

Luke Harding | Guardian | June 7, 2002

"No war has been declared, and yet the latest conflict between India and Pakistan is now raging all across their 1,800-mile border: from the icy Siachen glacier, through Kashmir and Jammu, down to Rajasthan and Punjab — and past Mr Singh's bungalow." [more]

Kabul Airport Killing 'Part of Plot'

Luke Harding | Guardian | February 16, 2002

"The brutal death of Afghanistan's new aviation minister - apparently lynched by a crowd of angry pilgrims at Kabul airport — took a bizarre twist yesterday after it was revealed he may have been the victim of an elaborate assasination plot." [more]

Fatal Errors that Led to Massacre

Luke Harding, Simon Tisdall, Nicholas Watt and Richard Norton-Taylor | Guardian | December 1, 2001

"As the net tightened around the Taliban leadership yesterday, questions were being asked about whether the bloody end to this week's prison siege at the 19th-century Qala-i-Jhangi fort outside the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif will be the defining moment of the Afghan war. Pictures of aid workers picking their way through the corpses of Taliban prisoners killed by a combination of Northern Alliance fighters and American bombings, have caused revulsion around the world. At least 175 prisoners were killed; that is the number of bodies recovered so far by the Red Cross." [more]

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This website is a tribute to Why War?, one of the nation's first and most innovative post-9/11 student antiwar organizations. Born on October 22, 2001 at Swarthmore College, we were a handful of freshmen and sophmores who vocally opposed the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere. And now, seven years later, we are retiring this website as we focus our efforts on new directions. We hope that it continues to serve future activists and we remain confident that humanity is on the verge birthing a better world.