Enforced postponement of event underlines just how dangerous the environment is for reporters.
IWPR’s longstanding editor Hafizullah Gardesh and newer reporter Mina Habib have been lauded for their contributions to Afghan journalism at an awards ceremony in Kabul.
An IWPR radio reporter talks to people living along the fertile Nangarhar Canal in eastern Afghanistan, where illicit logging is destroying once-productive orchards.
Media resource centre will connect Uruzgan to the outside world.
An IWPR press centre complete with computers and internet access has been hailed as a timely response to the needs of journalists in Afghanistan’s central Uruzgan province, where equipment sh
Interviews with IWPR staff involved in film, and reactions from public screenings in Afghanistan.
As the first documentary covering the gross human rights violations committed over two decades of conflict, from 1978 to 2001, The Forgotten Victims was bound to make difficult viewing for Afghans
New IWPR documentary sheds light on the war crimes and other abuses committed over two decades of Afghan conflict.
“The Forgotten Victims”, a new documentary produced by IWPR, sheds light on the war crimes and other human rights abuses committed in Afghanistan over two decades of serial conflict.
The Forgotten Victims hailed as a step forward towards transitional justice in Afghanistan.
An IWPR documentary on war crimes committed in Afghanistan over two decades received a rapturous welcome from foreign diplomats, Afghan media workers and civil society activists at a screening in K
One day eight years ago, 12-year-old Nazifa was walking home in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif when a rocket landed nearby. The explosion left her permanently blind.
This radio piece looks at an incident in the late 1990s in which 18 Afghan community and tribal leaders were killed while trying to negotiate a peace deal with the Taleban.