Sign up for free Newsletters

Once a month get new photos and expert tips.

Sign Up

Search Results

Results tagged “Afghanistan” from NatGeo News Watch

Photographer Emilio Morenatti, whose work has been featured in National Geographic Magazine and on the National Geographic Web site, was among the journalists and U.S. soldiers who were wounded and evacuated to a hospital in Afghanistan yesterday when the vehicle they were traveling in ran over an explosive device.

Here is a report about the incident from the Associated Press:

KABUL (AP)--Two Associated Press journalists wounded in a bomb blast while on assignment with the U.S. military in southern Afghanistan were evacuated to a medical center in Dubai on Wednesday after being treated at a military hospital.

The Army, meanwhile, released additional details of the attack, including word that two U.S. soldiers were also wounded in the bombing of a light armored vehicle called a Stryker near the Pakistani border.

Photographer Emilio Morenatti and AP Television News videographer Andi Jatmiko were traveling on Tuesday with a unit of the 5th Stryker Brigade when their vehicle ran over a bomb planted in the open desert terrain, the military said.

All four wounded were taken by helicopter to a military hospital in Kandahar. The journalists arrived around midnight Wednesday in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, where they were to receive further treatment.

Jatmiko suffered leg injuries and two broken ribs. Morenatti, badly wounded in the leg, underwent an operation in Kandahar that resulted in the loss of his left foot.

The two soldiers, who were not identified, also suffered leg wounds--one of them severe. One of the wounded soldiers crawled out of the vehicle and applied a tourniquet to the other injured soldier, according to Capt. Denis Lortie, commander of Bear Troop, 8th Squadron of the 5th Stryker. Another soldier also applied a tourniquet to Morenatti.

Four other soldiers in the vehicle were not injured, Lortie said.

The attack took place as four Stryker vehicles were on patrol 15 miles (24 kilometers) north of the town of Spin Boldak and 120 miles (193 kilometers) southeast of Dahaneh, a Taliban-held town where helicopter-borne U.S. Marines launched an operation before dawn Wednesday to uproot the militants.

Newspaper Photographer of the Year

Morenatti, 40, a Spaniard, is an award-winning photographer based in Islamabad who has worked for the AP in Afghanistan, Israel and the Palestinian territories. He was named Newspaper Photographer of the Year in 2009 by Pictures of the Year International.

Morenatti's work was also featured in National Geographic Magazine and on Nationalgeographic.com, including the lead image in this month's photo feature "Visions of Earth." (See this photo below). Morenatti's photographs have also been published by National Geographic News: Refugee in Pakistan, Refugees Waiting for Food, and Burning of Narcotics in Afghanistan.

Morenatti-picture.jpg

Pakistan--Women and children await registration and relief at the Jalozai refugee camp. Since last summer, some one million Pakistanis have fled the fighting between the military and militants near the Afghan border.

Photo by Emilio Morenatti, AP Images

In Spain, where Morenatti is widely known, Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos spoke with Morenatti's wife, Marta Ramoneda, to offer assistance, the Foreign Ministry said.

Jatmiko, 44, of Indonesia, has reported for the AP from throughout Asia for more than 10 years. Indonesian diplomats contacted the AP in Kabul to express concern for Jatmiko and seek assurances that he would be cared for.

AP President Tom Curley said their injuries reflected "the risks that journalists like Emilio and Andi encounter every day as they staff the front lines of the most dangerous spots of the world. We are grateful for their bravery and their commitment to the news. Our hearts are with them and their families, especially Emilio's wife, Marta, and Andi's wife, Pingkan."

Journalists have faced increasing danger from improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, as they go on assignment with Western troops carrying out new offensives as part of the effort by the United States and its allies to turn the tide of the Afghan war.

IED attacks are now the cause of the majority of U.S. and NATO deaths in Afghanistan.

According to figures from the U.S.-based Joint IED Defeat Organization, the number of incidents from IEDs soared to 828 last month, the highest level of the war and more than twice as many as in July 2008.

The IED used in Tuesday's attack employs a pressure-plate detonation mechanism to complete an electrical circuit under the weight of a passing vehicle.

Eighteen journalists were killed in Afghanistan between 1992 and 2008, making it the 11th most dangerous country in the world for media workers, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. At least one more has been killed this year.

Journalists have also been kidnapped in Afghanistan.

In June, New York Times journalist David Rohde and Afghan journalist Tahir Ludin escaped after being held more than seven months by the Taliban. They were abducted Nov. 10 south of Kabul while heading to interview a Taliban leader, and were later moved across the border into Pakistan.

Morenatti, too, has been kidnapped, although not in Afghanistan. In October 2006, the AP photographer was abducted in Gaza City and freed unharmed after 15 hours.

Snow leopards, wolves, Marco Polo sheep, and brown bears are among 33 endangered and threatened species that have gained the protection of the Afghanistan Government, the country's National Environment Protection Agency (NEPA) has announced.

snow leopard.jpg

Snow Leopard photo by Julie Larsen Maher/WCS

The listing of protected species--20 mammals, seven birds, four plants, an amphibian, and an insect--provides legal protection to Afghanistan's wildlife, which have been devastated by more than 30 years of conflict, said the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

NEPA, WCS (with funding from USAID), Kabul University, and Afghanistan's Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Livestock, created the Afghanistan Wildlife Executive Committee (AWEC) to facilitate the listing, the first of its kind in Afghanistan.

marco-polo-sheep-picture.jpg

Marco Polo sheep Photo by Stephane Ostrowski/WCS

"In July 2008, AWEC began evaluations of species such as the snow leopard, Marco Polo sheep, and Asiatic black bear," WCS said in a statement. "To make status determinations, AWEC and WCS worked with world experts to obtain the most recent and accurate information available for Afghanistan and the region, and then evaluated those data using scientific criteria established by the global authority on species listing: the IUCN Red List."

The list of protected Afghanistan wildlife may be expanded to as many as 70 species by the end of the year, WCS added.

baby-bear-picture.jpg

Asiatic Black bear Photo by WCS

"The Wildlife Conservation Society commends the Afghanistan's National Environment Protection Agency for showing a continued commitment to conserving its natural heritage--even during these challenging times," said Steven E. Sanderson, President and CEO of WCS.

"WCS believes that conservation can often serve as diplomacy, and we are optimistic that this commitment to conservation will benefit all of Afghanistan's people."

pallas-cat-picture.jpg

Pallas Cat photo by Julie Larsen Maher/WCS

The snow leopard and other species are under pressure from excessive hunting, loss of key habitat and illegal trade.

Snow leopard pelts for sale in tourist shops sell for as much as $1,500 each, WCS said."International trade in species like the snow leopard is illegal under international law because it is globally endangered. Now that the snow leopard is protected under Afghan law, it is also illegal for Afghan nationals or internationals to hunt or trade the species within Afghanistan."

greater-flamingo-picture.jpg

Greater Flamingo Photo by Mark Anderson

NEPA will be responsible for managing Afghanistan's protected species, including writing recovery plans for species designated as threatened.

Species will be re-evaluated every five years to determine whether populations have recovered to the extent where they may be removed from the protected list.

eurasian-lynx-picture.jpg

Eurasian Lynx photo by George Schaller

Last month Afghanistan announced the creation of its first national park: Band-e-Amir, six deep-blue lakes separated by natural dams made of travertine, a mineral deposit.

WCS, the only organization conducting ongoing scientific conservation studies in Afghanistan in the past 30 years, is working with the Afghan government to establish a network of parks and protected areas.

markhor-picture.jpg

Markhor Photo by Graham Jones

asiatic-cheetah-picture.jpg

Asiatic Cheetah (photographed in Iran) by Iran DOE/WCS/CACP/UNDP

persian-leopard-picture.jpg

Persian Leopard (photographed in Iran) by Iran DOE/WCS/CACP/UNDP

urial-picture.jpg

Urial Photo by George Schaller

saker-falcon-picture.jpg

Saker Falcon Photo by Mark Thomas

Bande-Amir-Lake-Kara-picture.jpg

WCS photo by Alex Dehgan

One of Afghanistan's best-known natural areas--a spectacular series of six deep blue lakes separated by natural dams made of travertine, a mineral deposit--has been declared the country's first national park.

The park is near the Bamyan Valley, where the 1,500-year-old giant Buddha statues destroyed by the Taliban once stood.

Bird-ID-at-BandeAmir-picture.jpg
"Travertine systems are found in only a few places throughout the world, virtually all of which are on the UNESCO World Heritage list and are major international tourist attractions," the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society said in a news release announcing the new national park. WCS worked with the Afghanistan government and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to establish Band-e-Amir national park.

WCS scientist Chris Shank with two Afghan park guards

WCS photo by Chris Shank

USAID provided key funding that led to the park's creation, including support of WCS to conduct preliminary wildlife surveys, identify and delineate the park's boundaries, and work with local communities and the provincial government, WCS said in a news statement. WCS also developed the park's management plan, helped the government hire and train local rangers, and provided assistance to the Afghan Government to design the laws enabling the park to be created.

"At its core, Band-e-Amir is an Afghan initiative supported by the international community. It is a park created for Afghans, by Afghans, for the new Afghanistan," said Steven E. Sanderson, president and CEO of the Wildlife Conservation Society. "Band-e-Amir will be Afghanistan's first national park and sets the precedent for a future national park system."

Bande-Amir-Lake-Kara-picture-2.jpg

WCS photo by Chris Shank

Band-e-Amir had been a destination for travelers since the 1950s, with a peak visitation in the 1970s, WCS added. Tourism was almost entirely absent during the war years between 1979-2001. "Today, Band-e-Amir is visited every year by thousands of Afghan tourists and religious pilgrims as well as many foreigners currently living and working in-country."

Though much of the park's wildlife has been lost, WCS said, recent surveys indicate that it still contains ibex (a species of wild goat) and urial (a type of wild sheep) along with wolves, foxes, smaller mammals and fish, and various bird species including the Afghan snow finch, which is believed to be the only bird found exclusively in Afghanistan. "Snow leopards were once found in the area but vanished due to hunting in the early 1980s."

Fragile Travertine Dams

The llakes are under growing threat from pollution and other human-caused degradation to the fragile travertine dams.

Creating the national park will provide international recognition essential to helping develop Band-e-Amir as an international tourist destination, and assist it in obtaining World Heritage status, which would provide additional protection, according to WCS. "It also sets the groundwork to create an Afghan Protected Area System that could include the wildlife-rich transboundary area in the Pamirs shared by Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and Tajikistan."

The new park will be managed by Afghanistan's National Environmental Protection Agency, the Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Livestock, and the Band-e-Amir Protected Area Committee.

WCS helped the 13 villages lying within the park establish this committee, which provides local input into all management decisions. "The park will provide employment, tourism-derived revenue, and ensure that local communities play a key role in protecting this world class landscape," WCS said.

Bande-Amir-Lake-Kara-picture-3.jpg

One of the travertine dams that make up the series of six lakes. Note the person standing on top of the dam.

WCS photo by Chris Shank

Farzana-Wahidy-Photo-lede.jpg

Photo by Farzana Wahidy

Under the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, women's rights were completely stripped away. Women were not allowed to pursue their education, all girls' schools were closed down, women were not allowed to work, and they were ordered to remain in their houses.

Raised in Afghanistan during the Taliban era, Farzana Wahidy was forced to go to school in secret in a small apartment in Kabul. At the age of 11, she helped teach mathematics to 60 other girls.

► Read This Entire Post

Most Popular Entries