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Kabul
built 657 days ago
Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC), headquartered in Kabul, is the largest private investor in Afghanistan, with approximately over $300 Million invested. Afghan Wireless is ... the largest employer of Afghans in Afghanistan, employing approximately 2,100 people directly and another 20,000 indirectly. AWCC is a leader in delivering wireless and broadband communication solutions to residential and business customers. The company has a strong reputation for philanthropy, supporting charitable organizations, assisting orphans, women, hunger relief and education through its own efforts and in conjunction with the Bayat Foundation. Additional information about Afghan Wireless Communication Company and the products and services provided by AWCC is available at http://www.afghan-wireless.com
Kabul is the capital and largest city of Afghanistan. It is located in the Kabul Province, which is in the south-centeral partof the country and under normal circumstances it would be your best place to explore.
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Mirwais Yasini, head of Afghanistan's Counter Narcotics Directorate in Kabul, said his government is making some progress in the fight against drugs. The government is educating farmers, cracking down on heroin labs and "eradicating the opium plants," Mr. Yasini said. Additionally, the U.S. Army has begun a new policy of destroying heroin labs and poppy fields when they encounter them during normal operations.
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Those in Kabul who were directly exposed to US-British precision bombing showed extreme signs of contamination, consistent with uranium exposure and with some types of chemical or biological weaponry. These included pains in joints, back/kidney pain, muscle weakness, memory problems and confusion and disorientation. Many of these symptoms are found in Gulf War and Balkans veterans and civilians. Those exposed to the bombing report symptoms of flu-type illnesses, bleeding, runny noses and blood-stained mucous.
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Kabul Airport Kabul was opened in 1992 by Slawomir Pytlasinski, a Polish immigrant. He recruited Afghan native Sultan Malikyar to create the restaurant for him, and Malikyar in turn brought in his fellow countryman, Khairzada, to run the business. Malikyar came from a family that had operated restaurants in Afghanistan. In 1994, the pair bought out the original owner, and in June 2000, Khairzada bought out Malikyar’s share of the restaurant. [read on]
According to other scholars, the Sanskrit name of Kabul is derived from Kamboj.[5] It is mentioned as Kophes or Kophene in the classical writings. Gazetteer of Bombay Presidency 1904 maintains that the ancient name of Kabul was Kambojapura, which Ptolemy (160 CE) mentions as Kaboura (from Ka(m)bo(j)pura?). Hiuen Tsang refers to the name as Gaofu, which according to Dr. J. W. McCrindle, Dr. B. C. Law, Dr. R. K. Mukkerji and others is equivalent to Kambojas (Kamboj/Kambuj). The Bactrians founded the town of Paropamisadae near Kabul, but it was later ceded to the Mauryans in the 1st century BCE.
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