Create a list of ten changes in the people of Afghanistan. How have they changed?
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Answer:
peoples are financially grow himselfs
Answer:
'Afghanistan Has Changed': Post-2001 Generation On Prospects Of Peace With Taliban
Taliban fighters react to a speech by their senior leader in the Shindand district of Herat Province in May 2016.
Talk of peace in Afghanistan is ramping up, with the United States and the Taliban negotiating and Kabul preparing to host hundreds of ethnic, religious, and tribal leaders to settle on a road map for ending nearly 18 years of war.
But while those born after the U.S. invasion in 2001 make up around half of Afghanistan's population of 33 million, their voice has largely gone unheard.
RFE/RL spoke with Afghans born after the fall of the Taliban regime to see how they feel about the prospect of the fundamentalist movement officially returning to the fold.
Lotfullah, 18
"The Taliban killed my father," says Lotfullah, a semiprofessional cricket player in the eastern city of Jalalabad. "But for the interests of my country, I'm prepared to support peace with the Taliban."
Jalalabad, near the border with Pakistan, has been wracked by deadly bombings by the Taliban and more recently by the Islamic State (IS) extremist group.
Lotfullah says many in the region yearn for peace. But he says it must compensate for the huge sacrifices Afghans have made over the past 18 years.
"We have all sacrificed a lot in the war against the Taliban," he says. "Thousands of our soldiers and citizens have been killed."
The UN said 3,804 civilians were killed and 7,189 wounded as a result of the conflict in Afghanistan in 2018, the deadliest on record since 2009.
"Peace with the Taliban has to suit the country’s interests," he says. "The progress we have made must be sustained. Otherwise, we don’t want peace."
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