<p>The Islamic declaration of faith, &quot;There is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is His messenger&quot;, covers the wall of the former US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.&nbsp;In front of the wall, street vendors sell Taliban flags and other merchandise. US diplomats negotiated with the Taliban in August 2021 to spare the embassy after the evacuation &nbsp;in exchange for future aid.</p>
2023 Photo Contest, Asia, Stories

The Price of Peace in Afghanistan

Photographer

Mads Nissen

Politiken/Panos Pictures
13 January, 2022

The Islamic declaration of faith, "There is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is His messenger", covers the wall of the former US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. In front of the wall, street vendors sell Taliban flags and other merchandise. US diplomats negotiated with the Taliban in August 2021 to spare the embassy after the evacuation  in exchange for future aid.

This story captures the daily life of people living across Afghanistan in 2022. 

In August 2021, the withdrawal of US and allied forces from Afghanistan marked the end of a 20-year long attempt at nation-building. Taliban forces, having sustained an insurgency across the country, returned to power shortly after the collapse of the Afghan state. Consequently, all international aid, which in 2019 accounted for an estimated 80 percent of the country’s expenditures, was halted, and 7 to 9 billion dollars of assets belonging to the Afghan state were frozen. Without these two sources of government income, the already fragile Afghan economy effectively collapsed. 

National gross domestic product of Afghanistan dropped to around 25 percent of its peak in early 2021. Estimates for 2022 suggest that 97 percent of the population lives below the poverty line and 95 percent of people do not have enough to eat. Nine million people are at risk of famine and, according to the UN, over a million children are severely malnourished. COVID-19, intense droughts, and the inability of aid organizations to bring relief to those in need have all exacerbated the crisis, which is only expected to worsen in 2023. 

Mads Nissen photographed this story on assignment for Politiken. He said: “My hope with this work is more than anything to create not just awareness, but engagement to the millions of Afghans who are desperately in need of food and humanitarian aid right now.”

Mads Nissen
About the photographer

Mads Nissen (b. 1979) is a photographer based in Copenhagen, Denmark.    For Nissen, photography is all about empathy - creating understanding and intimacy while confronting contemporary social issues such as inequality, human rights violations, and our destructive relationship with nature.    N...

Read the full biography
Technical information
Shutter Speed

1/500

Focal length

24

F-Stop

F. 2.8

ISO

100

Camera

Canon EOS R5

Jury comment

A concise edit reflecting on the aftermath of the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan. Each photo provides new information, culminating in a comprehensive selection of nine powerful images. The project demonstrates an airtight, traditional approach that elucidates the failures of the American adventure in Afghanistan to give us a well rounded look at how these failures have impacted the people. The jury remarked that this is truly extraordinary work especially as it covers so many different layers of life under Taliban rule.