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Feeling devastated after seeing this news about Afghanistan

337 replies

LovingLilacDuck · 19/05/2026 08:13

I stumbled across this on BBC — https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0q25dwj807o

I can’t stop crying. I feel so incredibly devastated that we live in such an unequal world. I cannot believe in 2026 people have to starve and children die — and girls be sold??? because of hunger. Goodness sake. That’s not right, it’s so inhumane. Seeing the tears on those tiny girls’ eyes and how fearful they are just breaks my heart so much, oh Gosh.

I just really feel sorry for these people who have to live under Taliban and suffer immensely. It’s so heartbreaking. And I know these people are not the only ones unfortunately…I just feel like we all have so much, more than we all need to and I wish we could just help the poor more as a whole world. But that doesn’t bring any profits does it???!

I wish I could do something to help, whatever that may be. Does anyone have a clue about what to do? I’d appreciate any insight. Thank you.

A man wearing a pink turban cuddles his small daughter close in front of a cracked mud wall

Afghanistan humanitarian crisis: Ghor's starving families

In Afghanistan today, a staggering three in four people cannot meet their basic needs.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0q25dwj807o

OP posts:
Thread gallery
9
InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:26

Borrowerdale · Today 08:24

And would you claim those men are ‘suffering’?

Bizarre comment.

RhannionKPSS · Today 08:27

Wordsmithery · 19/05/2026 08:35

@elgreco and @NoisyHiker Careful. Tarring the entire population with the same brush smacks of wilful ignorance at best.
Most of these people are just ordinary families trying to survive under a most brutal regime. Families who love each other and want what's best for them.
You can't extrapolate one behaviour (however ghastly that behaviour is) to every male in the country.

Oh I think we can tarr the men , WTF do you think the men have been doing for years and years in Afghanistan? This ! It’s nothing new, they have been selling their daughters for decades, it’s got very little to do with lack of food and everything to do with sexual & domestic slavery

Emilesgran · Today 08:28

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:26

Bizarre comment.

Well considering some people are STILL saying “Oh the poor men” I think it’s a reasonable question.

RhannionKPSS · Today 08:29

It’s a backward , medieval country and it hasn’t changed despite the blood shed by the troops of the UK, USA & other countries.

RhannionKPSS · Today 08:29

And all the aid poured into it over the years.

RhannionKPSS · Today 08:33

The Women of Afghanistan should have be armed not the bloody men

WaryCrow · Today 08:45

@Galadriel I would have agreed with you if not for this buried bit of misogyny.

” It's no different to when men say things like "women want equal pay but don't want to work as hard as men". Although that's possibly a more defensible statement as it seems there are always a lot more women moaning about 'male dominated jobs' than there are women who are prepared to step up and do these jobs.”

Tell me have you ever lived in a sexist area? Never been subjected to horrendous male sexual harassment just for walking down the road as a 10 yr old there? Ever tried to break into one of the male trades and been told to go out, show your tits and flirt with a male client?

Also have you never worked in one of the female dominated work areas and watched pay dwindle while demands increase? Are you aware that hospitals primarily employ women who are required to work while getting into debt for their qualifications while the male transport trades and bin men are given everything they want, knowing there would be a very hostile uproar if nurses and healthcare went on strike for what they deserve?

How fucking dare you. I’m horrified by Afghanistan because I can see it’s the extreme edge of male normality, not because it’s totally alien.

By the way anyone who thinks women haven’t had work or professions in the past needs to read through and past the misogyny of the ‘early modern state’. Philippa Gregory’s ‘Normal Women’ is a good introduction. Women leaders were once common, before Rome.

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:46

Emilesgran · Today 08:28

Well considering some people are STILL saying “Oh the poor men” I think it’s a reasonable question.

It seems like a bit of a brain dead response to my statement.

The point is that Afghani men are not special. They’re not uniquely bad due to religion and culture.

If Britain were to face the same levels of poverty, corruption, conflict and societal breakdown we would also be seeing the same levels of child rape, children being sold off etc.

Male sexual exploitation is global, how it manifests is shaped by socioeconomic factors.

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:51

RingoJuice · Yesterday 13:20

@Radarqueen honestly most hunter-gatherer societies are absolutely awful to women. It’s a human norm. Only largely industrialized societies have escaped this. The type of things that go on in tribal societies would make you want to throw up, and I’m not just talking about Pakistan.

We can rise above human nature … but it’s a rare and special thing and must be protected where it exists.

Which hunter gatherer society are you thinking of here?

OtterlyAstounding · Today 08:52

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:46

It seems like a bit of a brain dead response to my statement.

The point is that Afghani men are not special. They’re not uniquely bad due to religion and culture.

If Britain were to face the same levels of poverty, corruption, conflict and societal breakdown we would also be seeing the same levels of child rape, children being sold off etc.

Male sexual exploitation is global, how it manifests is shaped by socioeconomic factors.

I'm not sure what your point is, here. I don't feel sorry for any men who own their wives like breeding cattle, and sell their daughters into sex slavery. I only have boundless contempt for them. I don't care if they're starving. Death is better than that depravity.

Right now, the Afghani men are the ones engaging in that, and they're the ones that this article is about. If women's rights are stripped in Britain and British men begin selling their daughters, I'll have the same contempt - which is one I already have for rapists, abusers, and other such men.

quantumbutterfly · Today 08:54

RingoJuice · Today 08:21

I don’t agree with any of that by the way. Tibetans are being culturally and economically erased from their own cities.

But you’ll note that they aren’t forced into camps and told to abandon the radical elements of their religion. Because the Tibetan way of protest is to set themselves on fire instead of killing other people ….

As an aside - I read there is some disagreement on how the new dalai lama will be chosen. Controlling a religious hierarchy is historically a good way to control the people who follow it.

WaryCrow · Today 08:54

And which industrialised societies are you thinking of too? The industrial age in Britain was founded on misogyny, where women were openly employed with lower wages than the men in the early factories, and women were preferred both for this reason and because they tended to behave themselves more. It was also widely known that after the cultural shifts of the 15th century (ish) women were literally written out of land ownership and so had fewer choices than before. Evidence has recently been found that supports the long held suggestion of greater rights for women in Britain before Rome.

(that was aimed at RingoJuice following the query about hunter gatherer societies).

Feis123 · Today 09:10

WaryCrow · Yesterday 21:55

Good point actually.

But still could not, in the main, chase off the Taliban. Presumably because too many of them ARE the Taliban.

I would like to remind us all that there was a group of freedom fighters holed up in a valley somewhere. Presumably they lost fatally.

They are the Taliban! You are right!

Borrowerdale · Today 09:17

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:26

Bizarre comment.

What is your point then? That it is ok that Afghan men sell their daughters into slavery because some British might do it too? Why are you trying to justify rape and slavery of afghani girls?

ElReverendoGreen · Today 09:25

Inclined to agree with @XDownwiththissortofthingX
Additionally,
”Afghanistan” wasn’t really a thing to many of these men. Afghistan was/is really just a region full of very old villages / tribes. They didn’t identify as a unified country. The history of the country just wasn’t like that. A man from one side of the country had nothing to align him to a man from the other side of the country.

as @XDownwiththissortofthingXsays, expecting them to unify, align and fight from the starting point they were at was too much.

I think it’s a horrible, horrible situation. My heart breaks for the children. But I am also sad for the men, I’m sad for everyone. At the end of the day, many of them are just men trying to make a living and provide for their families. Like in any country, you can’t tar them all with the same brush.

The Bacha bazi, however….im horrified. I’ve been reading a little online about it and there are some utterly heartbreaking photos of these poor boys, surrounded by lecherous men.

I don’t know. Perhaps it all just is a bit too different from our western society to be able to understand it or help in any meaningful way. It’s all just so sad.

Borrowerdale · Today 09:29

ElReverendoGreen · Today 09:25

Inclined to agree with @XDownwiththissortofthingX
Additionally,
”Afghanistan” wasn’t really a thing to many of these men. Afghistan was/is really just a region full of very old villages / tribes. They didn’t identify as a unified country. The history of the country just wasn’t like that. A man from one side of the country had nothing to align him to a man from the other side of the country.

as @XDownwiththissortofthingXsays, expecting them to unify, align and fight from the starting point they were at was too much.

I think it’s a horrible, horrible situation. My heart breaks for the children. But I am also sad for the men, I’m sad for everyone. At the end of the day, many of them are just men trying to make a living and provide for their families. Like in any country, you can’t tar them all with the same brush.

The Bacha bazi, however….im horrified. I’ve been reading a little online about it and there are some utterly heartbreaking photos of these poor boys, surrounded by lecherous men.

I don’t know. Perhaps it all just is a bit too different from our western society to be able to understand it or help in any meaningful way. It’s all just so sad.

You are horrified for the little boys but not the little girls?

Twinandatwoyearold · Today 09:42

ElReverendoGreen · Today 09:25

Inclined to agree with @XDownwiththissortofthingX
Additionally,
”Afghanistan” wasn’t really a thing to many of these men. Afghistan was/is really just a region full of very old villages / tribes. They didn’t identify as a unified country. The history of the country just wasn’t like that. A man from one side of the country had nothing to align him to a man from the other side of the country.

as @XDownwiththissortofthingXsays, expecting them to unify, align and fight from the starting point they were at was too much.

I think it’s a horrible, horrible situation. My heart breaks for the children. But I am also sad for the men, I’m sad for everyone. At the end of the day, many of them are just men trying to make a living and provide for their families. Like in any country, you can’t tar them all with the same brush.

The Bacha bazi, however….im horrified. I’ve been reading a little online about it and there are some utterly heartbreaking photos of these poor boys, surrounded by lecherous men.

I don’t know. Perhaps it all just is a bit too different from our western society to be able to understand it or help in any meaningful way. It’s all just so sad.

The girls experience the same letchy old men but they are raped and abused behind closed doors. They will then be expected to feed their rapist, clean after their rapist and raise the children of the rapist. And probably care for the parents of the rapist. If she runs away I can only imagine what would happen.

And 3-4% will have a fistula due to injuries caused by raping a child.

ElReverendoGreen · Today 09:46

Borrowerdale · Today 09:29

You are horrified for the little boys but not the little girls?

Of course not. I’m horrified by both. I said my heart breaks for the children in particular.

Not sure how you inferred that from what I wrote.

ElReverendoGreen · Today 09:48

Twinandatwoyearold · Today 09:42

The girls experience the same letchy old men but they are raped and abused behind closed doors. They will then be expected to feed their rapist, clean after their rapist and raise the children of the rapist. And probably care for the parents of the rapist. If she runs away I can only imagine what would happen.

And 3-4% will have a fistula due to injuries caused by raping a child.

Edited

I’m not for one second suggesting they don’t.

I mentioned the bacha bazi, not because I think it’s in any way worse than what’s happening to the girls, but because I was not previously aware of it.

I was not differentiating between the harm done to boys and girls.

I was trying to differentiate between the men who are involved in practices like the bacha bazi, and normal family men who’s families are starving.

Puzzledandpissedoff · Today 11:08

As for ISIS...the West did not make men believe those things, or perpetrate those brutalities. We're not talking about the economic upheaval that the west is responsible for, we're taking about an organisation that relishes unimaginable, sadistic cruelty

You're right of course, @OtterlyAstounding, but I suppose it's easier for some to blame the west for everything rather than recognise that there really are some cultures like this

Add in the fact that they happen to be brown and there's not the slightest chance of some accepting the population's own culpability for aspects of their situation

OtterlyAstounding · Today 11:16

Puzzledandpissedoff · Today 11:08

As for ISIS...the West did not make men believe those things, or perpetrate those brutalities. We're not talking about the economic upheaval that the west is responsible for, we're taking about an organisation that relishes unimaginable, sadistic cruelty

You're right of course, @OtterlyAstounding, but I suppose it's easier for some to blame the west for everything rather than recognise that there really are some cultures like this

Add in the fact that they happen to be brown and there's not the slightest chance of some accepting the population's own culpability for aspects of their situation

I mean, fair play to those who point out that the western world has meddled where it shouldn't have for its own gain, and made the overall situation worse... And fair enough, it's possible that any culture could end up doing terrible things when facing deprivations...

But right now, it's Afghani men doing it, and the western world cannot be blamed for them engaging in child rape, or owning women like animals. That doesn't feed anyone. There are wider factors at play, such as the fact that the culture is drenched in unimaginable misogyny and child sexual exploitation, and that's not because of the West.

Never2many · Today 11:22

I think that what people need to realise here is that there are no normal men in countries like Afghanistan. Not normal in the way we think anyway.

Rape, brutality, sexual violence, the degradation of women is their normal. It’s how they’ve grown up, it’s their culture brought about by the leadership yes, but that’s something which has never changed.

If there were enough men who wanted change they could bring about a revolution but they haven’t.

There will be people there who care about their families in a less brutal way. But still all men there will see their wives and daughters as less than them. That’s never changed and it never will.

We can’t bring about change in Afghanistan because Afghanistan doesn’t want change.

The girls and women do, of course they do, but having said that so much of this is normal to them as well. The younger generations will have seen some more liberal life while western forces were in there, but the older generations have grown up with it, to them it’s how they’re meant to live.

So it’s the younger generations which need to bring about change, the young girls, and boys, because the boys will grow up into the men of today unless they can be got to first in order t change that.

Puzzledandpissedoff · Today 11:23

OtterlyAstounding · Today 11:16

I mean, fair play to those who point out that the western world has meddled where it shouldn't have for its own gain, and made the overall situation worse... And fair enough, it's possible that any culture could end up doing terrible things when facing deprivations...

But right now, it's Afghani men doing it, and the western world cannot be blamed for them engaging in child rape, or owning women like animals. That doesn't feed anyone. There are wider factors at play, such as the fact that the culture is drenched in unimaginable misogyny and child sexual exploitation, and that's not because of the West.

Exactly, OtterlyAstounding

As you suggest it's perfectly possible to recognise where western meddling's been unhelpful without blaming us for absolutely everything, especially when it involves local mens' choices

Emilesgran · Today 11:33

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · Today 08:46

It seems like a bit of a brain dead response to my statement.

The point is that Afghani men are not special. They’re not uniquely bad due to religion and culture.

If Britain were to face the same levels of poverty, corruption, conflict and societal breakdown we would also be seeing the same levels of child rape, children being sold off etc.

Male sexual exploitation is global, how it manifests is shaped by socioeconomic factors.

The problem with this is that child rape and selling of daughters in Afghanistan is NOT a result of famine or societal breakdown. It’s PART of their society and has been for generations.

If your point is that if British men were socialised to consider women as mere objects then they too would be ok with selling their daughters when they needed to raise some extra cash, well yes that’s exactly the point.

And that’s why it’s an Afghan who’s just been convicted in Austria for an attempted honour killing after stabbing his 15-year-old daughter 12 times because she was dating a Romanian boy.

A 51-year-old who arrived in Europe 22 years ago, who still felt that that his daughter must remain true to his culture. She had been “promised” to an older Afghan man. Well of course she had.

And isn’t it funny that Austrians are committing honour killings now too, just like in the UK.

Oh wait no. The factor in common is Afghan, not Austrian.

Twinandatwoyearold · Today 11:58

Emilesgran · Today 11:33

The problem with this is that child rape and selling of daughters in Afghanistan is NOT a result of famine or societal breakdown. It’s PART of their society and has been for generations.

If your point is that if British men were socialised to consider women as mere objects then they too would be ok with selling their daughters when they needed to raise some extra cash, well yes that’s exactly the point.

And that’s why it’s an Afghan who’s just been convicted in Austria for an attempted honour killing after stabbing his 15-year-old daughter 12 times because she was dating a Romanian boy.

A 51-year-old who arrived in Europe 22 years ago, who still felt that that his daughter must remain true to his culture. She had been “promised” to an older Afghan man. Well of course she had.

And isn’t it funny that Austrians are committing honour killings now too, just like in the UK.

Oh wait no. The factor in common is Afghan, not Austrian.

I had not seen that. I can’t imagine the BBC will be investigating or reporting it. Once that would have been headline news.

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