Graham Wood
Graham Wood is a humanitarian consultant and a director of www.aidworkers.net. He has worked in humanitarian assistance for 20 years with experience in Africa, the Middle East, and central and southeast Asia. Graham is dividing 2007 between assignments in Sudan, Uganda and Afghanistan, where he is leading a research programme into economic regeneration in Bamyan and greater Kabul.
Will the S. Korean kidnappings affect aid workers' safety?
By Graham Wood
The release of the South Korean hostages in Afghanistan is clearly good news. That two have been killed is a tragedy. However, the question that has constantly been asked by the international community here in Kabul is what they were doing in the first place. Twenty three South Koreans were kidnapped on July 19. They were travelling on a bus, together, on the main Kandahar to Kabul highway, part of Afghanistan's 'ring road', through the notoriously insecure province of Ghazni. ... Full article
By Graham Wood
The release of the South Korean hostages in Afghanistan is clearly good news. That two have been killed is a tragedy. However, the question that has constantly been asked by the international community here in Kabul is what they were doing in the first place. Twenty three South Koreans were kidnapped on July 19. They were travelling on a bus, together, on the main Kandahar to Kabul highway, part of Afghanistan's 'ring road', through the notoriously insecure province of Ghazni. ... Full article
An aid worker's life in Kabul
By Graham Wood
The questions "what's it like in Kabul; what do you do there?" fill me with dread. So much so that when I am in Europe I pretend to be an insurance salesman living in Barnsley rather than an aid worker based in Kabul.
Well. This is 'my' Kabul. At the moment, high summer, it's hot and dusty days and much cooler nights. My concrete block flat doesn't recognise the cool nights, radiating heat 24 hours a day.
... Full article
By Graham Wood
The questions "what's it like in Kabul; what do you do there?" fill me with dread. So much so that when I am in Europe I pretend to be an insurance salesman living in Barnsley rather than an aid worker based in Kabul.
Well. This is 'my' Kabul. At the moment, high summer, it's hot and dusty days and much cooler nights. My concrete block flat doesn't recognise the cool nights, radiating heat 24 hours a day.
... Full article
Crossed wires in postwar Afghanistan
By Graham Wood
"Do you know where I can smoke a shisha?" I asked the friendly Afghan helping me on a recent trip to Herat. He looked somewhat surprised, slightly shocked even. A shisha is a water pipe, often containing fruit-flavoured tobacco. His apparent shock I put down to the fact that foreigners don't usually make such requests and it would have come as a surprise to him. Cultural barriers here often seem very strong and perhaps I was crossing one? ... Full article
By Graham Wood
"Do you know where I can smoke a shisha?" I asked the friendly Afghan helping me on a recent trip to Herat. He looked somewhat surprised, slightly shocked even. A shisha is a water pipe, often containing fruit-flavoured tobacco. His apparent shock I put down to the fact that foreigners don't usually make such requests and it would have come as a surprise to him. Cultural barriers here often seem very strong and perhaps I was crossing one? ... Full article




