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Word: bazaar (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Even at the Khoja Bahauddin bazaar, where commerce and enterprise should reign, there is little movement. Shopkeepers lazily eye customers. There is little reason to hustle. Everyone sells the same dusty goods - banana biscuits and tomato paste from the Islamic Republic of Iran, wormy apples from neighboring Bagram province and the sole product (until last weekend) from the United States of America: Selsun Blue anti-dandruff shampoo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behind Northern Alliance Lines, Women are Invisible | 10/16/2001 | See Source »

...Last Saturday, a new product finally hit the bazaar: a bright-yellow pack of Humanitarian Daily Rations. Dropped by U.S. planes as free aid to the starving and displaced, they are now selling here or just over $1. Except to Americans. For them, the HDRs could be free. When a pair of Western journalists walked through the market, a kind- eyed, 70-year-old man ambled up. The yellow bag in his hands was emblazoned with the words: Gift from the United States of America. But the man could not read English, and he looked puzzled. Was the HDR ours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behind Northern Alliance Lines, Women are Invisible | 10/16/2001 | See Source »

...province was recently in Peshawar exploring the monetary incentives on offer for a mutiny against his Taliban ruler in Kandahar. He was approached by one of his fighters: "Is it true American soldiers wear boots that cost 5,000 rupees [about $80] each? I could sell them in the bazaar." In the same province, recounted this commander, an old Afghan invested in a donkey and a lantern so he could salvage scrap metal from downed U.S. aircraft at night. War is an age-old habit with Afghans, and they squeeze from it what benefit they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Country On Edge | 10/15/2001 | See Source »

...looking for the sole confirmed deserter on the Kabul front, and at first they were told he could not be reached because he was at the front line working the radios, calling on his former colleagues to surrender. Many hours later, he was tracked down in a bazaar. He, the commander to whom he had surrendered and a dozen or so other fighters had poured themselves into a taxi to go off and do some shopping. The deserter turned out to be a shopkeeper from northern Afghanistan named Khan Jan who had been conscripted three months earlier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Different Vantage | 10/15/2001 | See Source »

...have gone to school?there is no school in their village and, like their father, they will likely be illiterate all their lives. Farras has never had any toys?at home the ruling Taliban banned even kite flying, and here in Pakistan they cannot afford such things in the bazaar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Burden of Sanctuary | 10/15/2001 | See Source »

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