Rough Road

The Government Exists Only in Name in Afghanistan

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science
Cover of the book Rough Road by Wazhma Khalili, Trafford Publishing
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Author: Wazhma Khalili ISBN: 9781426942938
Publisher: Trafford Publishing Publication: November 17, 2010
Imprint: Trafford Publishing Language: English
Author: Wazhma Khalili
ISBN: 9781426942938
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Publication: November 17, 2010
Imprint: Trafford Publishing
Language: English

A nations government should create order. We put faith in government to uphold and maintain the well-being and safety of its citizens. Currently, in Afghanistan, the government does not seem to maintain anything at all. In Afghanistan, starving children cry out in hunger. The government does not provide food, shelter, or schools. The countrys opium production rate has doubled over the course of the past two years. Does a country in such cultural uproar have a government at all? Who is to blame? How should the problem be fixed? These are the questions posed and answered in Wazhma Khalilis Rough Road. Khalili calls for a stop to the authoritative abuse that runs rampant in the Afghan government. She wants to discover and correct fraud and punish disreputable behavioreven among the nations leaders. Khalili maintains that the government of Afghanistan is not government at all. A government should protect its people, not pull them down into poverty and leave the hungry starving in the streets. It is time for a change in Afghanistan. It will take bravery, strength, and faith, but it must happen in order for the country to survive.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A nations government should create order. We put faith in government to uphold and maintain the well-being and safety of its citizens. Currently, in Afghanistan, the government does not seem to maintain anything at all. In Afghanistan, starving children cry out in hunger. The government does not provide food, shelter, or schools. The countrys opium production rate has doubled over the course of the past two years. Does a country in such cultural uproar have a government at all? Who is to blame? How should the problem be fixed? These are the questions posed and answered in Wazhma Khalilis Rough Road. Khalili calls for a stop to the authoritative abuse that runs rampant in the Afghan government. She wants to discover and correct fraud and punish disreputable behavioreven among the nations leaders. Khalili maintains that the government of Afghanistan is not government at all. A government should protect its people, not pull them down into poverty and leave the hungry starving in the streets. It is time for a change in Afghanistan. It will take bravery, strength, and faith, but it must happen in order for the country to survive.

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