BiziBB
Mar 4, 09, 2:20 am
Maybe the USA can wean a few other Taliban members like this one, from that lifestyle into the iPhone-loving lifestyle.
Can you imagine the discussion at Apple's ad agency about this real-life evangelist. :)
Ex-Taliban diplomat hooked on his iPhone (http://www.smh.com.au/news/digital-life/smart-phone/extaliban-diplomat-hooked-on-his-iphone/2009/03/04/1235842462516.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1) [SMH/AP]
Mullah Abdul Salaam Zaeef is a former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan. He spent almost four years in Guantanamo. He wears a black turban, has a thick beard - and is never without his Apple iPhone.
The ultra-conservative Taliban banned modern technology ...but those items have boomed in Afghanistan since the regime's 2001 ouster, helping to bring the country into the 21st century.
Zaeef, who reconciled with the Afghan government after being released from U.S. custody, says he uses his iPhone to surf the internet and find difficult locations, employing the built-in GPS. He even checks his bank account balance online.
It's easy and modern and I love it," Zaeef said as he pinched and pulled his fingers across the iPhone's touch screen last week. "This is necessary in the world today. People want to progress."
Beyond making life easier, some say the country's embrace of technology could help break the cycle of 30 years of relentless warfare. It puts at the tip of a finger many things that were strictly outlawed by Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar - music, movies, pictures of people and games like chess.
Young Afghans see the world differently from older Afghans because of their use of the Internet and mobile phones, and their participation in sports, said Shukria Barakzai, a female lawmaker and former newspaper editor.
Afghanistan's youth are not caught up in "the old circle of war," she said. "They are engaging with the rest of the world. That's why technology is so important for Afghanistan."
...
Can you imagine the discussion at Apple's ad agency about this real-life evangelist. :)
Ex-Taliban diplomat hooked on his iPhone (http://www.smh.com.au/news/digital-life/smart-phone/extaliban-diplomat-hooked-on-his-iphone/2009/03/04/1235842462516.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1) [SMH/AP]
Mullah Abdul Salaam Zaeef is a former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan. He spent almost four years in Guantanamo. He wears a black turban, has a thick beard - and is never without his Apple iPhone.
The ultra-conservative Taliban banned modern technology ...but those items have boomed in Afghanistan since the regime's 2001 ouster, helping to bring the country into the 21st century.
Zaeef, who reconciled with the Afghan government after being released from U.S. custody, says he uses his iPhone to surf the internet and find difficult locations, employing the built-in GPS. He even checks his bank account balance online.
It's easy and modern and I love it," Zaeef said as he pinched and pulled his fingers across the iPhone's touch screen last week. "This is necessary in the world today. People want to progress."
Beyond making life easier, some say the country's embrace of technology could help break the cycle of 30 years of relentless warfare. It puts at the tip of a finger many things that were strictly outlawed by Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar - music, movies, pictures of people and games like chess.
Young Afghans see the world differently from older Afghans because of their use of the Internet and mobile phones, and their participation in sports, said Shukria Barakzai, a female lawmaker and former newspaper editor.
Afghanistan's youth are not caught up in "the old circle of war," she said. "They are engaging with the rest of the world. That's why technology is so important for Afghanistan."
...