-
How Did Dillon Gabriel Do in His First Start With Browns? - 45 mins ago
-
Derek Jeter: Cowboys’ Dak Prescott Needs To Win To ‘Change The Narrative’ - 52 mins ago
-
‘Golden Bachelor’ alum Gerry Turner engaged months after Theresa Nist divorce - about 1 hour ago
-
How to Watch Dolphins vs Panthers: Live Stream NFL Week 5, TV Channel - about 1 hour ago
-
Bills’ Josh Allen, Eagles’ Nick Sirianni Lead: Who Has It Better Than them? | FOX NFL Sunday - 2 hours ago
-
Small earthquake cluster hits near Big Bear Lake in San Bernardino County - 2 hours ago
-
Dyan Cannon, 88, clarifies viral ‘friends with benefits’ misunderstanding - 2 hours ago
-
Caesars Sportsbook Promo Code NEWSWK20X: Claim Top NFL Week 5 Sign-Up Bonus - 2 hours ago
-
'These games come down to one or two plays' — Alex Rodriguez on Mariners Game 1 loss to Tigers - 2 hours ago
-
Zac Brown engaged to Kendra Scott, plans to blend their families together - 3 hours ago
Travel influencers boost tourism to Taliban-run Afghanistan
Orzala, of RUSI, said that while influencers with Western passports “roam freely, pose for photos and gain online fame,” those privileges are denied to Afghan women, who are barred from schools, jobs or even walking freely in public without being accompanied by male guardians.
There are also moral and ethical dilemmas, she added, because profits from tourism risk indirectly legitimizing and financially sustaining a regime that has institutionalized “gender apartheid.”
As for videos from influencers that show Afghan women smiling in the background, Orzala said, “This should never be confused with contentment or consent to the current reality.”
“This is not cultural exchange; it’s neocolonial tourism dressed up as adventure,” she added.
Visitors to Afghanistan are still in the low thousands as the war-torn country tries to rebuild its image under strict Taliban-run Islamic laws and customs. Nearly 9,000 foreigners visited in 2024, while nearly 3,000 visited in the first three months of this year, according to a report from The Associated Press.
Along with travel influencers, some tourism companies are creating jaw-dropping videos that have since been reshared by Taliban accounts on social media in a bid to attract more visitors.
One outlandish 50-second video made by vlogger Yosaf Aryubi begins with an eerie scene of three people with bags over their heads, presumed to be held hostage by the men standing behind them, who are dressed like the Taliban with rifles slung over their shoulders.
“We have one message for America,” one of the armed men says, before pulling the bag off one of the hostages, only to reveal a grinning tourist who gives a thumbs-up and says, “Welcome to Afghanistan!”
The video then cuts to male tourists diving into scenic lakes and walking through waterfalls, and even holding M4 rifles that are revealed to be replicas.
Not every influencer sees Afghanistan in that way. In another video, YouTuber Nolan Saumure, whose channel Seal on Tour has 650,000 subscribers, acknowledges that he only interacted with men during his trip there.
In a 35-minute video titled “Afghanistan Has Too Much Testosterone,” Saumure spins the camera around to show a large crowd of Afghan men swarming him.
“It’s a complete sausage fest in here,” he says.
Source link