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'Welcome to Afghanistan': Shocking tourism promo urging Americans to visit the country goes viral

'Welcome to Afghanistan': Shocking tourism promo urging Americans to visit the country goes viral

Hindustan Times09-07-2025
A shocking promotional video is circulating on Taliban-affiliated social media, urging American travelers to come to Afghanistan. The video showcases a blend of dark comedy, military visuals and picturesque views of the Afghan countryside. It begins with a provocative image: five armed Afghan men positioned behind three kneeling, hooded figures, imitating the format of extremist hostage recordings. Shocking tourism promo asking Americans to visit the country goes viral (X)
Abruptly, an Afghan yanks the hood away from a grinning Caucasian man who offers a thumbs-up and exclaims, 'Welcome to Afghanistan!'
What does the video show?
In the video, a man does pull-ups on the barrel of a ruined tank, while another swims through a lake with an assault rifle. An M4 rifle labeled 'Property of US Government' is shown, while an off-camera voice quips, 'Oh, it's not even on safety,' prompting laughter.
Western visitors are shown enjoying regional cuisine, dressing in traditional Afghan garb and receiving kind welcomes from the locals. The pictures aim to portray Afghanistan as a challenging yet hospitable destination.
Influencers contribute to disputes
American adult star Whitney Wright recently traveled to the country and shared pictures of herself there on Instagram in March, showing off her Afghan attire and holding a rifle at different tourist spots, The Daily Telegraph reported.
A few Afghan citizens criticized the Taliban for permitting her visit while prohibiting local women from employment, education and participating in public life, the report added. 'This is fundamentally hypocritical,' one of them said.
In spite of attempts to alter Afghanistan's worldwide perception, Western governments still warn against traveling to the nation. The US State Department issued a Level Four 'Do Not Travel' advisory for Afghanistan because of the risks of terrorism, crime, and kidnapping. In 2021, the US embassy in Kabul closed, ending consular support for Americans who were there
The UK Foreign Office also advises citizens to avoid traveling to Afghanistan, referencing continuing civil unrest.
FAQs
Is it safe for US tourists to visit Afghanistan in 2025?
No. The US government currently advises against all travel to Afghanistan due to risks of terrorism, kidnapping, and civil unrest.
Who is behind the viral Afghan tourism video inviting Americans?
The video was shared on Taliban-linked social media accounts, though it was not officially released by the Taliban government.
Have any American influencers actually visited Afghanistan recently?
Yes. Influencers like Whitney Wright and Marian Abdi have visited and documented their trips, sparking controversy online.
What is the current US travel advisory level for Afghanistan?
The US State Department has issued a Level 4: Do Not Travel advisory for Afghanistan, citing extreme security concerns.
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Director Pawo Choyning Dorji interview: On Bhutanese modernity and echoes of Edward Yang in ‘The Monk and the Gun'
Director Pawo Choyning Dorji interview: On Bhutanese modernity and echoes of Edward Yang in ‘The Monk and the Gun'

The Hindu

timea minute ago

  • The Hindu

Director Pawo Choyning Dorji interview: On Bhutanese modernity and echoes of Edward Yang in ‘The Monk and the Gun'

There's a poster of A Brighter Summer Day hanging in Pawo Choyning Dorji's home. It's a tribute to the late Edward Yang, but also something far more personal. 'The little girl in the film,' he tells me, 'Chang Chen's little sister... that little girl is my wife.' There's something almost sacred in the intimacy of this little aside during our conversation that caught me by surprise. And yet it seems quite fitting. The Taiwanese auteur's legacy of stillness, his emotional patience, and the manner in which he held memory and modernity in the same breath — all feel strikingly alive in Pawo's oeuvre of cinema. It's an inheritance Pawo carries with grace, if not intentionality. 'I never went to film school,' he says. 'I studied political science.' It was precisely this confluence — studying politics in the U.S. during the invasion of Iraq while watching his homeland, Bhutan, gently usher in a democratic transition — that sparked something deeper in him. 'American students would say, it is the duty of America to give democracy to people who don't have it... the gift of democracy,' he recalls. 'I was from a country where we were literally gifted democracy. But we didn't ask for it. We didn't fight for it. There was no revolution, no war, and yet we weren't necessarily ready for it. I don't even know if we're ready for it now.' That tension between the 'gift' and the cost, between imposed modernity and lived tradition, is the soul of The Monk and the Gun, Pawo's latest political satire. On paper, it's a farcical telling of a monk in Bhutan tasked with finding a gun during the country's first national election. But beneath the comedic conceit lies some crushing insight into how nations rich in an inner life, like Bhutan, have risked spiritual amnesia in their pursuit of 'prosperous' external systems. 'When I premiered the film in Bhutan,' Pawo says, 'people were crying. I never expected that. I thought I made a satire. But for Bhutanese audiences, it was something else. One person told me, 'This reminded us of how, in the pursuit of something we thought we needed, we lost something we already had.'' He continues, 'That's not something I would've learned in a political science class. That's something I only realised at the very end, once the audience showed me what the film really meant.' Though it's not just the political system of his homeland that Pawo interrogates. He's also reckoning with what modernity is doing to its spirit. 'If you come to Bhutan, the phallus is a very important part of our culture,' he says. 'We are a tantric Buddhist country, and everything has meaning.' In tantric thought, inhibition is the final barrier to enlightenment, and the solution seems to be more embarrassment. 'If you have water in your ears, a Bhutanese will say: put more water,' he laughs. 'You want to destroy inhibition? Put yourself in situations where you constantly feel it. You see a phallus, you feel embarrassed, you feel shy, but that's okay. Because actually, in the end, nothing exists.' Towards the end of the film, an American who arrived seeking a firearm leaves with a towering wooden phallus. 'The gun represents something foreign,' Pawo explains. 'Western, modern, but also a bringer of suffering. The phallus, on the other hand, is our tradition. This juxtaposition is no accident. Both are 'phallic, '' Pawo says with a half-smile. 'Both are masculine. But one represents fear, and the other represents freedom.' More regretfully, the one native to Bhutan is disappearing. 'Growing up, they were everywhere. But as we became more modern and Westernised, we began to feel embarrassed by them, and so they vanished. The very thing that was supposed to help us transcend inhibition became the source of it.' In Pawo's Bhutan, these symbols are never inert and ripple outward personally, politically, and metaphysically. Yet, the road to manifesting these stories onscreen is anything but seamless. The Bhutanese film industry, as he tells me, is nascent, bordering on non-existent. His Oscar-nominated 2019 debut, Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom, was shot with a single camera and no electricity. 'It was a solar-powered film,' he says, laughing. 'Even now, with more recognition, we still truck every piece of equipment in from Delhi.' Still, Bhutan offers Pawo something few other places could as a spiritual ground to stand on, even as his gaze grows more global. Recently, he contributed a segment to Tales of Taipei, a collaborative anthology film about life in the Taiwanese capital. 'In Bhutan, we roll out of bed at eight, make coffee, then discuss what to shoot that day. In Taiwan, the crew was on set at 3 or 4 in the morning. It was quite intense, but also very professional.' Still, Taiwan isn't foreign terrain for Pawo. His wife and children are Taiwanese and he calls it a second home. In fact, his entire aesthetic sits at a confluence of worlds: East and West, past and present, tradition and transformation. He cites Kore-eda for his realism, Tarantino for his audacity, and, most meaningfully, his own spiritual and creative mentor, Dzongsar Khyentse Norbu. 'He was the one who saw I was a storyteller before I knew it myself,' Pawo says. 'His films are deeper, more philosophical, and I once told him my films would be more cheesy in comparison. And he said, 'Well, if cheesy is done right, it works.'' Indeed, 'cheesy' might be the last word anyone would use to describe Pawo's films. His frames feel like paintings. His stories take their time. And his humour, like his politics, comes from deep within. Pawo tells me, 'You will never see your own eyelashes because they are so close to you' — something the Buddha once said. The thought felicitously explains why his films often turn inward, searching for what's been missed in plain sight. While the world rushes to look outward, to see farther, Pawo seems more preoccupied with what we've stopped noticing up close. Perhaps that's where the spirit of Edward Yang lingers most clearly in his films. In the tenderness to look at one's own culture, to question it without cruelty, and to hold its contradictions and absurdities with care. To see clearly. Even especially, when it's your own eyelashes in the way. The Monk and the Gun is currently available to stream on MUBI

Mrunal Thakur gets a pre-birthday surprise on Dacoit sets, Adivi Sesh shares video
Mrunal Thakur gets a pre-birthday surprise on Dacoit sets, Adivi Sesh shares video

India Today

time31 minutes ago

  • India Today

Mrunal Thakur gets a pre-birthday surprise on Dacoit sets, Adivi Sesh shares video

Actor Mrunal Thakur received an unexpected pre-birthday surprise on the sets of her film, 'Dacoit'. The actor is set to turn 33 on July 31. Her co-star Adivi Sesh shared a video of Thakur's pre-birthday celebration on the video shared by Sesh, Thakur can be seen being led into a room where the cast and crew were waiting for a cake-cutting ceremony. She is dressed as her character, Juliet. The occasion turned more joyous when she started dancing as everyone sang 'Happy Birthday'.advertisement"Happy Birthday, Juliet. Celebrating early on the sets of Dacoit (sic)," read the caption of the post. Have a look at the video shared by Adivi Sesh here: Directed by Shaneil Deo, the highly anticipated film 'Dacoit' is slated to hit the theatres on December 25. The film is a blend of romance and action an interview with Sesh earlier described 'Dacoit' as a "passion project". Sesh emphasised the emotional depth of 'Dacoit', remarking, "No Indian story is a true Indian film without heart, without emotion, so we wanted all these heightened emotions in 'Dacoit' set against the backdrop of an angry neo-Western, a 'Sholay' of 2025, if you will." He also expressed admiration for Thakur, describing her as "positive" and "vibrant". He added that because she is constantly travelling and has "figured out a way to make any place home."Along with 'Dacoit', Thakur will also be seen in the upcoming film 'Son of Sardaar 2'. The film stars Ajay Devgn, Ravi Kishan, Neeru Bajwa, Deepak Dobriyal, Kubbra Sait, Chunky Panday, Vindu Dara Singh and Sanjay Mishra, among others. It will be released a day after her birthday, on August 1.- EndsMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Mrunal Thakur

After Priya Sachdev, Sunjay Kapur's Stepdaughter Safira Changes Surname. Here's How The Internet Reacted
After Priya Sachdev, Sunjay Kapur's Stepdaughter Safira Changes Surname. Here's How The Internet Reacted

NDTV

time31 minutes ago

  • NDTV

After Priya Sachdev, Sunjay Kapur's Stepdaughter Safira Changes Surname. Here's How The Internet Reacted

New Delhi: Businessman and Karisma Kapoor's ex-husband Sunjay Kapur died after suffering a cardiac arrest during a polo match in London on June 12, 2025. But what has caught everyone's attention is the recent developments within the family. One of which is his wife, actress Priya Sachdev, who changed her name and Instagram bio after joining his company's board. He was the chairman of Sona Comstar, a global auto components company based in Gurugram. New reports now suggest that Priya's daughter, Safira Chatwal from her first marriage, has also changed her name. What's Happening After taking over her role on the board of Comstar, Priya Sachdev Kapur changed her Instagram name to 'Priya Sunjay Kapur', to reflect her new position. Now, speculations are rife that her daughter, Safira, from her first marriage to Vikram Chatwal, American hotelier and actor, has followed her mother's footsteps too. This happens amid the ongoing Rs 30,000-crore succession battle between Priya Sachdev and her mother-in-law, Rani Kapur. A Reddit thread went viral on the same, which stated, "The drama is playing out. Priya Sachdev's daughter, whose name on Instagram until last month was Safira Chatwal. Now she suddenly dropped her surname 'chatwal'. Priya went from Priya Sachdev Kapur to Priya Sunjay Kapur. This home wrecker is so cunning. Moved into Sunjay's home with her daughter even before Karisma was divorced. I think Karisma's kids' inheritance is at risk. This woman already has the company's CEO on her side.... even some board members too." Reddit A report by stated that the Internet has been coming up with several theories while the family feud continues. However, there's no official confirmation on Safira's name change yet. As for her Instagram account, she has dropped the surname Chatwal in her bio. How The Internet Reacted Mixed reactions were received online, while some supported Priya Sachdev and her daughter, Safira, a few slammed them. One person commented, "But Sunjay had officially adopted Safira as his daughter. So she's entitled to her share of his property." Another post reads, "Property pe haq toh biological bacchon ka hi banta hai. Also, Priya's first daughter's father himself is super rich." Someone else mentioned, "Sanjay wrecked his home himself. Karishma left him due to torture and abuse, not due to cheating." Another person said, "Priya has been magically appointed as a director of the company at the last AGM. Non-exec directors are paid salaries. She was not one of the board of directors for all of Sunjay's life. This does say a lot about where she stands." About The Ongoing Feud As of the latest updates, Sunjay Kapur's mother, Rani Kapur, has taken steps to stop an Annual General Meeting of the company, Sona BLW Precision Forgings (Sona Comstar). This took place based on her claims that she was "compelled to sign various documents without explanation" while grieving her son's death. In an emotional letter to the Sona Comstar board, she mentioned that she was the major shareholder of the company. "Despite being under immense mental and emotional distress, I was coerced into signing such documents behind locked doors and, though I've repeatedly requested, the contents of such documents have never been revealed to me," Ms Kapur wrote in her letter." "Please also take note, I have been totally denied access to my accounts and have been left to the mercy of a select few for survival. All this, in less than a month of my only son passing away," concluded Rani Kapur. In A Nutshell After Priya Sachdev, her daughter, Safira, has also reportedly changed her name. While there is no official statement issued by the family, Redditors spotted that Safira had dropped "Chatwal" from her surname. Safira Chatwal is Priya Sachdev's daughter with her first husband, Vikram Chatwal.

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