John boone was the afghanistan correspondent at the f t from two thousand seven to 20 12. A month ago, he returned to coble to write a story about the new afghanistan. When john went, people in cobble were still in good spirits. American troops were pulling out, but cities had yet to fall to the taliban. That night, he was invited to this dinner by an old friend who had worked at the presidential palace. And he brought these three female professional women, who also social media activists,. They thought it was part of their er, their conomission, to push back against taliman narratives on line, on social media. But in seconds
Twenty years after the Twin Towers were brought down, FT Weekend podcast host Lilah Raptopoulos explores where 9/11 sits in our memories. The FT’s New York correspondent Joshua Chaffin introduces us to billionaire developer Larry Silverstein, who bought the World Trade Center in July of 2001 and had to rebuild on the site of a tragedy. How do spaces change in meaning over time? The FT’s former Kabul correspondent Jon Boone introduces us to the “New Afghanistan” generation, what they were promised, and what was lost. Plus: we hear from a woman who fled the Taliban and is now waiting in limbo in Albania, suddenly a refugee.
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We’re on Twitter at @FTWeekendpod. Lilah is on Twitter and Instagram @lilahrap.
Links from the episode:
Josh Chaffin on Larry Silverstein: https://www.ft.com/content/f38a5067-58d1-491f-902f-568abcdd8a84#comments-anchor
Jon Boone on The Last Days of the New Afghanistan: https://www.ft.com/content/4a276093-cf85-4da7-9093-6af6443bb53a
Sound design and mixing is by Breen Turner, with original music by Metaphor Music.
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