Visiting Arts
Afghanistan Cultural Profiles ProjectCultural Profile
 
                                                                               
 
 
Introduction to Afghanistan:
Population
Blue Mosque, Mazar (Linda Mazur)In 1977 the population of Afghanistan was calculated at 17.4 million, but 22 years of war - from the invasion of Soviet forces in 1979 through the jihad (holy war) and civil conflicts of the mid 1990s to the intervention that ousted the Taliban in late 2001 - has left millions displaced. The estimated population in 2003 was 26.9 million (AIMS). In the 1980s the Afghans were the largest group of refugees in the world at 6,000,000 people, about one third of the population. However, the situation is improving, land is gradually being cleared of land mines and can be cultivated again, the infrastructure is being rebuilt, and the people are returning to their homeland. According to the Bonn Agreement of 2001 a census must be carried out, but with such a large number of internally displaced people, refugees who haven’t yet returned and the difficulty in some regions of ascertaining accurately the number of women in a household, this will be a monumental task. The lack of demographic data is an ongoing hindrance to research, planning and the development of an electoral process.
Exact figures on the distribution of ethnic groups in Afghanistan are not currently available. However, the online CIA World Factbook gives the following estimated breakdown:
Pashtun: 42 per cent; Tajik: 27 per cent; Hazara: 9 per cent; Uzbek: 9 per cent; Aimak: 4 per cent; Turkmen: 3 per cent; Baloch: 2 per cent; Other: 4 per cent
The majority Pashtuns have retained political power with great military skill; their traditional code of behaviour, the Pashtunwali, includes rules for mediation, retaliation (blood revenge) and hospitality. The Tajiks have traditionally been known as ‘men of the pen’, working mainly in government administration or as agriculturalists and traders.
According to the online CIA World Factbook the average life expectancy in Afghanistan (2007 estimate) is just 43.77 years (male: 43.6 years, female: 43.96 years).
Kabul street scene (Linda Mazur)The capital city of Kabul is home to an estimated population of 1,500,000 and is the centre of political power, although the government maintains only a tenuous control of the outlying districts. Afghanistan’s other major cities are Kandahar (225,500) in the south, an important business centre dominated by ethnic Pashtuns; Herat (177,300) in the west, a commercial centre and strategic gateway to Iran dominated by ethnic Tajiks; and Mazar e Sharif (130,600) in the north, a major industrial town with long standing links to the former Soviet states, also dominated by ethnic Tajiks. Other smaller towns include Jalalabad in the east, with a Pashtun majority; Charikar just north of Kabul, the hub of road links over the Hindu Kush, which is populated by a variety of ethnicities; and in the north Uzbek-dominated Andkhui and Tajik-dominated Kunduz, Faizabad and Baghlan.
During the long years of war some 150,000 Afghans migrated permanently to other countries, including the United States, Australia, and various parts of Europe. The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has been instrumental in supporting qualified, overseas Afghans to return for six month periods to assist their counterparts in many aspects of rebuilding the skills and infrastructure of the country.
 
 
 
The Afghanistan Cultural Profile was created with financial support from the British Council Afghanistan
Date updated: 27 March 2008
 
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