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Sunday September 07, 2008
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As Opium Surges Back, Afghan Women Pay A Heavy Price
By JAMES PALMER
Image
A woman takes part in a sewing class at the Women's Affairs Office in Kandahar, Afghanistan. The center has become an important outlet for the growing number of women who are addicted to opium. (Photo by James Palmer)
c.2008 Newhouse News Service

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Under a wine-colored burqa that flows from the crown of her head down over her body, Khadija sat cross-legged, spinning the wheel of a sewing machine and methodically stitching a seam into a flowing stream of white cloth.

The 42-year-old mother of five was working to burn off a consuming and deadly habit that again is blooming across Afghanistan. Until a few days ago, Khadija, who like many Afghans uses only one name, slipped opium in her tea twice a day to combat depression.

"It was," Khadija said, "more important than food."

Just as the Taliban have been reborn in Afghanistan, so have the opium crops.

Read more...
TOP STORIES
AROUND THE NATION
Newhouse Spotlight

The Press-Register of Mobile is Alabama's oldest newspaper, dating to 1813. It focuses coverage on two coastal counties, Mobile and Baldwin, and the large port city of Mobile, but also serves communities throughout southwest Alabama and in nearby areas of Mississippi.
Featured Correspondent
Richard Ryan, The Staten Island Advance
Rich Ryan has been covering the home video industry since its infancy. Soon after joining the Staten Island Advance in 1989, he was named the paper’s entertainment editor, a position he held for 13 years. Prior to that, he worked at Billboard magazine.
Special Reports
Johanna: Facing Forward — Image Gallery

This is an image gallery created from a nine-part series from The Plain Dealer of Cleveland.  Johanna Orozco and Juan Ruiz had known each other since second grade.  During high school in 2005, they began to date. Juan got possessive and Johanna broke off the relationship.  Then he climbed into her room one night, put a knife to her throat and demanded she give him another chance. He forced himself on her.  After Johanna turned him in, Juan was on the street just four days later.  Then Juan appeared at her house and shot a birdshot of peppercorn-size pellets that ripped through her jaw. The 18-year-old would spend the next months in the hospital where Dr. Michael Fritz performed multiple operations to repair and reconstruct her jaw.  As Johanna continues to put her life back together, Juan has been sentenced to 27 years in jail.

View the slideshow.