Are there still afghan hounds in afghanistan




















The very first of these imports was Zardin, who was purchased in India by Captain John Bariff and was believed to have been born in Iran. When Zardin was exhibited at the famous Crufts dog show in , he created such a stir that Queen Alexandra requested he visit Buckingham Palace.

Zardin was such an enviable specimen that he became the model for the first-ever Afghan Hound breed standard, which was written in But after the bullets stopped flying, British imperialism kept a steady stream of soldiers and civilians heading to Afghanistan and neighboring lands, where they inevitably grew intrigued by these exotically primitive dogs.

And as the dogs began to arrive on British shores in greater numbers in the first quarter of the 20 th Century, fascination turned to intense debate over which Afghan Hounds were the authentic ones.

Afghanistan has a varied topography, from expanses of plateau and desert to the craggy, inhospitable mountains that provided such fortress-like protection to the fugitive Osama Bin Laden. In the face of this widely divergent topography, Afghan Hounds in various parts of the country developed differently — as all breeds do, evolving to suit the conditions in which they lived. In , Major and Mrs. Bell-Murray and Miss Jean C. Manson returned to Scotland with a group of dogs that came to be referred to as the Bell-Murray strain.

This type of Afghan was brought to England in by Mary Amps, whose husband was stationed in Kabul. Assembled from the mountainous areas around that key Afghan city, the Amps dogs became known as the Ghazni strain. Please consider a donation. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck. Spokesperson, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Email to FactCheck. Updated 14 Jul Kirby, John PentagonPressSec. Photos circulating online were animals under the care of the Kabul Small Animal Rescue, not dogs under our care. Rohrig, Nikki. Sheehan, Laura. Vice president of communications and legislative affairs, American Humane. For people, however, the situation is so different. For instance, it is nigh-on impossible for Afghan interpreters who have worked for British forces to be allowed to come to the UK, though they remain at continual risk of reprisals by the Taliban.

Dogs can be saved but people are abandoned. Saving Afghanistan from the Taliban was a major part of the justification used for our military presence. Years later, and with much blood and gold wasted, it is hard to see that we have succeeded in anything like that.

The Taliban are far from defeated. And the rubbish will pile up again in Rubbish Street. How is this salvation? My friend who brought the dogs over from Kabul gave me a word of advice. They find it hard to distinguish between fear and aggression, he told me. Which means that the more afraid I get of them, the more likely they are to snarl at me, and the more afraid I get — a vicious circle indeed.

This article is more than 6 years old. Giles Fraser.



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