The Prague Post - Afghan wedding halls light up sombre Kabul nights

EUR -
AED 4.217905
AFN 82.378977
ALL 98.700849
AMD 448.003306
ANG 2.069647
AOA 1047.288649
ARS 1248.314225
AUD 1.796307
AWG 2.067018
AZN 1.951601
BAM 1.954827
BBD 2.318445
BDT 139.520521
BGN 1.958041
BHD 0.432792
BIF 3414.399695
BMD 1.148343
BND 1.501574
BOB 7.934634
BRL 6.605613
BSD 1.148328
BTN 97.767354
BWP 15.687325
BYN 3.75483
BYR 22507.525687
BZD 2.306551
CAD 1.587722
CDF 3303.78374
CHF 0.934114
CLF 0.028621
CLP 1097.926998
CNY 8.384729
CNH 8.396702
COP 4919.15754
CRC 577.31251
CUC 1.148343
CUP 30.431093
CVE 110.210117
CZK 25.094766
DJF 204.467496
DKK 7.464943
DOP 68.595841
DZD 151.579011
EGP 58.577739
ERN 17.225147
ETB 153.201904
FJD 2.586415
FKP 0.858161
GBP 0.858099
GEL 3.152207
GGP 0.858161
GHS 17.739081
GIP 0.858161
GMD 82.104593
GNF 9942.049051
GTQ 8.845595
GYD 240.887457
HKD 8.908438
HNL 29.768176
HRK 7.537035
HTG 150.195206
HUF 408.456424
IDR 19354.806993
ILS 4.248835
IMP 0.858161
INR 97.771539
IQD 1504.250912
IRR 48373.955161
ISK 144.932458
JEP 0.858161
JMD 181.999368
JOD 0.81452
JPY 161.624714
KES 148.997347
KGS 99.762282
KHR 4597.470334
KMF 497.784482
KPW 1033.578085
KRW 1636.004234
KWD 0.35114
KYD 0.956873
KZT 595.523441
LAK 24795.141051
LBP 102880.392133
LKR 344.368511
LRD 229.643643
LSL 21.404841
LTL 3.390759
LVL 0.694621
LYD 6.240892
MAD 10.584129
MDL 19.64139
MGA 5105.146539
MKD 61.605715
MMK 2410.995549
MNT 4065.051789
MOP 9.174531
MRU 45.494345
MUR 51.112807
MVR 17.685689
MWK 1991.125797
MXN 22.530538
MYR 5.042949
MZN 73.384842
NAD 21.404841
NGN 1841.77006
NIO 42.258956
NOK 11.859221
NPR 156.437097
NZD 1.914053
OMR 0.44214
PAB 1.148158
PEN 4.255781
PGK 4.750634
PHP 64.866444
PKR 322.32169
PLN 4.288086
PYG 9192.422351
QAR 4.185915
RON 4.97841
RSD 117.181646
RUB 93.706077
RWF 1654.376153
SAR 4.307443
SBD 9.561983
SCR 16.325798
SDG 689.579445
SEK 10.89157
SGD 1.502974
SHP 0.902417
SLE 26.153497
SLL 24080.16298
SOS 656.273189
SRD 42.326786
STD 23768.384653
SVC 10.046997
SYP 14930.701248
SZL 21.388349
THB 38.269113
TJS 12.22921
TMT 4.019201
TND 3.400007
TOP 2.689532
TRY 43.934571
TTD 7.799116
TWD 37.33493
TZS 3083.301363
UAH 47.75322
UGX 4202.907033
USD 1.148343
UYU 48.485855
UZS 14823.618124
VES 92.853454
VND 29752.422603
VUV 138.237485
WST 3.200783
XAF 655.596271
XAG 0.03487
XAU 0.000335
XCD 3.103455
XDR 0.815277
XOF 655.630509
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.631006
ZAR 21.362932
ZMK 10336.467988
ZMW 32.69601
ZWL 369.766025
  • NGG

    1.1600

    74.06

    +1.57%

  • SCS

    0.0750

    9.495

    +0.79%

  • CMSC

    0.2200

    21.93

    +1%

  • GSK

    0.2440

    36.694

    +0.66%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    21.98

    +0.73%

  • RIO

    1.1500

    59.62

    +1.93%

  • BCC

    0.9750

    91.775

    +1.06%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    9.6

    +3.23%

  • JRI

    0.3700

    12.5

    +2.96%

  • RBGPF

    0.1400

    63.59

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    22.39

    +0.04%

  • AZN

    1.0900

    67.99

    +1.6%

  • VOD

    0.3250

    9.555

    +3.4%

  • RELX

    0.7550

    52.825

    +1.43%

  • BP

    0.8200

    28.9

    +2.84%

  • BTI

    0.3450

    42.895

    +0.8%

Afghan wedding halls light up sombre Kabul nights
Afghan wedding halls light up sombre Kabul nights / Photo: Wakil KOHSAR - AFP

Afghan wedding halls light up sombre Kabul nights

As night settles over Afghanistan's capital, only a few small lights and neon signs pierce the darkness and thick blanket of winter pollution.

Text size:

But on some street corners, glittering colossal wedding halls loomout of the gloom, a rare display of opulence in the Afghan capital.

The city of more than six million people is often plunged into shadow due to ubiquitous power outages, whichonly the wealthiest can remedy with expensive generators or solar panels.

Apart from a few vendors, the streets are deserted, a stark contrast with the chaotic hustle of the daytime.

People huddle at home to shelter from the cold and for lack of nighttime activities.

Since the Taliban took power in 2021 and imposed their strictversion of Islamic law, a veil of sadness has enveloped the capital.

There is no music spilling out from restaurants because it is forbidden, women are banned from parks, and walls decorated with colourful pro-peace graffiti have been splashed with calls to holy war.

The only bright lights emanate from the wedding halls that dot the city centre and escape some of the Taliban's scrutiny, as marriage is prized in Afghan culture.

The high-ceilinged halls are segregated by gender, with music only tolerated on the women's side.

"In Afghanistan, the marriage ceremony is the most important event for girls and boys. It's a once-in-a-lifetime event -- we don't have much divorce," said Mohammad Wassil Qaumi, director of the Imperial Continental, a palatial white-and-gold hall that shines with a glitz reminiscent of a Las Vegas casino.

"It's the start of a new life so the light should be everywhere, that's why the city is bright, it should have a little bit of luxury!" he told AFP.

- 'Weddings are a necessity' -

Bunches of plastic flowers, throne-style sofas, gilded trimming and neon lights fill the complex's four halls, some of which can accommodate up to 7,000 guests.

Qaumi, 32, says he spends $25,000 to $30,000 per month for municipal electricity, which provides a few hours of power per day.

To keep the lights on, he also pays just under $15,000 for generators.

To recoup his costs, he charges up to $20,000 for a wedding, in a country where 85 percent of the population lives on less than a dollar a day, according to the United Nations Development Programme.

"Weddings are a necessity in the Afghan culture, you have to invite more and more people" even if it means going into debt, said Haji Safiullah Esmafi, owner of the Stars Palace hall.

In another district of the capital, the City Star welcomes its guests with a beige and gold facade topped with three sculpted domes and a huge sparkling arch out front.

"Electricity is very expensive," admits the owner, 24-year-old Siyer Paiman.

But, he added, "people in Afghanistan like bright colours".

- 'Brightness of the city' -

He has invested in solar panels and spends the equivalent of $12,000 to $19,900 on generators and electricity, which only covers six to seven hours a day, "and not always at night".

Afghanistan depends on its Central Asian neighbours for imported electricity.

With the hopes of increasing supply, the country is involved in several regional interconnection projects, but progress is slow.

"The current demand in Afghanistan is about 7,000 to 8,000 megawatts but they currently produce locally about 1,000 megawatts and import the rest from Central Asia," a sector expert who asked for anonymity told AFP, adding that renewable energy sources should be developed but that funding was lacking.

Power cuts also affect heating, with temperatures easily dropping below 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit).

Kabul's residents use stoves, burning almost anything from coal and wood to plastic or household waste, creating a fog of pollution in the city slung between mountains 1,800 metres (5,900 feet) above sea level.

In the nighttime gloom, wedding halls are "the brightness of the city", said Qaumi. "Here, everyone is very happy."

"People come here to meet friends and family, (they) wear new clothes, jewellery... showing off so much," he said of patrons enjoying one of the only places left in Kabul where this is still possible.

F.Vit--TPP