From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Khost (Pashto: خوست) is one of the
thirty-four provinces of Afghanistan. It
is in the east of the country. Khost province used to be part of Paktia province in the past. Its capital is
Khost
City, which was the first Afghan city to be liberated from
communist rule during the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan.
Security
On 20 November 2009 a bomb killed 3 civilians and wounded 3
others as a car hit a roadside bomb in Khost City. According to the
chief of criminal investigation the act was perpatrated by the
Taliban. [2]
On 24 November, 2009, according to the Afghan Ministry of
Interior, 6 people, including 5 children were killed when a remote
control bomb attacked a water station in Khost which had been built
by the Rural Rehabilitation Ministry to distribute water to the
locals. [3]
On 30 December, 2009, a suicide attacker detonated explosives at
Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khost province near the Afghan
border with Pakistan, killing eight American civilians and wounding
others.
Politics
The current Governor of the Province is Hamidullah Qalandarzai.
Demographics
Man with his young daughter waiting to receive medical care in the
province.
The population of 638,849 is primarily Pashtun, and the main tribes are:
- Khostwal (clans: Lakkan, Tawizai, Sabari, Shamil, Matun, Mali,
Mandozai, Tani and Ishmaelkhel)
- Zadran
- Dzadzi
- Wazir
- Kharsin (Mazdak)
There are Ghilzai
Pashtuns in smaller number as well.
Districts
Districts of Khost (not showing the Shamal District).
Districts of Khost Province
| District |
Capital |
Population[1] |
Area[4] |
Notes |
| Bak |
|
27,675 |
|
|
| Gurbuz |
|
30,751 |
|
|
| Jaji Maidan |
|
23,197 |
|
|
| Khost (Matun) |
|
160,214 |
|
|
| Mandoazi |
|
61,682 |
|
|
| Musa
Khel |
|
41,998 |
|
|
| Nadir Shah Kot |
|
37,193 |
|
|
| Qalandar |
|
11,406 |
|
|
| Sabari |
|
89,779 |
|
|
| Shamal |
|
13,523 |
|
Shifted from Paktia Province in 2005 |
| Spera |
|
26,685 |
|
|
| Tani |
|
67,096 |
|
|
| Tere
Zayi |
|
|
|
|
See also
References
- Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American
Empire, by Chalmers Johnson, ISBN
0-8050-6239-4
- "Ghost Wars"
External
links