Ten years ago, in November 2006, Al Jazeera English was launched. To mark that anniversary, Al Jazeera English have created REWIND, which updates some of the channel's most memorable and award-winning documentaries of the past decade. Al Jazeera English find out what happened to some of the characters in those films and ask how the stories have developed in the years since their cameras left.
In 2014 Fault Lines reported from the Taliban stronghold of Charkh District just an hour outside Kabul. Charkh had become a microcosm of Taliban rule in Afghanistan.
Though only an hour from Kabul, armed Taliban were openly patrolling the streets and had built a parallel administration in Charkh, including Sharia courts and special girls' schools.
Filmmaker Nagieb Khaja took us to a Taliban controlled town for a rare glimpse of life under Taliban rule amidst a civil war.
REWIND spoke to Nagieb about what, if anything, has changed in the past three years since the planned US drawdown has been scrapped, further deteriorating the security situation in Afghanistan.
"The situation in Afghanistan has gotten worse, the Afghan security forces are bleeding. They lose a lot of people, and it is really difficult for the Afghan National Army at the moment," Nagieb told REWIND.
"The US actually just decided that they would send 600 troops to Helmand again, and this is after they said that the war was over," he added.
(Click here for Android APP of IBTN. You can follow us on facebook and Twitter)
About sharing
Varanasi: Worship started from today in Vyas basement located in Gyanvapi Mosque
The work on the corridor connecting India, Middle East countries and Europe may start soon....
Unlike the annual UN conferences on climate change, the G-20 meetings generally do not see ...
In response to a question asked at the National Press Club of Washington DC, Rahul Gandhi, ...