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Offbeat News: Irish Pub Kickstarts Kabul Nightlife KABUL,
Afghanistan (AP) --
In Taliban times, it would have been unimaginable: a fully stocked
Irish pub serving whiskey and cold beer in the heart of Afghanistan's
ultra-Islamic capital. In
the post-Taliban era, Kabul's new Irish Club -- the country's only bar --
is still unthinkable, at least for Afghans. But it's a huge success with
the many foreigners who are desperate for a little bit of nightlife. "Walk
in that front door and you'll find a very different world in here,"
says Allan Ferguson, a 57-year-old Australian businessman sitting on a
barstool as Irish folk tunes blare from speakers overhead. "You
could be anywhere -- Ireland, Australia, America. But walk outside, and
you'll be back in Afghanistan." The
Irish Club opened on a secluded side street in central Kabul last month on
-- what else -- St. Patrick's Day. Concealed
by a nondescript outer concrete wall with no sign out front -- not even a
number on the door, it's not an easy place to find. In a country where
terrorists are still a threat, that's exactly the way the Irish-born owner
wants it. "We
wanted to keep a low profile, so we didn't advertise whatsoever,"
owner Sean Martin Mc Quade said. "But people know where to find us.
News travels fast by word of mouth." Judging
by the club's growing popularity, Quade was right. In
a mock-Tudor style house behind the blank outer wall, immaculate Afghan
waiters in black pants, white shirts and black bow ties serve up beer for
$2 and cocktails for $3. Customers -- mostly aid workers, diplomats and
journalists -- crowd around a wooden bar topped off with green marble
imported from Ireland. Afghan
carpets are strewn about the floor. Ads for Guinness Draught are tacked
all over the walls. Small lanterns -- handy during sporadic power outages
-- are placed on every table, filling the bar with warm light. "We're
the first people to stick our necks out and say this can be a cosmopolitan
city," says Quade, who's worked as an engineer in Afghanistan for 11
years. "But we don't want to disrespect anybody." Toward
that end, Quade sought the approval of a neighborhood mullah to open the
bar. In return, he has promised to help rebuild the potholed road in front
of the club and help relocate an adjacent school to a bigger, better lot. The
bar is officially licensed by the state to sell alcohol -- but only to
foreigners. Just inside the bar's entrance, an Afghan bouncer keeps
Afghans out, checking IDs and requiring patrons to sign in. "I'm
sad we can't let them in, but this is a Muslim country and it's the
government's wish that we don't encourage their sons and daughters to
participate," Quade says, before taking a swig from a tall glass of
Foster's lager. The
Taliban no longer are in power but Muslim conservatives continue to hold
sway in Afghanistan. Just a few months ago, the country's chief justice
banned cable television, complaining of images that violate Islamic
morals. Fazel
Ahmed Manawi, the deputy supreme court justice, said Muslims found
drinking at the Irish Club will be punished. "We've
got a lot of foreigners living in our country and unfortunately, this is a
necessary thing for them," Manawi says. "But
this bar should remain a place only for foreigners." There
are Afghan staff, of course, but they've all been given Irish names --
Kevin, Jimmy, Michael, George -- "to protect them from possible
retaliation." Most
of the staff, too, are keen on keeping a low profile. "Our
families know what we do, but we tell other people we just work in a
restaurant or a guesthouse selling food and soft drinks," says
22-year-old "Paddy." The
claim is not far off. The club already serves up pork chops and steaks for
lunch and dinner. And rooms are being refurbished for what will soon be a
full-blown inn. Out
front, several soldiers -- paid by the bar -- prowl the street with
automatic weapons. Afghan drivers, slumped in four-by-four vehicles, wait
listlessly for aid workers and diplomats to emerge, hoping their nights on
the town don't last too late. The
risk of a terrorist attack is always present, but in a city with little in
the way of nightlife, few patrons seem to mind. "We all accept a certain level of risk in coming to Afghanistan," Ferguson says with a shrug. "You can't live in a cocoon."
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