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1:2
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by Juan Manuel Gabino modified by Santiago Dotor
Date on arms 1348 (=1929 C.E.) Flag adopted 27 January 2002, abolished 4 January 2004
This flag was also commonly seen with the coat of arms in gold.
See also:
Other sites:
After the Taliban defeat in November-December 2001, both the 1992 flag and the 1973 flag
– and even the earlier April 1992 flag
– were flown by different factions within the anti-Taliban forces.
Santiago Dotor, 12 December 2001
On 27 January 2002 a new flag was adopted for the Transitional Authority which follows basically the same design of the 1930-1973 flag with some minor changes:
From a Reuters story dated 2 December 2001 [about the Afghan provisional government]:
The draft calls for the 87-year-old former king to play a symbolic role in opening the Loya Jirga, which would elect a transitional authority to govern for about 18 months until a constitution is drawn up and a permanent government elected. (...) Until then, it suggests that most of Zahir Shah's 1964 [sic] constitution the most liberal political system the country has ever had would be reinstated as Afghanistan's basic law.If, indeed, the final agreement would use the 1963 Constitution as the constitution for a provisional government, as the Reuters story dated 2 December indicated, then it may result in a temporary restoration of the flag of 1930-1973:
Article 4The entire constitution can be read at the Afghan Website.
The flag of Afghanistan is tricolor (black, red and green) all pieces joined together vertically from left to right in equal proportions; the breadth of each strip equalling half of its length, having in the middle the insignia of the mehrab (an arch in a mosque where the praying congregation stands, facing the Kaaba in Mecca) and the mender (a many tiered pulpit placed to the right of the mehrab in a mosque, from which addresses are delivered) in white, flanked by two flags and ensconced in two sheaves of wheat.
The same text was found on this Afghan government website with a link to a Draft Constitution of Afghanistan for transitional period by Dr. Salim Modjaz. Article 180 describes the flag, the same one used
until 1974.
Zoltán Horváth, 5 January 2002
According to a Reuters news message dated 29 January 2002 the flag contains the emblem (like until 1974) and the words The interim government of Afghanistan:
(...) Interim government leader Hamid Karzai called last week for the restoration of the national flag introduced by King Amanuallah in 1928 and banned after the communist takeover in 1978. The tricolor has broad [vertical] stripes of black, red and green and an emblem showing a mosque with a pulpit and dome bearing the inscription "there is no God, but Allah and Mohammad is his prophet". But one small difference from the old flag is an inscription bearing the words "The interim government of Afghanistan". (...)
Mark Sensen, 29 January 2002
Reviewing all the current information about the new Afghan flag, some conclusions would emerge:
Very good review. However, looking at the photos, I would rather support ratio 1:2.
Armand du Payrat, 30 January 2002
I still believe in 2:3 ratio because:
Jan Zrzavy, 30 January 2002
The online edition of Spanish newspaper El Mundo reported 5 February 2002 the hoisting of the new Afghan flag over the presidential palace at Kabul. Note that the coat-of-arms is all within the red stripe.
Santiago Dotor, 5 February 2002
That is an extremely interesting image:
Jan Zrzavy, 5 February 2002
Perhaps the clearest photo I have seen up to now of the presidential palace flag is this one from Yahoo! News. The flag appears to be quite clearly 2:3 and the arms falls well within the red stripe alone.
Santiago Dotor, 6 February 2002
The Chargé d'Affaires of the Afghan Embassy in Paris confirmed that the flag ratio is now 1:2.
Armand du Payrat, 15 February 2002
The official statement (quoted above) states of the three panels "the breadth of each stripe equaling half of its length" which gives three panels, each in the ratio of 1:2, and thus an overall proportion of 2:3.
Michael Faul, 18 February 2002
1:2 image by
Juan Manuel Villascan
Date on flag: 1380 = 2002 C.E.
image by Juan Manuel Villascan
1:2
image
by Juan Manuel Villascan
Date on arms 1380 (=2002 C.E.) [click on image for larger version].
The Loya Jirga of spring 2002 voted the Afghan national flag with a few
changes: yellow (gold) Coat of Arms instead of white dating "1380" (in Arabic
writing = 2002) under the mosque instead of "1348" yet the colours did not
change: black, green Pantone 3415c, red Pantone 186c.
Armand du Payrat, 14 February 2003
Mr Y. Koshikawa had a meeting with Dr. Abdul Wahab, Deputy Ambassador
Afghanistan Embassy in London on February 17th 2003, who provided an official
national coat of arms drawing last year. Dr. Wahab says that he knows some
people use gold coat of arms in the national flag of Afghanistan but either gold
or white can be used. In fact the Afghanistan Embassy in London hoists a
flag with white coat of arms. He also mentions that in 2004 Afghanistan will
establish a national policy from transitional government and the details of the
official national flag will be specified by the Constitution. Until that point
we will see variant national flags. He confirms Afghanistan national flag should
have hoist at right side and the same coat of arms can be stitched on the back
side of the flag.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 22 February 2003
Today the Afghan embassy in Tokyo advised me that on June 27th 2002
Afghanistan officially changed its national flag from a white coat of arms in
the center of the flag to a gold coat of arms which symbolizes the colour of a
wheat wreath, a part of the coat of arms, and that the proportion of the new
national flag is 1:2. The Tokyo embassy actually hoisted a flag with gold coat
of arms since they re-opened in January 2003.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 9 May 2003
I have just returned from a trip to New York where I visited the U.N.
headquarters to check members flags. I bought a flag chart of U.N. members
published in August 2002 which shows the Afghanistan flag with the gold coat of
arms introduced on June 27th 2002 and I saw the flag flying in front of the
headquarters. No more white coat of arms on the flag at least at the U.N.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 5 July 2003
The 24 August 2004
online edition of the New York Times has a photo of a meeting of Presidents
Karzai and Musharraf in Islamabad. Behind Mr. Karzai is a large Afghan flag with
a gold coat of arms, and on the table is a small desk flag with a white coat of
arms. It seems that even the people in charge of flag protocol on Islamabad
can't decide which color to pick!
Thorsten, 23 August 2004
Date on arms 1348.
Perhaps the clearest photo I have seen up to now of the presidential palace flag is this one from Yahoo! News. The flag appears to be quite clearly 2:3 and the arms falls well within the red stripe alone. I can see no difference with the 1930-1973 flag except for the Arabic wording on top of the mosque, between the top ends of the wreath.
Between the mosque and the wreath there is certainly a year, the same as in the 1930-1973 flag. The Arabic numeral is 1348 which is the Arab lunar
Islamic (hijri qamari) date for 1929 AD, when Zahir Shah's dynasty came to power. It is strange that the solar
Islamic calendar, more frequent in Afghanistan and Iran, was not used.
Santiago Dotor, 6 February 2002
The four characters immediately below the mosque are definitely numerals, reading "1348", as best as I can make them out. (...) The top definitely shows the shahada. The two letters below the shahada (by the sides of the tower) look to me like they could be Allahu Akbar (God is [very] great).
Joseph McMillan, 6-7 February 2002
The scroll looks exactly like the scroll on Flaggenbuch 1939 and also like the one on the right part of the post-communist flag. If so, it could mean Afghanistan.
Armand du Payrat, 8 February 2002
It seems that the second (left) word is sulta (authority). Still can't make the first.
Dov Gutterman, 8 February 2002
The date below is 1348 (1929 AD), the year Nadir Khan took Kabul, deposed Habib Allah Khan, and was proclaimed King Nadir Shah, founding a new dynasty.
Juan Manuel Gabino, 15 February 2002
The scroll text is Afghanistan-something: probably Transitional Authority or maybe just Authority.
Nathan Lamm, 15 February 2002
Arnaud Leroy sent to the FrancoVex mailing list his last findings on the Afghan flag, obtained from the Cultural Attaché of the Afghan Embassy in France. Here is my translation:
Ivan Sache, 22 February 2002
I asked Mr Masstan, Afghan Chargé d'Affaires in Paris, to confirm the gold wreath and black-red-green flags flanking the monument. He denied that information, saying that everything should be white on red.
Armand du Payrat, 25 February 2002
image by Ivan Sarajcic, 16 December 2003
A photograph of Sibghatullah Mujadeddi, former President of Afghanistan and
Chairman of Loya Jirga, or Grand Council, presiding at the third day of sessions
in Kabul, Afghanistan on Tuesday, Dec 16, 2003, showed a table flag and behind a
banner with the same emblem.
Ivan Sarajcic, 16 December 2003
The same symbol could be seen on the wall on a TV report about the "loya jirga".
I think there's a strong presumption for this flag to be the loya jirga's flag.
Olivier Touzeau, 17 December 2003
German television channel ARD (Tagesschau, 7 March 2002 and also afterwards) I have seen a variant of the Afghan flag. This was flying over Gardez, the city close to the battles between the US forces and the remnants of the Taliban. It was a horizontal tricolour of equal stripes black-red-green with a white arms in the center. The arms was only shortly visible, but it was obviously not the current [2002-2004] one.
Marcus Schmöger, 27 March 2002
From my trip to Pakistan last week flags were seen at the border post at
Torkham, the crossing point between Pakistan and Afghanistan at the Afghan end
of the Khyber Pass. On the Afghan side was a flagpole flying a *horizontal*
variant of the Afghan tricolor--black, red, green--with what was apparently the
current national coat of arms stenciled in white, extending well into the upper
and lower stripes. The stripes were separated by narrow strips of gold-colored
fabric. Ratio was probably something like 3:4. The building housing the office
of the Afghan border guards' commander had a short flagpole mounted on it with a
plain vertical black-red-green tricolor, with no coat of arms at all.
Joe McMillan, 22 January 2003
Afghan opium production surged after the Taliban took control of most of the country in 1996, and reached a peak of 4,030 US tons in 2000, accounting for 72 percent of the world market. Citing Islamic principles, the Taliban banned opium, virtually eliminating it from its territory in 2001. The ban remained in effect after the 11 September 2001 events, but farmers began ignoring it, as an important money-maker for the Taliban militia. In early April 2002, Hamid Karzai's interim government carried out a UN-backed plan to wipe out Afghanistan's poppy crop, once the source of 70 percent of the world's opium. The narcotic is the raw material used to make heroin. Source: this and this CBS News webpages.
Santiago Dotor, 14 February 2005
A friend asked me about a flag that he saw hoisted on a terrain military vehicle in Afghanistan that he saw on CNN some days ago. It was supposed to be photographed in areas under control of the Northern Alliance and the flag was a purely black one. Is that some kind of new Afghan flag or maybe just some local unit flag? Possibly a reaction to the purely white Taliban flag?
Željko Heimer, 20 September 2001
Muslim South Asia is awash in single color flags of green, red, black, and white. They are mounted on makeshift poles outside shrines and mosques, especially outside the tombs of Sufi saints. Popular saints often have dozens of these flags of varying colors on display, not only on poles but hanging from telephone and power poles, trees, and so on. The Taliban's ideology would seem to prohibit reverence for such tombs, so I would be hesitant to conclude that display of a white flag at such a tomb necessarily had anything to do with the Taliban.
These flags also attached to the rear of large trucks and buses, etc. I would not ascribe a specific ratio to them as they appear home-made. They seem to be of religious significance, but I was never able to ascertain whether different colors represented different sects.
Joseph McMillan, 3 October 2001
It may not make any difference, but the Taliban are a different sect of Sunni Islam, called (I think) Deobandi. The Wahhabi are from the Arabian
Peninsula. While in general you are right about Muslim burial practice, there may be some variation here and there. Afghans, after all, are not Arabs. For all I know Turks and Albanians follow different practices too.
Al Kirsch, 3 October 2001
I seem to recall an early edition of The Flag Bulletin had an article on Afghan grave flags, where monochrome flags in the four Arab/Muslim/Afghan colours, green, white, black and red, were flown on graves, with a significance to each colour. I remember green was supposed to be for descendants of Mohammed.
Dean R. Mc Gee, 4 October 2001
Editor's note: see also Origin of the Pan-Arab Colours.
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