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The Afghan bodybuilders out to ape Schwarzenegger and Salman Khan, and how getting ripped relieves stress of constant conflict

Bodybuilding, which has a long tradition in Afghanistan, has helped the country’s young men develop mentally as well as physically since the fall of the Taliban regime

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Afghan bodybuilder Hares Mohammadi (left), 25, competes in a bodybuilding and fitness contest in Kabul. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Hindi music pumps from the speakers as dozens of Afghan men grunt and sweat their way through a workout beneath the watchful eye of a young Arnold Schwarzenegger, whose muscle-bound image hangs from the wall.

The scene inside this Kabul gym is repeated at venues all round the capital, where bodybuilding has become ubiquitous since the fall of the Taliban regime.

The sport has a long tradition in Afghanistan, and was even tolerated by the Taliban when they ruled the country from 1996-2001 – so long as the men wore long trousers as they lifted.

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But as security deteriorated and the initial euphoria after the US invasion dissipated into stress, trauma and loss, more young men took to the gym.

Mohammadi is covered in fake tan before taking part in the bodybuilding event in Kabul. Photo: AFP
Mohammadi is covered in fake tan before taking part in the bodybuilding event in Kabul. Photo: AFP
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“Everyone, everywhere in Afghanistan, wants to have a beautiful body shape, and this sport is a favourite sport for every young man,” says Hares Mohammadi, a law and political science student turned champion bodybuilder who is also a trainer at one gym in Kabul.

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