Afghanistan's mindless war
There can be few more dreadful places on earth to work than the brick fields on the outskirts of the Pakistani city of Peshawar.
The fires are fuelled with rubber, so as to give the bricks a particular colour. The smoke gets into the workers' lungs and they soon sicken.
For this, they earn a dollar a day.
The men who work here are mostly refugees from Afghanistan.
An extended family of 19 has just arrived in the brick field camps from the Shomali area, north of Kabul.
The men used to have a farm and orchards.
Now they get occasional work in the brick fields, and have nothing but the clothes they stand up in.
They were driven out because they were from the same ethnic group as the Taleban's enemies.
We would call it ethnic cleansing.
"The reason for coming here is to save our women and our children's lives because we don't have a government to save us," says Alam Shah.
"If we hadn't moved here the Taleban could have killed our family," he adds.
"Life is very tough we do not even have enough to eat. During the night our children don't have a proper place to sleep," says Pari Shah.
"I don't know what kind of life this is? Only one person is working and 10 are eating," she says.
Twenty-year battlefield
The unceasing war has reduced the inhabitants to poverty.
Without peace there is no question of investment or redevelopment.
For 20 years this country has been little more than a battlefield with outside countries encouraging the fighting for their own selfish ends.
The West, which used to care so much about Afghanistan when the Russians occupied it, does not worry in the slightest what happens to it or how much its people suffer.
India and Russia have played their part and Pakistan helped to invent the Taleban.
And still the fighting goes on between the Taleban and Ahmed Shah Massoud, the warlord whom Western countries used to favour.
Stalemate
Neither side wants to show weakness by proposing a deal. It is a stalemate.
Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil is the Taleban's new foreign minister. I asked him if his government was really interested in peace.
"Our leader, Mullah Omar, has been offering peace and an amnesty to the opposition. And we've again asked the opposition that they should stop threatening us with war. They can't win against us so it's useless fighting us," he said.
Countries like Afghanistan which disappear from international view are regarded as bandit territory.
Anyone can do anything to them, without question.
Pakistan, Russia and Iran can stir things up to their heart's content.
This country has been utterly ruined by 20 years of warfare.
Now, as a final twist, it is governed by what is probably the most extreme religious movement in the world.
The Taleban have not only outlawed pictures of living beings; children have been ordered not to fly kites - though they do - and no one is supposed to sing or whistle.
Yet even though music is outlawed, the government allowed this chant to be broadcast on the radio while we were there.
"Our pilots and our young boys never fear the enemy," it says. "I pray to Allah to save them and give them victory."
But what kind of victory can it possibly be? And what will be left if it ever comes?