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Home > News > World News > Article > From Kabul to Istanbul The Rickshaw Circus enters dangerous territory

From Kabul to Istanbul: The 'Rickshaw Circus' enters dangerous territory

Updated on: 18 July,2012 07:37 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

A Canadian man and his German girlfriend are braving the Taliban to take a rickshaw on one of the world's most dangerous road trips to bring the circus to children in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan

From Kabul to Istanbul: The 'Rickshaw Circus' enters dangerous territory

Adnan Khan and his anthropologist sweetheart have embarked on the punishing 8,000-kilometre trip to Istanbul that demands a police escort and hoisting the rickshaw onto trucks to navigate the trickiest stages.



Laughs on wheels: Afghan children from the Mobile Mini Circus for Children (MMCC) perform in Kabul. Adnan Khan and his sweetheart have embarked on a 8,000-kilometre trip to Istanbul. pic/afp


Their purpose is twofold: raise money for a charity that uses circus training to lift the spirits of children in war-torn Afghanistan and to spread those circus skills along the way, to brighten the lives of refugees and orphans.


The rickshaw, painted yellow, green and white with a jazzy ‘Rickshaw Circus’ on the side, and sporting a brass clown horn stands out in an area synonymous with kidnapping, suicide bombings and ambushes.

“I finally got the rickshaw to the Pakistani side. It took hours. It was quite funny. A policeman told me ‘I haven’t seen a carnet de passage (the document needed for tourists to cross the border) in years’,” said Adnan.

His next task was speeding the rickshaw to Peshawar, where Osama bin Laden kept a house during the 1980s war against Soviet troops in Afghanistan, and onto the capital Islamabad.

The trip has been months in the planning. Khan and Schmeding expect to spend two months winding their way through Pakistan, Iran and Turkey — averaging 300 kilometres a day in six hours.

The couple are determined to raise as much money as possible for the Afghan Mobile Mini Circus for Children (MMCC), which was recently forced to close a school in the western city of Herat and sack staff because of a shortage of funds.

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