
Violence, suffering, and mental health in Afghanistan: a school-based survey,
Panter-Brick et al.
The Lancet
| August 2009
The study, the first large-scale survey of mental health among young people in Afghanistan, found
that one in five schoolchildren in northern Afghanistan is likely to suffer from a psychiatric
disorder, and that day-to-day violence and stress were as much the cause of the children’s suffering
as the war-related brutalities they witnessed.
Extensive coverage including Daily Telegraph, BBC, Channel 4, etc.
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Extensive coverage including Daily Telegraph, BBC, Channel 4, etc.

Altai Consulting mentioned in leading French economic newspaper La Tribune
La Tribune
| August 24, 2009Emmanuel de Dinechin comments on Afghanistan's economic situation and perpectives.
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Altai Consulting awarded Best French Presence Overseas
Numerous Articles in Le Figaro, L’Express, etc.
| March 2008
Altai Consulting has been awarded the Prize for Best French Presence Overseas
by the French Senate for its 5-year work in Central Asia.

Afghanistan's Media Mavericks
Financial Times
| July 4, 2007
[...] Altai Consulting is a name familiar to most expatriates in Kabul, partly because of the
speed with which Mr de Dinechin and his 33-year-old business partners Rodolphe Baudeau and
Eric Davin have built the country's biggest advertising firm [...]
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Un trio francais au service du développement afghan
Le Monde 2
| February 25, 2006
[...] L'un part en mission à la frontière du Pakistan, le deuxième a plusieurs rendez-vous,
le troisième, fébrile sur son ordinateur, doit conclure un rapport... On est pourtant à
Kaboul. Pas à Londres, Paris ou New York ! Comment imaginer que, dans un pays considéré
comme l'un des plus pauvres du monde, de jeunes entrepreneurs mènent une activité si
trépidante ?
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Roshan enjoys Afghan mobile demands
Financial Times, Rachel Morajee
| November 23, 2005
Minefields are rarely thought of as a boon for big business. But for Afghanistan's largest
telecoms operator Roshan, the country's war-shattered infrastructure has been exactly that.
Telecoms have bucked the trend, with 4.5 per cent of the population using mobile phones -
an astonishing figure given Afghanistan's poverty, said Emmanuel de Dinechin, of Kabul-based
consulting firm Altai.
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