In 1973, while Zahir Shah was abroad in Italy, his cousin
Mohammad Daoud Khan staged a
coup d'état and established an autocratic republican government. In August 1973, Zahir Shah lived in exile in Italy for 29 years alongside his wife Queen
Humaira Begum and other royal family members. Initially, they lived in a three‐room apartment on Rome's
Via Cassia. Relatives of the 1920s King
Amanullah Khan, of the same
house of Barakzai, also lived in Rome. President Daoud Khan continued to send money to them in Italy consisting of income from property and estates of the former royal family. After the
Saur Revolution, the leftist
Khalq government cut all funds to Italy. Zahir Shah eventually lived in a
villa in the affluent community of Olgiata on Via Cassia, north of Rome, where he spent his time playing golf and chess, as well as tending to his garden. He was financially supported by the
Shah of Iran since the new Afghan government failed to provide him a monthly salary. The Shah also supported his two sons, who were studying in the United States and Canada. He was prohibited from returning to Afghanistan during the late 1970s by the Soviet-assisted Communist government. In 1983 during the
Soviet–Afghan War, Zahir Shah was cautiously involved with plans to develop a government in exile. Ultimately these plans failed because he could not reach a consensus with powerful Islamist factions. Both the Soviet Union and the United States sent representatives to meet him, and President
Mohammad Najibullah supported Zahir Shah to play a role in a possible interim government in the quest for peace. In May 1990, Zahir Shah issued a long statement through
Voice of America and the
BBC calling for unity and peace among Afghans, and offering his services. This reportedly led to a spark of interest and approval among the Kabul populace. However, the idea of a revived political role for Zahir Shah was met with hostility by some, notably radical Islamist
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. In 1991, Zahir Shah survived an
attempt on his life by a knife-wielding assassin masquerading as a Portuguese journalist, who later revealed that the attempted assassination was ordered by
Osama bin Laden. After the fall of the pro-Soviet government, Zahir Shah was favoured by many to return and restore the monarchy to unify the country as he was acceptable to most factions. However, these efforts were blocked mostly by Pakistan's
ISI, who feared his stance on the
Durand Line issue. In June 1995, Zahir Shah's former envoy Sardar Wali announced at talks in
Islamabad, Pakistan, that Zahir Shah was willing to participate in peace talks to end the
Afghan Civil War, but no consensus was ever reached. ==Return to Afghanistan==