Afghan Hazara elders pledge support for Taliban rulers

Hazara leader says previous govt of president Ashraf Ghani was the "darkest point" in the history of Afghanistan

PHOTO: AFP/FILE

More than 1,000 Afghan Shia Hazaras pledged their support on Thursday to the country's new Taliban rulers, insisting that the "dark period" of previous Western-backed governments had ended with the return of the militants.

Afghanistan's Hazaras have been persecuted by militants for centuries, but on Thursday community elders gathered in Kabul alongside Taliban leaders in a show of support.

Senior Hazara leader and former lawmaker Jafar Mahdawi, who organised the gathering, said the previous government of president Ashraf Ghani was the "darkest point" in the history of Afghanistan.

Read more: Hazara farmers say Taliban have ordered them off their lands

"Afghanistan had no independence and (foreign) embassies ruled every aspect of the government," he said.

"Thank God, we have now passed this dark period."

Since the Taliban seized power in August, the new rulers have put an end to the war, ended corruption and increased security, Mahdawi said.

He, however, called for a more inclusive government from the Taliban and urged the new rulers to reopen schools for girls.

"In the coming weeks or months we hope to witness an inclusive government that has representatives of all people," Mahdawi said.

The current government, which the Taliban says is interim, is made up almost entirely of the group's Pashtun stalwarts and does not include any women.

Taliban leader and spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told the gathering that rebuilding the country was a priority.

"Our jihad against the foreign invaders has ended and now we will start jihad for building the country," he said.

Also read: 'No more hope': Afghan Hazaras live in fear under Taliban rule

The Hazaras, who make up roughly 10 to 20 per cent of Afghanistan's around 38 million population, have been persecuted for centuries in the Sunni majority country.

In the last two decades they have been targeted in particular by the Taliban and Da'ish militants, who consider them heretics.

The militants have carried out several mass killings of Hazaras, including in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998, where Human Rights Watch says at least 2,000 mainly Hazara civilians were executed.

Several bomb attacks in recent years have also killed and wounded scores of Hazaras in Kabul and other cities.

Just days after the Taliban seized power in August, a statue of a prominent Hazara political leader was decapitated in Bamiyan, a city inhabited mostly by the Shia community.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the act, but the Taliban earned notoriety in 2001 for destroying two giant Buddha statues in Bamiyan after deeming them un-Islamic.

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