Thousands attend funerals of beheaded Afghan Shia Hazaras

Seven people from the mostly Shia Hazara ethnic minority were kidnapped from Jaghuri by unknown gunmen in October

Afghan men protest to condemn the killing of seven Hazara ethnic minority that were kidnapped and killed by Islamic State militants in Ghazni province, Afghanistan, November 10, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

KABUL:
Thousands of people attended the burials of seven Shia Hazaras in Afghanistan Friday, witnesses said, nearly a week after their decapitated bodies were found, with the gruesome discovery spurring massive protests, including in Kabul.

The coffins of the four men, two women and one young girl - named as Shukria - were flown by Afghan military helicopters from Kabul to their home district of Jaghuri in central Ghazni province, a local tribal elder said.

"Around 5,000 people took part in the funeral ceremony under tight security," 45-year-old Jafar Haidary told AFP.

The coffins were covered in a green shroud, while most of the women were dressed in black according to Shiite tradition, worker Zia Ahmady said, adding that nearby buildings were also "covered with black cloth".

Thousands protest at Afghan killings as sectarian fears rise

The seven people from the mostly Shia Hazara ethnic minority were kidnapped from Jaghuri by unknown gunmen in October this year.


Their bodies were found last week in neighbouring Zabul province, which is under Taliban control and has been the scene of clashes between rival militant factions. Officials have yet to confirm who is responsible for the killings.

The macabre discovery galvanised protests in both Ghazni and Kabul to demand the government take action in the face of a recent wave of violence against the Hazara.

On Wednesday thousands of people, mainly Hazara, poured into the rainy streets of Kabul to carry the coffins of the seven victims to the gates of the presidential palace.

The demonstrators chanted slogans against both the Taliban and the Islamic State, while calling for both President Ashraf Ghani and the country's chief executive Abdullah Abdullah to resign.

The protest, unusual for Afghanistan in its scale and organisation, prompted Ghani to call for calm and vow to avenge the dead.

The three million-strong Afghan Hazara community has been persecuted for decades, with thousands killed in the late 1990s by al Qaeda and the mainly Pashtun Sunni Taliban.

There has been a surge in violence against the mostly Shia Hazara this year, with a series of kidnappings and killings that have triggered a wave of fury on social media.
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