Wednesday

Funerals, protests for Herat mosque bombing victims | News

Afghans have once again lost their faith in the police and security services after a pair of suicide attackers killed at least 29 Shia worshippers in the western province of Herat.

“Around 50 Shias killed and 80 wounded in an attack by Islamic State fighters yesterday on a mosque in western Afghanistan’s Herat,” the group’s propaganda outlet Amaq said.

Tuesday’s blast, claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant on Wednesday, comes amid a spate of nationwide assaults over 48 hours.

Most recently, a Taliban attack on Wednesday against NATO troops in Kandahar has caused casualties, though no figures of those harmed or killed have been announced.

Deadly violence was also reported on Tuesday in Helmand province and Paktia.

On Monday, fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) claimed responsibility for a suicide blast at the Iraqi embassy in Kabul that killed at least two Afghan guards.

Protesters took to Herat’s streets on Wednesday after funerals for some of the victims of Tuesday’s attack at the popular Jawadya mosque.

Jilani Farhad, a spokesman for Herat’s governor, said he feared the death toll could rise, given the gravity of some of the injuries sustained by more than 60 people.

Before blowing themselves up, two attackers fired on private guards outside the mosque in Herat city and then shot at crowds of worshippers.

Police and the guard did not “shoot back”, eyewitness and activist Mohammed Jawad Amid told Al Jazeera.

READ MORE: Can the US defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan?

“People started screaming and running out. All eyes were on the police and the security guards who did not shoot back when asked. They said they were not authorised to do so,” Amid said, adding that there were four attackers – two of whom managed to escape.

“The police also escaped the scene,” he said.

Angry locals clashed with the police and set a checkpoint on fire after the attack, venting their frustrations over what they said was a weak police response.

‘Herat is united’ 

Security was heightened in Herat ahead of the rallies, in which protesters are demanding better protection.

Funerals took place in the afternoon.

READ MORE: SIGAR questions millions spent in Afghanistan

Jawad, the protest organiser, said both Shia and Sunni Muslims are attending the rally.

“Herat is united. When the injured were brought to the hospital, many Sunnis volunteered to donate blood,” he said.

“Everyone is angry. It’s not about Shia or Sunni, no one cares about this at the moment. We are all a target for these terrorists.”

‘May God punish them’

Ismail Mohammadi, a shopkeeper, spent Tuesday evening in Herat searching for his nephew as he received calls from family members asking about Ali’s whereabouts.

Ali was among those killed in the mosque bombing.

MSF reopens Afghan clinic after being bombed in US air strike

“I was at my shop at the time of the blast. When I heard a loud bang, I closed my shop and walked towards the area where the attack took place,” Mohammadi told Al Jazeera.

“I knew my nephew used to go to that mosque every Wednesday as there are special prayers on that day. While I walked towards the mosque, my niece called me saying that Ali’s phone was switched off.”

Mohammadi searched hospitals only to discover that his nephew had died.

“The mosque is God’s home and we think it’s the safest place in the world, but people were butchered there as well.”

Mohammadi said he believed more than 70 people were killed, and that officials were covering up the death toll.

“I protest today to hold our government and security officials responsible for the deaths. As for the terrorists who killed my nephew, may God punish them and take my revenge,” Mohammadi said. 

Source: Al Jazeera News

Source link

Follow Us @soratemplates