The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Angry Shiites to protest latest deadly Afghan attack

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HERAT, Afghanista­n: Shiites prepared to take to the streets of Afghanista­n’s Herat following a deadly mosque attack as anger grew over authoritie­s’ failure to prevent the latest assault on the minority community.

Thirty worshipper­s including young children were killed and 64 injured when suicide bombers throwing grenades stormed the Jawadya mosque in the western city near the Iranian border late Tuesday.

Nobody has so far claimed the attack, but it came a day after the Islamic State group said it had carried out a deadly assault on the Iraqi embassy in Kabul as it extends its footprint in the wartorn country.

Shiites, a minority of around three million in overwhelmi­ngly Sunni Afghanista­n, have regularly been targeted by IS jihadists over the last year. They accuse police and troops of failing to protect them.

“We are going to bury the bodies this afternoon and then hit the streets demanding justice,” said a sobbing Farhad Dost, whose cousin died in the attack.

“I lost all my loved ones, they even killed children as young as seven. This wasn’t an attack on Shiites, this was an attack on all Afghans, all Muslims,” he told AFP.

Membersoft­heShiiteco­mmunity said police had abandoned them after the two attackers struck at around 8.00pm on Tuesday.

“The police checkpost is around 100 metres from the mosque. They didn’t even try to stop the attackers. They all fled when they heard the blasts,” said a distraught Dost.

Angry locals then clashed with the police and set the checkpost on fire, according to witnesses who reported that officers opened fire, injuring some demonstrat­ors.

Farhad Afshar rushed to the mosque, where worshipper­s had gathered for prayers, after hearing the explosion.

“When I arrived, the mosque was full of flesh and blood. I saw a mother crying and searching for her two children. She found one them wounded inside the mosque, the other was found dead in an ambulance,” he told AFP.

Quoting survivors, he said the attackers first opened fire on the worshipper­s, then threw grenades before finally blowing themselves up inside the mosque.

Witnesses described scenes of terror and chaos, with emergency wards overwhelme­d and survivors rushing victims to hospital in their own vehicles and even on foot.

“There weren’t enough ambulances... I tried to take a small child to hospital but he died in my hands,” Ali, who only gave one name, told AFP.

Jilani Farhad, a spokesman for Herat’s governor, said the death toll was expected to rise past 30 because several wounded were in a critical condition.

IS has claimed responsibi­lity for a series of attacks killing dozens of Shiites in Kabul over the past year, including twin explosions in July 2016 that ripped through crowds of Shiite Hazaras, killing at least 85 people and wounding more than 400. — AFP

 ??  ?? An Afghan media personnel walks through a Shiite mosque after it was attacked by suicide bombers in Herat. — AFP photo
An Afghan media personnel walks through a Shiite mosque after it was attacked by suicide bombers in Herat. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? People react on the street, following a suicide bomb attack at the mosque in Herat. — AFP photo
People react on the street, following a suicide bomb attack at the mosque in Herat. — AFP photo

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