Los Angeles Times

Slain Afghan didn’t burn Koran, an inquiry finds

The victim of a mob attack is ‘completely innocent.’ Thousands attend her funeral.

- By Ali M. Latifi and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Latifi reported from Kabul and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — As thousands gathered Sunday to bury a woman who was beaten and burned by an angry mob, Afghan officials said they had found no proof that she had burned pages of the Koran as her assailants had claimed.

“We have reviewed all the evidence and have been unable to find any single iota of evidence to support claims that she had burned a Koran,” Gen. Mohammad Zahir, head of the Interior Ministry’s criminal investigat­ion directorat­e, said at the funeral. “She is completely innocent.”

Zahir’s comments followed an investigat­ion by the Ministry of Hajj and Religious Affairs that said charred papers found at the shrine in Kabul where she was attacked Thursday were from a Persian-language prayer book, not the Koran, which is written in Arabic.

The death of the 28-yearold woman, identified only by her first name, Farkhunda, has sent shock waves across Afghanista­n. In a rare sight, Farkhunda’s casket was carried to the gravesite in north Kabul’s Khair Khana neighborho­od by a dozen women, including some women’s rights activists, with men escorting them.

The public outpouring of grief in many ways seemed a reversal of the events that led to her death.

After police were criticized for not doing enough to control the mob of several hundred men who surrounded Farkhunda at the Shah-Do Shamshira shrine in the Afghan capital last week, officers on Sunday accompanie­d the procession from the family’s home to the cemetery. Young men and women took smartphone pictures of the ceremony and posted them on social media.

Many in Afghanista­n and overseas were aghast to learn that during the attack, hundreds more people gathered along the banks of the Kabul River to take pictures and videos of Farkhunda’s burning body, which was left in a dirt patch of the shallow river.

When Farkhunda’s body was taken from her family’s house for the funeral, young men cried out, “Allahu akbar! ” — God is great! — the same words her attackers used before beating her and running her body over with a car before setting it on fire.

Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said 13 police officials had been suspended. Thirteen suspects have been arrested, authoritie­s said.

The mullah of the shrine, whom Farkhunda’s family has accused of burning the pages, has also been taken into custody, officials said.

Mourners at the funeral demanded that another religious leader, who praised the attackers during a Friday sermon, be removed from his post at a mosque.

Farkhunda’s relatives, who said she suffered from mental illness, described her as a devout Muslim who graduated from a local religious school and was preparing to begin classes in the Islamic studies department of Kabul University. Her parents said in an interview that they wanted only that the killers be brought to justice.

Demonstrat­ors were planning to gather this week in Kabul to call for justice and for a local landmark to be named after Farkhunda.

President Ashraf Ghani, who has condemned the incident, arrived in Washington on Sunday for meetings with President Obama and senior administra­tion officials.

Before his arrival, Ghani, who has called for the Obama administra­tion to delay the withdrawal of 9,800 U.S. troops remaining in Afghanista­n, said the two countries had common security concerns, including the rise of the militant group Islamic State, which Ghani’s government says has establishe­d a beachhead in Afghanista­n.

“The threats that we are facing on a daily basis — were they, God forbid, to overwhelm us — will threaten the world at large,” Ghani said on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS.” “The experience of Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya are now examples to draw on.”

 ?? Wakil Kohsar AFP/Getty Images ?? IN KABUL, Afghanista­n, women carry the casket of the 28-year-old woman killed by a mob at a shrine.
Wakil Kohsar AFP/Getty Images IN KABUL, Afghanista­n, women carry the casket of the 28-year-old woman killed by a mob at a shrine.

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