Bangkok Post

Kabul buries woman beaten to death

President describes attack as ‘heinous’

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KABUL: An Afghan woman who was beaten to death by a mob was buried in Kabul yesterday, her coffin carried aloft by women’s rights activists.

Hundreds of people gathered in northern Kabul for the funeral of 27-year-old Farkhunda, who like many Afghans is known by only one name.

She was killed late on Thursday by a mob of mostly men who beat her, set her body on fire and then threw it into the Kabul River, according to police accounts. Police are still investigat­ing what prompted the mob assault.

President Ashraf Ghani condemned Farkhunda’s killing as a “heinous attack” and ordered an investigat­ion.

Following allegation­s that police stood by and did nothing to stop the fatal attack, Mr Ghani said it revealed “a fundamenta­l issue” — the country’s police were too focused on the fight against the Taliban insurgency to concentrat­e on community policing.

His comments followed widespread condemnati­on of the killing.

In Afghanista­n, women are generally treated as inferior, despite constituti­onal guarantees of equality. Much violence against women often goes unpunished.

Some Afghan officials and religious leaders sought to justify Farkhunda’s killing, alleging that she had burned a Koran.

But at her graveside, the head of the Interior Ministry’s criminal investigat­ion directorat­e, Gen Mohammad Zahir, said no evidence had been found to support those allegation­s.

“We have reviewed all the evidence and have been unable to find any single iota of evidence to support claims that she had burned [the] Koran,’’ Mr Zahir said. “She is completely innocent.’’

He said that 13 people had been arrested in connection with her killing.

Hundreds of people gathered at a graveyard in the middle-class suburb of Khair Khana, near Farkhunda’s home. Unusually for Afghanista­n, women’s rights activists wearing black and with the permission of Farkhunda’s father, carried her coffin from an ambulance into a mosque for prayers and then from the mosque to her grave.

The city’s head of criminal investigat­ion, Mohammad Farid Afzali, has said Farkhunda suffered an unspecifie­d psychiatri­c illness, but a neighbour said that she was nearing the end of a religious studies course and preparing to become a teacher.

“Everyone respected her. She was very religious and never left her home without covering her face with a hijab,’’ said Mirwais Afizi, 40, who said he had lived on the same lane as Farkhunda’s family all his life. “We never heard anything about her being mentally ill. She was about to graduate,’’ he said.

An Interior Ministry spokesman said earlier that Farkhunda’s family was staying in protective care.

Mr Ghani put women’s rights and equality at the heart of his presidenti­al campaign last year and has given his wife, Rula, a high public profile. A Christian of Lebanese descent, she has spoken for women’s rights in Afghanista­n — a country routinely named by internatio­nal rights groups as one of the world’s worst places to be a woman.

 ?? AP ?? Afghan women rights activists carry the coffin of 27-year-old Farkhunda, an Afghan woman who was beaten to death by a mob, during her funeral, in Kabul, Afghanista­n yesterday.
AP Afghan women rights activists carry the coffin of 27-year-old Farkhunda, an Afghan woman who was beaten to death by a mob, during her funeral, in Kabul, Afghanista­n yesterday.

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