Gunmen seize at least 14 from bus in Afghanistan

Published November 21, 2015
The gunmen asked for identity documents and when people showed them, they took away only Hazaras," Sayed Mohebullah, a manager for the Ahmad Shah Abdali bus company, told Reuters. — AFP/File
The gunmen asked for identity documents and when people showed them, they took away only Hazaras," Sayed Mohebullah, a manager for the Ahmad Shah Abdali bus company, told Reuters. — AFP/File

KANDAHAR: Unidentified gunmen in Afghanistan on Saturday kidnapped 14 bus passengers believed to be from the Hazara ethnic minority, 10 days after the killing of seven Hazaras by militants sparked one of the biggest protests in Kabul in years.

Gunmen stopped three night buses in Zabul province, on the main road between Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar, and kidnapped passengers, said provincial police chief Mirwais Noorzai.

He said he did not know how many people had been taken or their identity but the manager of a bus company and a provincial official said the gunmen had taken at least 14 Hazara people.

"The gunmen asked for identity documents and when people showed them, they took away only Hazaras," Sayed Mohebullah, a manager for the Ahmad Shah Abdali bus company, told Reuters.

He said he believed the gunmen had also taken people from other buses. Asadullah Kakar, a member of the Zabul provincial council, said he believed 20 people, all but two of them Hazaras, had been taken away.

The Hazara are a Persian-speaking, mainly Shia minority who have long faced persecution in Afghanistan, with thousands massacred by the Taliban and Al Qaeda in the 1990s, but a series of murders and kidnappings this year has stoked a mood of growing despair.

Militants killed seven Hazara people, including women and children, in Zabul early this month and dumped their partially beheaded bodies.

The murders fuelled a growing sense of insecurity since the Taliban briefly seized control of the key northern city of Kunduz in late September and heightened the risk of sectarian hatred further poisoning relations in the ethnically diverse country.

No militant faction claimed responsibility.

Thousands of angry Hazaras took to the streets of Kabul on November 11 to demand government action and justice for the seven. The protesters attempted to scale the walls of the presidential palace before police dispersed them with warning shots.

Seven people were wounded.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani appealed for calm and promised more security along highways.

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