Afghan Police Fire on Student Protesters, Killing at Least Four and Wounding 30
The Associated Press, Nov.12, 2002
K A B U L, Afghanistan, Nov. 12 — Hundreds of students enraged over a lack of food and electricity in their dormitory clashed with police in violent demonstrations that carried into the morning Tuesday. At least four students were killed and dozens injured, witnesses and officials said.
Firefighters pushed back students Tuesday with water cannons, and police blasted with barrages of automatic fire. Authorities said they were firing over students' heads. Students threw rocks, bricks and sticks back at the security forces.
A student is being beaten up by Kabul police. AP
"With my own eyes I saw the bodies of four students shot when they tried to march to the presidential palace," said Sher Mohammed, an army officer who witnessed the initial protests on Monday night. It was not clear whether any more students died in Tuesday's clash.
"Death to the killers of our colleagues. We want justice," protesters shouted outside the dilapidated dormitories where more than 3,000 students from villages throughout Afghanistan live in squalor.
"All we're trying to do is contain them to the university right now, we can't stop it," intelligence chief Abdul Karim told The Associated Press.
It was the first time since the fall of the Taliban that a university protest turned violent. Kabul's fledgling police department has received international training, mostly from German police.
"This is barbaric," said Umaid, a social sciences student who leapt over a rusted fence to escape the shooting. "Today the students are protesting the death of our fellow students."
The army officer, Mohammed, said students had waited three hours in line Monday night for food following the end of the daylong fast being observed throughout Islam's holy month of Ramadan, which began about a week ago.
The food ran out before more than 400 students could be fed. For much of the time they had been standing in the dark because the electricity had gone out, he said.
"There is no al Qaeda at Kabul University, just official neglect," said Faizullah Jalal, a law professor and critic of the Karzai government. "Only once students were killed and wounded did these charges of religious and political motives suddenly come out. It was irresponsible and insulting."
Rahim's family was especially bitter, saying the accusations had hurt them even worse than his death. Abdul Alim, his older brother and a medical student who also lives in the central dorm, said his classmates supported the Karzai government, but that their persistent complaints about living conditions had fallen on deaf ears.
The Washington Post, Nov.24, 2002
"We have no water. We have no bread. We have no electricity. Everything is expensive," said Nangalai, a medical student. He said some of the students were also firing in the air during the protest Monday.
Habib-ur Rahman, whose cousin is studying at the university, said he saw one dead body at a local hospital while searching for his relative, who is missing. Witnesses said at least 30 students were injured on Monday.
The protest came nearly a year to the day after the fall of the hard-line Taliban from the capital, and amid complaints that the cash-strapped government has not done enough to improve people's lives.
Hundreds of onlookers gathered Tuesday to watch the demonstration, some standing atop the ruins of destroyed homes near the university, which lies in an area of Kabul that was heavily damaged during factional fighting in the early 1990s.
The university, once the country's flagship of higher education, was not repaired during the rule of the Taliban who frowned on most education, other than religious training.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai has pleaded for more international assistance, saying his poor nation has not received what it has been promised by the world following the collapse of the Taliban.
A report prepared in October by the global charity CARE International says: "We conclude that despite the rhetoric the donor community has yet to deliver the required funding for Afghan reconstruction. This not only breaks a promise; it is potentially counterproductive."
Student Deaths Shame Afghan Government
The Washington Post, Nov.24, 2002
KABUL, Afghanistan (WP) - Abdul Rahim was the most promising of his siblings, a bright and diligent student of 21. His father, a respected Islamic judge from the southern Afghan city of Ghazni, sent him off to study law at Kabul University six months ago, hoping the young man would one day follow in his footsteps.
Instead, on Nov. 11, Rahim´s life ended violently in a confused, after-dark clash between Kabul police and a crowd of students, who had taken to the streets to protest the lack of electricity, food and water in their dormitory. Rahim and Abdul Ghaffar, a second-year medical student, were shot dead; a dozen other students were wounded.
A list of wounded students
This list has been prepared by some RAWA supporters in the university.Name Father's Name Province M. Shakir Qurbanyar Jozjan Ghani Iesa Khan Logar Naqibullah Ghulam Dastagir Wardak Wahidullah M. Azam Herat Ismatullah Sayed Rasul Wardak Saifullah Dlawar Khan Kabul Rahimullah Islamudin Wardak Khulam Sakhi x Logar Abdullah A.Ghani Paktia M.Wasif M.Azim Logar M.Shapoor M.Nadir Wardak Amal Ghulam Nabi Ningrahar Naqibullah Khan Wali Khost Ajmal Gulmir Khan Khost Firuz Saifuddin Khost Akbar Abdul Ahad Logar A.Saleem A.Basir Logar M.Asif Aminullah Wardak M.Asif Ghulam Dastagir Wardak A.Hadi A.Salam Wardak Hasan Ali A.Hussian Ghazni Javid Ghulam Nabi Logar Atiqullah Ayatullah Logar Noor Agha M.Zahir Badakhshan A.Wali Sattar Badakhshan A.Zahir M.Omar Wardak Barat Ali Hussian Dad Ghazni A.Samad A.Qauym Ghazni Faiz Mohammad x Logar Mirwais Bang Wardak Wahdat M.Aesa Wardak Abdullah x Kabul A. Wali Haji Zadak Wardak Nasir x Takhar Ahmad Shah Mir Aqha Wardak A.Jamil A. Rauf Wardak Ghulam Sakhi Ghulam Jalani Wardak Hafizullah Ziauddin Ghazni And the following students are disappear, most probably they are in prison
M. Arif M.Akbar Ghazni M. Younis M.Nazar Ningrahar A. Raziq Jandad Maidan Zalmi M.Nasir Ghazni "That boy was my light, and now he is gone," Rahim´s father, Qazi Abdul Hakim, said in an interview in his home, 100 miles southwest of the capital. "I sent him to Kabul to study, and instead he was killed. Not by the communists or the Taliban, but by the police of a democracy," he said, weeping. "I have been a judge for 30 years, but there is no law or justice in this country."
The incident -- the first violent clash between students and police in the capital in more than a decade -- has mortified the transitional government, which is strongly backed by the United States. President Hamid Karzai immediately ordered two separate, cabinet-level commissions to investigate the police actions and the causes of the student protest.
Human Rights Watch, a New York-based advocacy organization, said it was "seriously concerned" about the shootings. "If the government can´t handle a protest by unarmed students," Human Rights Watch said in a statement, "it raises serious questions about the government´s ability to provide security in the rest of the country."
The incident has also highlighted the ease with which religious politics can be injected into any volatile situation in post-Taliban Afghanistan, where Islamic extremism remains both a threat to stability and a convenient tool with which to discredit opponents, even on a normally placid college campus.
Government officials, while acknowledging that the police were poorly trained and used excessive force, charged that Taliban and al Qaeda sympathizers among the students deliberately goaded their indignant classmates to violence, provoking the fatal confrontation. They alleged that some students carried pistols and shouted, "Long Live, Osama!" as they threw stones and smashed police car windows.
"We believe there was an unseen hand behind it, that provocateurs were waiting to exploit youthful emotions and disrupt security for their own purposes," said Hussain Ishrak Hussaini, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry.
Numerous students who joined the demonstration said their only motive was to draw attention to poor conditions in the overcrowded central dorm, which had worsened steadily during Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting that began Nov. 7. That night, they said, the electricity went off again, leaving them without light to read or water to wash, and the food being distributed to break their day-long fast ran out.
A medical student named Rahman said he was studying for an exam when the power failed. Fed up, he rushed out of the building and joined hundreds of other students who began marching toward central Kabul, vaguely planning to take their complaints to Karzai.
"It was the last straw. People were hungry, and we were all upset," Rahman said. "I didn´t see any weapons or hear anyone shouting Islamic slogans, but some students behind us did become violent. We wanted to negotiate with the police, but they wanted to attack them. We tried to stop them, but then the shooting started, and everyone ran."
Many students and faculty members -- as well as relatives of the slain students -- were furious that the government had raised the specter of Taliban and al Qaeda infiltrators on campus. They dismissed the allegations as a ruse to deflect criticism of police excesses and abysmal living conditions for student boarders.
"There is no al Qaeda at Kabul University, just official neglect," said Faizullah Jalal, a law professor and critic of the Karzai government. "Only once students were killed and wounded did these charges of religious and political motives suddenly come out. It was irresponsible and insulting."
Rahim's family was especially bitter, saying the accusations had hurt them even worse than his death. Abdul Alim, his older brother and a medical student who also lives in the central dorm, said his classmates supported the Karzai government, but that their persistent complaints about living conditions had fallen on deaf ears.
"None of us have anything to do with the Taliban; we just wanted our rights," Alim said. "The dorm was really awful. The bathrooms smelled terrible because there was no water, and the employees were stealing our food. We went to the authorities again and again, but nothing happened."
But university officials said the apparent hijacking of a peaceful student demonstration was only one example of a deeper political problem on the Kabul campus, where the student body of 13,000 is a potentially volatile mix.
There are groups of rival ethnic Pashtuns, Tajiks and Hazaras. There are hip urbanites in jeans and devout rural students in Muslim robes. There are brilliant students and barely literate boys from Islamic academies in both Afghanistan and Pakistan who were enrolled by the Taliban.
Officials said some of these religious students are affiliated with Islamic anti-government groups -- not only holdovers from the defeated Taliban movement, but also followers of Islamic factions headed by still-influential leaders.
"I can't say whether these groups were responsible for what happened that night, but I know they are active on campus, and they have elements in the dormitories that manipulate the other students," said Sharif Fayez, the minister of higher education. "Some of them have no academic qualifications, but they have powerful connections, and to remove them would be a very sensitive issue."
Fayez, who is accompanied by bodyguards because of threats to his life, said his efforts to modernize the university had antagonized Islamic groups, especially after he dismissed several senior officials from their camp. But he also said he had tried to de-politicize the campus and encourage students to focus on their careers.
"I had to bring in reforms, and I had to bring in a professional team that wanted change," said Fayez, who wept as he described seeing Rahim and Ghaffar´s bodies in a morgue several hours after the protest. "But I warned the students over and over to avoid political activism, because in Afghanistan, unfortunately, that still means violence."
One indication of disturbances on campus was the discovery of a bomb in a medical school classroom the morning of the protest. Police said they had found a handwritten letter with a Taliban stamp outlining detailed plans for the bomb and accusing the class professor of being an "infidel." One student in the class was arrested, and the professor was assigned two uniformed bodyguards.
But several sources suggested the letter and bomb might have been planted by the intelligence services, possibly to tar ethnic Pashtun students as pro-Taliban saboteurs. The sources also said plainclothes intelligence police may have been shouting extremist slogans at the nighttime protest to agitate or discredit the students.
One week after the protest, the campus appeared to have returned to normal.
Students sunned themselves and snacked between classes. The lines of riot police were gone, and female students, who had vanished during the days of tension, strolled across the grounds. A load of new mattresses was delivered to the main dorm, and a new electrical transformer arrived.
On Thursday afternoon, hundreds of somber students filed into the campus mosque for a prayer recitation service for their two dead classmates. Fayez came to pay his respects, as did the local police commander, who had been hit in the head with a brick during the demonstration.
But for Rahim's family, there was little consolation in the belated improvements to student facilities, the formal condolences by officials who had tarred their sons as Islamic terrorists, or the promises by Karzai that the government would identify and prosecute the policemen who had fired the fatal shots.
"My son was a good Muslim from an educated family. They killed him, and then they announced he was al Qaeda," Hakim said angrily. "Mr. Karzai can do nothing for him now, and there is nothing I can ask. We performed a mourning ceremony for justice in this country a long time ago."
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