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On the evening of
March 10, 1999, I was on a bus destined for Kandahar. In Chakab (two kilometers
to Delaram in the province of Farah) at 10:30 we heard shots being fired
and then the bus stopped. We realized that the driver and one of the passengers
had been shot. Then, eight armed people who were wearing black turbans
and loose Talib-style clothes surrounded us and started cursing at us vulgarly.
They asked the driver, who was a young man, for some money; but he told them that he did not have
any and that he had left the money in Herat at the bus station. The armed
bandits, however, did not accept this and threw him out of the bus and,
while already shot and injured, aimed at his chest and shot him again.
The driver's father, who was on the bus too, started shouting, "Take this
money and leave my son alone." The bandit Talibs, after taking the money,
started beating up the passengers savagely. (There were 19 passengers on
the bus out of which 14 were ethnic Hazrahs who had been deported by the
Iranian regime.) After they robbed the passengers of all their money and
valuables, they left us alone and fled the scene.
Around twenty minutes later, another bus arrived and, upon our request, took the injured to transfer
to a hospital. The rest decided to stay in Delaram for the night. Since
I was the only one who could drive, I drove the bus the next day toward
Kandahar. When we reached Kandahar in the afternoon, we learned from the
driver's friends that he had died at the hospital a few hours after the
incident. All the passengers were infuriated by the news and started expressing
their hatred for the fascist Talibs.
-- Neman |