Afghan girl shoots dead two Taliban fighters after they murdered her parents
An Afghan girl has shot dead two Taliban fighters
and wounded several more after they dragged her parents from their home and
killed them for supporting the government.
The incident happened last week when insurgents
stormed the home of Qamar Gul, a teenager from a village in the central
province of Ghor.
The fighters were looking for her father, the
village chief, when they stormed into her house and shot her parents dead
outside.
Gul emerged from the house with her family's AK-47
gun and shot dead the two Taliban
fighters who killed her parents, and injured several others.
Her father was a government supporter, which is why
the Taliban fighters went to his house and dragged him out.
When his wife resisted, the Taliban fighters killed
the couple outside their home, local police chief Habiburahman Malekzada said.
'Qamar Gul, who was inside the house, took an AK-47
gun the family had and first shot dead the two Taliban fighters who killed her
parents, and then injured a few others,' he said.
Gul is aged between 14 and 16, according to
different officials. It is common for many Afghans to not know their precise
age.
Several other Taliban fighters later came to attack
her house, but some villagers and pro-government militiamen expelled them after
a gunfight.
Afghan security forces have now taken Gul and her
younger brother to a safer place, said Mohamed Aref Aber, spokesman to the
provincial governor.
Since the incident, social media networks have been
flooded with praise for Gul's 'heroic' act.
A photograph of Gul, wearing a headscarf and holding
a machine gun across her lap has gone viral in the past few days.
'Hats off to her courage! Well done,' wrote Najiba
Rahmi on Facebook. 'Power of an Afghan girl,' wrote another Facebook user
Fazila Alizada.
'We know parents are irreplaceable, but your revenge
will give you relative peace,' said Mohamed Saleh in his post on Facebook.
The Taliban regularly kill villagers who they
suspect of being informers for the government or security forces.
In recent months, the militants have also stepped up
their attacks against security forces despite agreeing to peace talks with
Kabul.




