Extremists target young women in Kabul
Dead
friends visit the schoolgirl at night. They return to her dreams as she last
saw them: their bodies blasted down the street by the school gates, some with
their satchels and clothes aflame.
“They
come every night,” Rokiya Ahmedi told me. “I see my classmates dead. I see them
on fire. I hear the screaming. I wake up screaming too. I scream for what I
see, and I scream because of the fear that men will come to kill me also.”
No
one can tell the 15-year-old survivor of last month’s bomb attack at the Sayed
al-Shuhada high school in west Kabul that it will never be repeated. At least
85 students, most of them girls aged 15 or 16 from the Hazara ethnic minority,
died in the atrocity.
As
the last few thousand American and Nato troops prepare to leave Afghanistan,
attacks on the Hazara community in the Dasht-e-Barchi quarter of Kabul have
continued apace as part of a campaign of terror involving femicide as well as
sectarian targeting.
Since
mid-May, at least five bomb attacks have killed scores of Hazara in the Afghan
capital. Most victims were young, educated females, including teachers and
students, two employees from the Afghan Film Organisation, and a TV
anchorwoman.
“We
feel as if the Hazara community are under specific attack,” said Abul Fazl
Rezayee, 27, whose fiancée was murdered on June 12 when the minibus carrying
her home from work at the Ministry of Culture and Information was turned into a
fireball by a limpet mine that killed four others.
Fatima
Mohammed was 23 years old and was so severely burnt that her family had to
identify her by a chipped tooth.
“Our
wedding halls are bombed; our schools; civilian vehicles; hospitals,” Rezayee
added. “Outside Kabul the war is one of front lines and clashes, but inside the
city we die at the hands of unseen attackers.”
The
Hazara are the country’s third largest ethnic group and are mostly Shia. They
have historically suffered at the hands of larger ethnic groups — thousands
died in a series of massacres by the Taliban in 1998.
Recent
large-scale atrocities against Hazaras in west Kabul, mostly attributed to
Islamic State, include the attack in May last year by gunmen on the
Dasht-e-Barchi maternity hospital in which 12 mothers and two babies were
killed; a suicide bomb attack in October on a Dasht-e-Barchi school which
killed 30 pupils and teachers; and the triple bomb attack in May this year on
the Sayed al-Shuhada high school. Though scores have died in these attacks,
dozens of others have died in recent months in targeted killings.
Earlier
this month, Shaharzad Akbar, head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights
Commission, called on the UN to begin an international investigation into the
murders of Hazaras, suggesting the campaign against them may constitute
genocide.
Meanwhile,
the hashtag “#StopHazaraGenocide” has become the social media focal point for
Hazaras to express their solidarity in the face of the killings.
Nevertheless,
even by Afghan standards, at this critical juncture of the war — with the US
and Nato hurrying to pull out their remaining troops and the Taliban on the
advance — the fear and trauma of Kabul’s Shia community haunts every
conversation.
“It
feels like they are killing us everywhere, whatever we are doing,” said Hanifa
Attayee, 60, whose 23-year-old daughter Parwin was a teacher murdered in the
October 2020 suicide attack on a school.
“They
kill us like this while the Americans are still here, so we are terrified of
what will happen to us once the Americans have gone.”
As
much as the sectarian nature of the killings, the terrorist attacks have
targeted educated young women. Most bereaved mothers I spoke to in west Kabul
were illiterate but had relished the chance to educate their daughters in the
two decades that followed the Taliban’s downfall, hoping it would allow them a
better future.
Now,
with the Taliban on the ascent amid growing chaos in Afghanistan, many fear the
era of girls’ schooling may end. Even among young Shia men in west Kabul there
is suspicion that a good education may merely earn them graduation to a kill
list.
“We
all strove for a good education but what good is an education if all it does is
get you killed,” said Sayeed Mahdi Mussawi, 21, whose 23-year-old sister
Tayyiba Mussawi died in the minibus blast a fortnight ago. An employee with the
Afghan Film Organisation, she had died alongside Fatima Mohammed. “I feel
hopeless,” her brother said. “It is like we are a ball in the field kicked
between sides one to the other: our lives are played.”
For
the recently bereaved Shia families, grief at the loss of their children
transcends the fear of what may follow when the final western troops leave
Afghanistan.
“I
cannot describe my feelings over my daughter’s death,” said Mohammed Amin,
whose daughter Aqala, 16, was one of the 85 schoolgirls killed in the Sayed
al-Shuhada school massacre last month. “All I can say is that when I rushed to
the hospital and saw her lying there, unmarked but for a single small wound
above her eyebrow; when I looked at the face of the girl I loved and raised;
when I saw the clothes I had bought her; the shoes she was wearing; and
recognised the satchel lying beside her body, I turned to the doctor and said
‘This cannot be my daughter, for my daughter cannot be dead’. ”