World | Afghanistan
Afghans stage more protests over Quran shooting
Hundreds of Afghans chanted anti-US slogans on Monday in protest against the shooting of the Quran by an American soldier in Iraq.
Tangi Wagh Jan: Hundreds of Afghans chanted anti-US slogans on Monday in protest against the shooting of the Quran by an American soldier in Iraq.
Sporadic protests have erupted across Afghanistan in the last week as news spreads of a copy of the Quran being found riddled with bullets at a shooting range in Baghdad on May 11.
A Lithuanian soldier and at least two Afghans were killed last week when protesters tried to storm a military base in the west of the country.
In the latest protests, police arrested dozens of demonstrators and prevented them blocking a highway in Logar province south of the capital, Kabul. Some demonstrators waved the white flag of the Taliban.
"Death to America. Death to Bush, his allies and the United Nations. We want them out," said one young protester as others chanted Allahu Akbar, or God is Great.
An effigy of US President George W. Bush and an American flag were dragged along the road.
The shooting of the Quran was the latest in moves to insult Islam, a speaker said, recalling the printing of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in the Western press and the desecration of the Quran by a US soldier in Guantanomo Bay prison.
The US president apologised to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki last week and promised to prosecute the US soldier accused of desecrating the Quran. There have no demonstrations in Iraq over the incident.
Protests over perceived insults to Islam have often turned violent in Afghanistan, where a deeply conservative faith is mingled with resentment at the presence of foreign troops.
Protests over the shooting of the Quran also took place in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif on Monday.
"They always add fuel to our anger. We strongly denounce it and ask the Afghan government to cut any relations with these people," said Mohammad Nasim, a protester.
Protesters destroyed an effigy of Bush.
Some 12,000 people have been killed in Afghanistan in the last two years since the Taliban relaunched their insurgency to overthrow the pro-Western Afghan government and drive out the more than 60,000 foreign troops now based in the country.
Afghanistan
French president in Afghanistan talks of pullout
Two foreign doctors abducted
US ambassador to Kabul to quit, embassy says
Afghan troops complain about obsolete gear
Top Afghan peace negotiator killed
Procurement switch puts boot into Afghan dream
US struck secret deal with Taliban
Soldiers take dogs back home to bust stress
More from World
News Editor's choice
-
Allies quit ruling coalition in Nepal
Political row could trigger months of street protests and violence
-
Qatar blaze 'started at nursery'
Fire killed 19 including 13 children, at Doha’s main shopping centre
-
Jagan jailed over illegal assets
Andhra Pradesh leader accused of corruption, cheating, conspiracy

