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| University students chant anti-U.S. slogans during a protest in Kabul May 12.(Xinhua) |
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| Afghan policemen are on the alert during the protest. (Xinhua) |
KABUL, May 13 (Xinhuanet) -- 19 persons were killed
and more than 50 injured in Afghanistan on Friday in new protests against
American interrogators' desecration of Islamic holy book Quran, local police and
residences said.
Three persons were killed, and 31
were injured in Baharak district of northeastern province of Badakhshan when the
protestors conflicted with local police, provincial police chief Shah Jahan
Noori told Xinhua.
About 1,500 students and civilians walked on the
street to protest against US desecration on the Quran, and they had conflicts
with the police as the procession passing the office of Non-governmental
Organizations (NGO), Noori said.
"The police clashed with the protestors when they set
fire on three NGO offices of Mission East, Gardian and Focus. Three persons
died, 31 injured including two policemen," Noori added.
On the same day, 15 persons were killed when local
police clashed with protestors in central province of Ghazni, about 100 km south
of Kabul, residents here said.
"About 2,000 civilians attended the protest, and
clashed with police. Both the policemen and some armed civilians shot each
other. Till now, 15 killed including at least one policeman, and 22 injured
including the privincial police chief." Voice of Ghaznawian, a local radio
station reported Friday.
Besides these two bloody incidents, there was another
policemankilled in the northwestern province of Badghis when having conflict
with the protestors, a resident said. But the local government refused to
confirm it.
The influential US-based magazine, Newsweek in its
latest edition disclosed that US servicemen in Naval base detention center at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, had put Quran in toilet to psychosocially punish suspected
Taliban militias held there.
To condemn the reported Quran abuse, Afghans from all
segments particularly the students came out on Tuesday to streets in Jalalabad,
the provincial capital of eastern Nangarhar province, demanding the punishment
of those behind the offence.
The demonstrations turned bloody on Wednesday when
clash erupted between personnel of law enforcing agencies and protestorsthat
left five dead and some 70 injured.
At least three protestors lost their lives in
Thursday's procession in Khogyani district of Nangarhar province when police
opened fire to disperse them.
Friday's deaths increase the number killed in
protests this week to 27, and more than 100 injured. Buildings including UN
offices, police stations and government premises have been attacked. Enditem
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