KABUL, Afghanistan — Anger and frustration over the brutal killings of seven members of Afghanistan’s minority Hazaras spilled into the streets of Kabul on Wednesday, with about 10,000 people marching to demand justice for the Shite minority and calling on the government to do more to ensure the nation’s security or step down.
The case of seven Hazaras, whose beheaded bodies were found Saturday in the country’s southeastern province of Zabul, appears to have galvanized many in war-battered Afghanistan, uniting them across ethnic and sectarian divides.
No one claimed responsibility for the killings, though Afghan officials have blamed a range of extremists, from Taliban insurgents to an emerging affiliate in Afghanistan of the Islamic State group, which is fighting in Syria and Iraq.
The protest climaxed outside President Ashraf Ghani’s heavily fortified presidential palace at Pashtunistan Square, where marchers brought the coffins, draped in green flags symbolizing the Shiite minority.
At one point, presidential guards opened fire as some of the protesters tried to scale the walls and get into the palace grounds. The president’s deputy spokesman, Zafar Hashemi, said the shooting wounded 10 people.
Shortly afterward, Ghani went live on national television, appealing for calm and promising that the Hazara deaths would be avenged. “The nation’s pain is my pain,” he said, vowing the authorities would have “no mercy” on the killers.
“Like you, I will not calm down until the perpetrators of these crimes are brought to justice. We shall revenge the blood of our brothers and sisters,” he said, adding that the “enemies of Afghanistan” are trying to create disunity and “bring ethnic and sectarian violence” to the country.
After the gunshots, many of the demonstrators dispersed but about 1,000 were allowed into the palace compound. About 30 of them were to meet with Ghani and members of his National Security Council later Wednesday to press demands for justice and security, according to organizer Lilia Mohammadi.
The seven coffins had also been moved inside the palace grounds, she said, where they would stay the night — a conciliatory gesture following the gunfire.
Before arriving at the palace gates, the protesters walked for almost four hours carrying the green-draped coffins of the seven Hazaras — four men, two women and a nine-year-old girl, Shukria. Many chanted “Death to the Taliban,” “Down with the Government” and “Death to Pakistan.”
The seven were seized in Ghazni province, which borders Zabul, up to six months ago. Afghanistan’s spy agency dismissed Taliban claims that affiliates of the Islamic State group were behind the killings. In the past five days, rival Taliban groups have been fighting each other in the area where the bodies were found.
On Tuesday, demonstrators, many of whom had traveled with the coffins to the capital, 380 kilometers (240 miles) from Zabul, held an overnight vigil. Ghani had sent a delegation to Ghazni to investigate the killings, his office said, describing the abductors as “mainly non-local terrorists.”
The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan condemned the killings and said they may constitute a war crime. Killing and kidnapping civilians are “serious violations of international humanitarian law,” UNAMA chief Nicholas Haysom said and called for the perpetrators to be held accountable.
During the rally, the Kabul marchers called on Ghani and his Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah to resign if they cannot guarantee the security of the country.
“We came to the front gate of palace to raise our voices for justice and to condemn all acts of murder in the country,” said Sakhi Rizayee 37, one of the organizers of the protest.
The demonstrators included members of all Afghanistan’s ethnic groups, according to activist Zahra Sepehr, who said the turnout was about 10,000.
That would make it the biggest demonstration in Kabul since the March killing of a young woman, Farkhunda Malikzada, by a mob enraged over false reports that she had burned a copy of the Quran, Islam’s holy book.
“We want justice and we want this government, Ghani and Abdullah, to go so that we can have a government that protects all the people of the country and brings security to the whole country,” Sepehr told The Associated Press.
The Taliban have stepped up their fight across Afghanistan this year in an effort to topple the government. The Islamic State also has had an emerging presence, especially in Zabul and southeastern Nangarhar province, according to Afghan officials.
The insurgents have also linked up in some parts of the country with other militant groups, such as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. Many IMU followers in Afghanistan, including those in Zabul, have declared loyalty to IS, officials have said.
Afghanistan’s Hazaras, who are predominantly Shiite, have been attacked in the past, and this year many of them have been the victims in a number of large-scale abductions.
Another activist and protester in Kabul, Habibullah, who goes by only one name, said Wednesday’s demonstration aimed to show the unity of the Afghan people, regardless of ethnicity or sect.
“Our voice wants justice, brotherhood, sanctity of life, peace and equality,” he said. “No one can tolerate any longer the situation we have in the country.”
___
Associated Press writers Amir Shah and Humayoon Babur in Kabul contributed to this story.
___
This story has been corrected to show that the name of the slain nine-year-old Hazara girl is Shukria, not Tabasum.