2 April 2011 Last updated at 14:47 GMT

Afghanistan: Deadly Kandahar protest at Koran burning


The BBC's Paul Wood says the authorities in Kandahar have blamed the Taliban 
for the protests

Ten people have been killed in the Afghan city of Kandahar during a 
demonstration against the burning of a Koran in the US, officials say.

Hundreds of people took part in the protest. Gunfire was heard and cars were 
set on fire.

On Friday, seven UN workers were killed after a protest over the same issue in 
in the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif.

It was the worst attack on the UN mission in Afghanistan since the 
international invasion in 2001.

Further violence

A large and angry crowd surged through the streets of Kandahar, chanting "They 
have insulted our Koran" and "Death to America", the BBC's Paul Wood reports 
from Kabul.

The authorities in both Kandahar and Mazar-e Sharif blamed the Taliban for the 
attacks. However, the Taliban has rejected the accusation.

Continue reading the main story
Analysis
Paul Wood BBC News, Kabul

The investigation now begins into the circumstances surrounding the worst 
attack on the United Nations in Afghanistan since the invasion in 2001.

Some have blamed Taliban infiltrators in the crowd which attacked the UN 
headquarters in Mazar-e Sharif. It is certainly true that armed men were seen 
in the crowd, but that may have been because the protesters managed to disarm 
the UN's own guards.

The killings - including, perhaps, two beheadings - underline the international 
community's sometimes precarious position in Afghanistan.

They also raise questions about the timetable to Afghan security control. 
Mazar-e Sharif is due to be one of the first places transferred from Nato 
security control in the summer, but on this occasion the Afghan police were 
unable to protect the UN.

"The Taliban had nothing to do with this, it was a pure act of responsible 
Muslims," spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid told the Reuters news agency by phone 
from an undisclosed location.

"The foreigners brought the wrath of the Afghans on themselves by burning the 
Koran," he said.

UN staff remain on maximum security alert and under lockdown, our correspondent 
says. However, there is no move yet to evacuate them from Afghanistan, as 
happened in 2009 after an attack on a UN guesthouse.

Separately, three insurgents were killed when they attacked a Nato base.

They were stopped before they could enter the compound, Nato and Afghan police 
said.

At least one was wearing a burka, news agencies reported on Saturday, quoting 
police sources.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned the violence in Mazar-e Sharif as 
"outrageous and cowardly". Afghan President Hamid Karzai said it was inhumane 
and against Islamic and Afghan values.

In all, 14 people were killed.

Local police told the BBC that 27 people had been arrested following the 
demonstration in Mazar-e Sharif.

'Overwhelming'

The demonstrators were angered by the actions of US Pastor Wayne Sapp, who set 
light to a copy of the Koran at a church in Florida on 20 March.

The burning took place under the supervision of Pastor Jones, who last year 
drew condemnation over his aborted plan to burn copies of the Koran on the 
anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.

Pastor Jones has denied responsibility for the lethal protests in Afghanistan.

Witnesses said the protest - which began outside the central Blue Mosque after 
Friday prayers - began peacefully but suddenly turned violent.

The crowds moved to outside the UN compound, where a small group broke away.

Several demonstrators were killed by guards at the compound, who were then 
overpowered by the mob.

Munir Ahmad Farhad, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said the group 
seized weapons from the guards and opened fire before storming the building.

A state of emergency has now been declared in the city, Afghan intelligence 
sources told the BBC. All roads in and out of Mazar have been blocked and cars 
are being checked, says the BBC's Bilal Sarwary.

Dan McNorton, spokesman for the UN mission in Afghanistan, said: "Three 
international Unama (United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan) staff 
members were killed, and four international armed security guards were killed."

One of the dead was a Swedish national, while another came from Norway. The 
other foreign victims are believed to be a Romanian and four Nepalese guards.

US President Barack Obama condemned the attack "in the strongest possible 
terms", saying the work of the UN "is essential to building a stronger 
Afghanistan".

The top UN representative in Afghanistan, Staffan De Mistura, has flown to the 
area to handle the matter.

Cloud of smoke from burning car in Kandahar (2 April 2011) Cars were set alight 
during the protest in Kandahar

Local police spokesman Lal Mohammad Ahmadzai told reporters that two of the UN 
staff had been beheaded.

However, police Gen Abdul Rafu Taj said that "according to the initial 
reports... none were beheaded". He said they were shot in the head.

Kieran Dwyer, director of communications for the UN mission in Afghanistan, 
said the UN workers had been trapped inside the compound and "hunted down" in 
what was an "overwhelming situation".

Mr Dwyer said it was too early to tell how the attack happened or why the UN 
was targeted, but that the organisation would now take extra security measures.

But he added: "The UN is here to stay. We're here to work with the people to 
help them achieve peace, and this sort of thing just highlights how important 
that is."

Protests were held in several other Afghan cities on Friday which demonstrators 
in Herat had called a "day of anger", Afghanistan's Noor TV channel reports.




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