Troops on the U.S.' largest base in Afghanistan have inadvertently burned Qurans and other religious materials, triggering angry protests and fears of even larger demonstrations as news of the burning spreads.
The books were mistakenly thrown out with the trash at Bagram Air Field north of Kabul and were on a burn pile Monday night before Afghan laborers intervened around 11:00 p.m., according to NATO and Afghan officials.
The workers doused the flames with their jackets and mineral water before marching out of Bagram in a fury, carrying with them the charred remains, according to Sabir Safar, secretary of the provincial council of Parwan, the province where Bagram is located.
By the morning, hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside of Bagram and
on the outskirts of Kabul. Some shot into the air, some threw rocks at
the Bagram gate, and others yelled, "Die, die foreigners." Many of them
were the same people who work with foreign troops inside the base. At
one point, apparently worried that the base would be stormed, guards at
the base fired rubber bullets into the crowd, according to the military.
"They should leave Afghanistan rather than disrespecting our religion, our faith," Mohammad Hakim told the Associated Press outside of Bagram. "They have to leave and if next time they disrespect our religion, we will defend our holy Quran, religion and faith until the last drop of blood has left in our body."
There is perhaps no action that enrages Afghans more than foreigners'
mistreating the Quran. It taps into widespread doubt of whether
Americans respect Islam as well as deep frustration that, more than 10
years after the Taliban
were overthrown, violence remains widespread. Qurans are supposed to be
buried or released into a flowing river if they need to be disposed.
NATO officials
scrambled furiously to contain the fallout, tweeting and emailing
reporters not long after the first protests began. Gen. John Allen, the
commander of all foreign forces in Afghanistan, released a statement,
then a video statement, then gave an interview to NATO television. In
his and in all NATO officials' communication today, each emphasized that
the burning was unintentional.
"Those materials were inadvertently given to troops for disposition and
that disposition was to burn the materials. It was not a decision that
was made because they were religious materials," Allen told NATO TV. "It
was not a decision that was made with respect to the faith of Islam. It
was a mistake, it was an error. The moment we found out about it we
immediately stopped and we intervened."
Allen launched an investigation and promised to take steps that the same incident would not be repeated.
"This is not who we are. These are very, very isolated incidents," Allen
said. "We've been dying alongside the Afghans for a long time because
we believe in them, we believe in their country, we want to have every
opportunity to give them a bright future."
In the morning, U.S. officials on Bagram escorted local Afghan elders to
the site of the burning. Ahmad Zaki Zahed, the chief of the provincial
council, said 60 to 70 books had been recovered from the fire, including
Qurans that were once used by detainees at the base.
"Some were all burned. Some were half-burned," Zahed told the Associated Press.
The protesters' fury was immediate, but Afghan officials eventually
calmed them down by the afternoon. They demanded to see President Hamid
Karzai and threatened to resume demonstrations.
Previous reports of Quran burning have led to deadly protests in
Afghanistan. In April, 2011, after a fringe protester burned a Quran, a
mob in a usually peaceful northern city stormed the United Nations
compound and killed at least seven foreigners. In May, 2005, Afghan
police killed at least four demonstrators angry over a report that an
American interrogator in Guantanamo Bay prison flushed a Quran down a
toilet.
While today's reaction was quick and furious, the protests might have
been larger if it wasn't snowing and if it had happened at a different
time. Many Afghans did not know about the burning because it occurred
late last night and news is generally consumed during television
newscasts in the evenings, at home. Many Afghans and Westerners fear
that protests could get larger Wednesday and the rest of the week.
"Past demonstrations in Afghanistan have escalated into violent attacks
on Western targets of opportunity," the U.S. embassy said in statement
known as a Warden Message, sent to Americans living in Afghanistan.
"U.S. citizens in Afghanistan should remain vigilant and avoid areas
where Westerners congregate. Avoid large public gatherings or
demonstrations. Do not discuss travel plans or other personal matters
with strangers, or in public."
Far to the south, in an area where a surge of U.S. troops has removed
many Taliban safehavens, insurgents reminded the local population that
they still held considerable sway.
In the Washer district of Helmand, insurgents beheaded four people they
accused of spying for the U.S., according to the Helmand governor's
spokesman. The Taliban denied any involvement in the executions,
claiming they were carried out by Western intelligence officials to
bring the Taliban a bad name.
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