Taliban destroy statue of Shiite foe from 1990s civil war

A Taliban fighter patrols in the Wazir Akbar Khan neighborhood in Kabul, Afghanistan on Wednesday. The group declared an "amnesty" across Afghanistan and urged women to join their government on Tuesday. AP/RAHMAT GUL
A Taliban fighter patrols in the Wazir Akbar Khan neighborhood in Kabul, Afghanistan on Wednesday. The group declared an "amnesty" across Afghanistan and urged women to join their government on Tuesday. AP/RAHMAT GUL

KABUL – The Taliban have blown up the statue of a Shiite militia leader who had fought against them during Afghanistan’s civil war in the 1990s, according to photos circulating on social media Wednesday.

The statue depicted Abdul Ali Mazari, a militia leader killed by the Taliban in 1996 when the Islamic militants seized power from rival warlords. Mazari was a champion of Afghanistan’s ethnic Hazara minority, Shiites who were persecuted under the Sunni Taliban’s earlier rule.

The statue stood in the central Bamyan province, where the Taliban infamously blew up two massive 1,500-year-old statues of Buddha carved into a mountain in 2001, shortly before the United States (US)-led invasion that drove them from power. The Taliban claimed the Buddhas violated Islam’s prohibition on idolatry.(AP)

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