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Taliban claim killing of top female Afghan
officer
September 29, 2008 – (International Herald Tribune) An attack
on a high-profile female police officer is the latest in a wave
of attacks on women across Afghanistan for which the Taliban have
claimed responsibility.
After scattering in the wake of the 2001 offensive by a U.S.-led
coalition, the Islamic militants have regrouped over the past two
years. Attacks on women, girls' schools and organizations working
for women's advancement have become increasingly common.
On Sunday, in an attack claimed by the Taliban, two gunmen on a
motorcycle shot and killed the police officer, Malalai Kakar, as
she prepared to leave for work in the southern city of Kandahar.
The police in the city said she had died instantly from gunshot
wounds to her head. Her 18-year-old son, driving her car, was seriously
wounded.
Kakar, who was in her mid-40s with six children, was an iconic figure
among women's groups in Afghanistan and abroad. She was one of the
leading totems for the wider freedoms gained by women when the Taliban,
with their repressive policies toward women, were ousted from power
by a U.S.-led coalition in 2001.
Kakar, with the rank of captain, was head of Kandahar's department
of crimes against women, leading about 10 female officers, and spent
her working life tackling theft, domestic violence and murder. She
joined the city's police force in 1982, following in the footsteps
of her father and brothers, but was forced out after the Taliban
captured Kandahar in the mid-1990s and banned all women from working.
She was the first female police officer in the country to return
to work after the Taliban were ousted. Her commitment was particularly
notable for the fact that it took place in Kandahar, which became
the headquarters for the Taliban soon after the movement was formed
in the early 1990s.
Kakar's killing prompted a wave of tributes. President Hamid Karzai,
on a trip to the United States, issued a statement calling the attack
"an act of cowardice" committed by "enemies of peace
and welfare and reconstruction of Afghanistan."
The Interior Ministry in Kabul, responsible for the country's 80,000-member
police force, about 700 of them women, called Kakar "a brave
hero among women and loyal to her profession," and said she
had been "cowardly martyred."
The police commander in Kandahar, General Matiullah Qati, said Kakar
had continued working despite repeated death threats. "She
took a big risk by continuing to work in the current serious situation,
and her death will undoubtedly have a negative impact on other women
who may have wanted to join the police but now may not dare to,"
he said.
The European Union's mission in Kabul said: "Any murder of
a police officer is to be condemned, but the killing of a female
officer whose service was not only to her country, but to Afghan
women, to whom Kakar served as an example, is particularly abhorrent."
Kakar is not the first female official of prominence in Kandahar
to be killed. Two years ago, the head of the province's women's
affairs department was killed in a similar attack. In June, a female
police officer was shot and killed by gunmen in the western province
of Herat.
From:http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/09/29/europe/kabul.php
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