You are using an outdated browser.
Please upgrade your browser
and improve your visit to our site.

A Propaganda Defeat in Afghanistan

I hadn't been aware of the uproar in Afghanistan over the alleged desecration of a koran by American forces until the Washington Post flagged it in passing this morning. It's a reminder that the Taliban can match our guns and helicopters with some equally powerful lies. Here's a full account from AFP:

Furious Afghans torched an effigy of US President Barack Obama and hurled stones at police Sunday during a mass protest over allegations that Western troops set fire to a copy of the Koran.

A crowd of around 1,000 demonstrators, mainly university students, marched through the streets of the capital Kabul before massing in front of the national parliament building and hurling stones at riot police as well as an armoured vehicle which blocked them from going down one street.

Police responded by firing into the air, dispersing the crowd for a brief period before they massed again.

The demonstrators, almost all men, chanted: "Death to America, death to Jews and Christians!" as they burned a model of Obama and a United States flag. Some wore black ribbons on their foreheads, calling for a jihad.

"We have gathered here to express our disgust towards the American troops and their act of burning and insulting our holy book of Koran," Ihsanullah Hakimi, one of the demonstrators, told AFP.

At one stage, the deputy speaker of parliament came out to address the crowds, saying they had the support of parliament.

"It is not the first time that they have shown their disgust for the Koran. We are with you and it is a good democratic way you demonstrate," said Mohammad Saleh Saljoki.

The protest follows widely-circulated rumours that international troops -- part of a 100,000-strong Western military deployment in Afghanistan -- burned a copy of the Muslim holy book during an operation against Taliban rebels in the province of Wardak, south of Kabul, earlier this month.

The claims have been rigorously denied by NATO and Afghan authorities who say they are being falsely circulated to whip up hatred against the West.

Habibullah, one of the organisers of the demonstration, claimed that events in Wardak were part of a pattern of abuse of the Koran.

"This kind of incident takes place across the country," he said.

There had been similar demonstrations but on a smaller scale in the eastern city of Jalalabad and southern Kandahar earlier last week.

A spokeswoman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said that the claims had been investigated and found to be groundless.

Koran-desecration stories, incidentally, are just another bad hangover from Gitmo.