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Afghan victims offended by Taliban glorification of suicide bombers

A recent event to "honour" the Taliban's suicide bombers and their "sacrifices" has drawn heavy criticism from Afghans, DW reported. Relatives of suicide bombing victims told DW they feel repulsed by the glorification of murderers.

Sentinel Digital Desk

KABUL/NEW DELHI: A recent event to "honour" the Taliban's suicide bombers and their "sacrifices" has drawn heavy criticism from Afghans, DW reported. Relatives of suicide bombing victims told DW they feel repulsed by the glorification of murderers.

On October 20, Sirajuddin Haqqani, the Taliban's interim interior minister, lauded the "sacrifices" of the suicide bombers, who perpetrated countless violent attacks across Afghanistan during the 20-year US occupation of the country, the report said. At a ceremony in a hotel in Kabul, the minister rewarded the relatives of suicide bombers by offering them cash and land.

Qari Saeed Khosty, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said in a tweet that the Taliban could not have returned to power without the help from the suicide bombers. The Taliban's glorification of suicide bombers angered many Afghans, especially those who have lost their loved ones in suicide attacks, the report added.

As she heard the news of the Taliban "honouring" families of their suicide bombers, 19-year-old Sharifa, who lost her father in a 2018 suicide attack in Kabul, burst into tears. "It's like rubbing salt in the wound," she said. "When I heard that instead of helping us, they [the Taliban] are praising those who intentionally killed themselves and others, I was heartbroken," Sharifa told DW over the phone. In 2018, a Taliban suicide bomber targeted the Interior Ministry in Kabul, killing 95 people and wounding at least 185. Sharifa's father was one among the dead. (IANS)

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