US troops accused of burning Quran in Afghanistan

Asadabad, Afghanistan –October 15, 2007 – Hundreds of angry villagers demonstrated in eastern Afghanistan yesterday alleging that US troops had burned the Holy Quran, a charge the US-led coalition rejected. Residents of Kunar province blocked a road for several hours before parliamentarians were able to calm the crowd, AFP reported. The protesters alleged coalition forces had torn and burned a Quran copy during an overnight raid in which they had arrested four men. The news agency reporter saw torn pages of the holy book in the village of Kodu, which is about 20 kilometers south of the provincial capital Asadabad.
The owner of the house where two men were arrested said the soldiers had burst into his house in the early hours of the morning and gone through his books. “They tied up and took two of my sons with them,” the man, Char Gul, said. “They went through our books, spread them on the floor. They tore and set ablaze a Holy Quran and they took another Quran with them.” An elder, Haji Mumtaz, said the raid started at midnight and lasted until early morning. “They took them with four people and they desecrated the Holy Quran,” he said. The coalition, which is rounding up Taleban and Al Qaeda militants, confirmed there had been an operation and that four men were detained but rejected the allegations about the Quran. “The coalition force involved in this incident didn’t desecrate any religious articles,” said coalition spokesman Army Maj. Chris Belcher. “We respect all religions and treat the holy articles with the respect they deserve.” Afghanistan is a deeply devout country and allegations of abuse of Islam have in the past touched off protests that have turned deadly.
In April 2005, thousands of people took to the streets to protest allegations in Newsweek magazine that Quran was desecrated at the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay. Violence erupted at one demonstration, leaving at least 15 people dead and 120 wounded. Newsweek later retracted the story, which alleged that a Quran copy had been flushed down a toilet. The Kunar province police chief, Abdul Jalal, said it was not clear what had happened in the latest incident, and authorities had sent a delegation to the area to find out. “The Americans have not come here to desecrate our religion and disrespect our culture,” he told AFP. “But if anything like this has happened, we hope that the authorities of the foreign forces penalize the perpetrators.”
HA/IINA

14 Oct 2007


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