Sunday, May 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

Afghan teenager shoots 2 Taliban militia with AK-47 rifle as revenge for parents killing

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 21 Jul, 2020 08:40 PM
  • Afghan teenager shoots 2 Taliban militia with AK-47 rifle as revenge for parents killing

A story of one Afghan girl is gaining widespread attention on social media. When the Taliban came to kill her parents, she took matters into her own hands, bursting from her home brandishing an AK-47 and killing two of the Taliban men. 

Qamar Gul, a teen between the ages of 14 and 16, wounded other fighters, too, after her mother and father were executed by the men for giving the government their backing.

The incident happened last week  in central Afghanistan. Her late father was the chief of the village village.

According to an Afghan police chief Habiburahman Malekzada, said: “Qamar Gul, who was inside the house, took an AK-47 gun the family had and first shot dead the two Taliban fighters who killed her parents, and then injured a few others.”

The Afghan government has now intervened and removed the girl and her brother from the home, after militants came back to the site looking for revenge.

The girl’s bravery is being praised by Twitter and Facebook users.

“Suffering exists only because weakness exists,” posted one user on Twitter, calling her a “Ninja Assassin.”

Another said she was “a true hero.”

Clashes have escalated in recent weeks between Afghan government forces and Taliban militia after the government failed to free hundreds of jailed Taliban as part of a prisoner swap agreed by both sides.

The defence ministry said a suicide car bomber in central Afghanistan targeted a convoy of Afghan army troops, killing eight soldiers. Taliban Islamist militants claimed responsibility for the attack amid a nationwide escalation of violence.

In a statement, the defence ministry said a car bomber targeted army troops in Monday’s incident in the district of Sayed Abad in Wardak province, killing eight soldiers and wounding nine more.

The Taliban, claiming responsibility, said dozens of Afghan special forces were killed in their latest deadly assault on government forces, who have suffered many casualties in the recent fighting.

A pact signed by the United States and Taliban in Doha in February laid out plans for a withdrawal of foreign forces from the war-torn country in exchange for security guarantees from the militants and negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban for a peace settlement to end the 18-year-old war have been delayed over the release of nearly 600 Taliban prisoners Kabul says were involved in major attacks.

As part of the Doha deal, the Afghan government has released more than 4,000 Taliban prisoners and the militant group has freed hundreds of government troops.

MORE International ARTICLES

Consider Exemptions To Travel Restrictions, Border-state Senators Urge Trump

Consider Exemptions To Travel Restrictions, Border-state Senators Urge Trump
New York senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, both Democrats, released a letter Monday urging the White House to bear in mind the importance of bilateral travel to businesses, families and communities located near the Canada-U.S. border.

Consider Exemptions To Travel Restrictions, Border-state Senators Urge Trump

US Approves Anti-Malaria Drug For COVID-19, Says It Could Be Gamechanger

Trump said the drug could prove to be a "gamechanger" and if it is not, the downside risks are likely to be low.

US Approves Anti-Malaria Drug For COVID-19, Says It Could Be Gamechanger

London Store Employees Push Out Elderly Sikh Customer Amid Coronavirus Panic-Buying

Employees at a London store lashed out at an elderly Sikh customer before pushing him out as coronavirus panic-buying chaos gripped supermarkets across the country, a media report said on Thursday.

London Store Employees Push Out Elderly Sikh Customer Amid Coronavirus Panic-Buying

Indian-American-Led Team Translating COVID-19 Info In 30 Languages

A team led by a first-year Indian-American medical student from the Harvard Medical School has launched an initiative to help immigrants with information regarding the coronavirus pandemic available in 30 different Indian languages, including Hindi, it was reported.

Indian-American-Led Team Translating COVID-19 Info In 30 Languages

COVID-19-Fighting Indian Doctors Stuck In US Green Card Backlog

COVID-19-Fighting Indian Doctors Stuck In US Green Card Backlog
Hundreds of Indian doctors fighting the coronavirus pandemic in the US have been stuck in the green card backlog, facing additional anxiety and uncertainty of their stay in America amid the health crisis, a media report said.  

COVID-19-Fighting Indian Doctors Stuck In US Green Card Backlog

Indian American Techies Struggle In 'Ghost Town' Seattle

Indian American Techies Struggle In 'Ghost Town' Seattle
Washington State is currently bearing the brunt of new coronavirus (COVID-19 disease) the most -- 54 deaths and counting.    

Indian American Techies Struggle In 'Ghost Town' Seattle