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Who was Banu Negar? Wiki, Bio, Age, Family, Cause of Death

Banu Negar Wiki – Banu Negar Biography

Banu Negar, per local media, was killed in front of her family members outside her family’s home in the city of Firozkah. The Taliban denied any involvement in Negar’s death and said they are investigating the incident, the BBC reported.

“We are aware of the incident and I am confirming that the Taliban have not killed her, our investigation is ongoing,” spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid told the outlet. He blamed the killing on “personal enmity or something else,” adding that the Taliban announced that they would grant amnesty to employees of the former US-backed government.

The BBC cites three sources who confirmed that the Taliban beat and shot Negar. Relatives provided graphic images showing “blood splattered on a wall in the corner of a room and a body, with a very disfigured face,” she wrote. Relatives said that she worked at the local prison and she was eight months pregnant.

Banu Negar Age

Banu Negars age is unknown.

Banu Negar Cause of Death

Taliban militants shot dead a pregnant policewoman in front of her husband and children in a door-to-door execution, witnesses said. The victim’s family has stated that the officer she was eight months pregnant when she was killed.

Taliban militants in Afghanistan shot dead a Banu Negar in a provincial town at the family’s home in front of relatives in Firozkoh, the capital of central Ghor province. The killing comes amid growing reports of escalating repression of women in Afghanistan. The Taliban told the BBC that they were not involved in Negar’s death and that they are investigating the incident.

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Spokesman Zabiullah Mujaheed said: “We are aware of the incident and I am confirming that the Taliban have not killed her, our investigation is ongoing.” He added that the Taliban had already announced an amnesty for people working for the previous administration and attributed Negar’s murder to “personal enmity or something else.”

Details of the incident are still vague, as many in Firozkoh fear retaliation if they speak up. But three sources told the BBC that the Taliban beat and shot Negar in front of her husband and her children on Saturday 4 September.

Relatives provided graphic images showing blood splattered on a wall in the corner of a room and a body, with the face badly disfigured. The family says that Negar, who worked at the local prison, was eight months pregnant. Three armed men arrived at the home on Saturday and searched it before tying up family members, relatives say. The intruders were heard speaking Arabic, a witness said.

“Negar’s son has said that her mother was brutally murdered by the Taliban in front of the children and had her brain ripped out. This is Taliban 2.0. The United States and NATO let this happen,” said one.

On August 15, when the Taliban seized power, they tried to portray themselves as more tolerant than their global reputation suggests, but incidents of brutality and repression are still reported in parts of Afghanistan. Human rights groups have been documenting revenge killings, detentions and persecution of religious minorities. The Taliban have officially said that they will not seek retaliation against those who worked for the previous government.

“No hard feelings, no revenge,” was the message from the Taliban at their first press conference after they took power. But there is a widening gulf between the declarations of the Taliban and the message that comes from the streets where each Taliban has a weapon and controls his own corner.

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