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Police Open Fire on Afghan University Riots 

Police opened fire on student crowds shouting "death to the student killers" 

KABUL, November 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Police opened fire Tuesday, November 12, on several thousand students rioting in the Afghan capital against the police handling of an earlier riot in which at least one student was killed. 

Crowds shouting "death to the student killers" were advancing on riot police armed with batons when the police turned water cannon on them, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The students retaliated with stones and police opened fire, initially in the air. Some were seen shooting into the student crowd, according to AFP. It was not immediately clear if there were any fresh casualties.

According to BBC News Online, eyewitnesses near Kabul University say gunshots could still be heard, indicating the situation was not brought under control Tuesday.

"All we're trying to do is contain them to the university right now, we can't stop it," intelligence chief, Abdul-Karim said.

Earlier Tuesday, the students had taken to the streets in protest at police handling of a demonstration late Monday, November 11, against poor conditions at Afghanistan's main university.

Interior Minister Taj Wardak confirmed that at least one student died when police and soldiers were called in to break up the rock-throwing crowd, said AFP.

Officials said another seven were injured. Two military personnel were also injured.

"We asked them a logical question why they did not improve conditions. They answered us with bullets," one student told AFP.

Wardak, for his part, said an investigation had been ordered into the Monday night riot and the conditions in which the students are living.

"Their big mistake was to stage their protest at night. This has never happened before in the history of Kabul. They threw rocks at everything, every car in the area," he said.

On Monday, November 11, a protest against poor conditions at Afghanistan's main university turned violent as police were called in to break up a crowd of stone-throwing students.

Ministry of Interior spokesman Paktia Wal said the students were voicing anger at conditions in dormitories on the campus of Kabul's university, which they say are hampering their studies.

But the spokesman, who had just returned from the campus with Wardak, denied reports that police fired on the crowd, killing several students.

Wal said the students were voicing anger at conditions in dormitories on the campus of Kabul's university, which they say are hampering their studies.

"The students have had some problems, they have no electricity and nothing to keep them warm, that's why they had this demonstration.

"There was a demonstration, I just came from the university with the Minister of Interior. I do not think anybody was killed or injured by police; as far as I know, there was no firing by police," he said.

"The students have had some problems, they have no electricity and nothing to keep them warm, that's why they had this demonstration."

This week, Afghanistan's Education Ministry ordered that medical students would shortly have to sit end-of-year exams, despite appeals to delay the tests because of recent bad weather.

Some 3,000 students, mostly from the country's poor outlying provinces, have protested that without electricity they are unable to study at night or keep warm in the large, poorly-insulated university dormitories.

 

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