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2020 education center attack. On October 25, 2020, a suicide bomber detonated in the street outside of the Kawsare Danish center, an education centre in a heavily Shia Hazara neighborhood in the Pule Khoshk area of Dashte Barchi in western Kabul. At least 30 were killed and 70 [51] more were injured in the attack.
Deaths. At least 2,000, likely many more. Perpetrator. Taliban. The 1998 Mazar-i-Sharif massacre took place in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan in 1998. At least 2,000 victims were murdered by the Taliban, with Human Rights Watch estimating that the actual number of victims may be much higher. [2]
Part of the insurgency in Balochistan, Sectarian violence in Pakistan, and the persecution of Hazara people: Location: Machh, Balochistan, Pakistan: Date: 3 January 2021: Deaths: 11: Perpetrator: Islamic State – Khorasan Province: Motive: Anti-Shi'ism, Islamic extremism
9 Hazara men killed: Taliban used torture and extrajudicial executions to commit the massacre. January to June 2021 Attacks on the Hazara community: Throughout Afghanistan: Taliban, ISKP, Anonymous terrorist groups 143 killed and 357 injured: 2022: Kaaj girl school bombing Kabul, Afghanistan Unknown Alleged Taliban involvement ISKP
As revenge, Taliban forces captured Mazar-i-Sharif and killed hundreds of Northern Alliance members, particularly members of the Hazara and Uzbek ethnic groups as they were accused of being the ones who carried out the killings of Taliban prisoners. [citation needed] Incident. On 8 August 1998, Taliban forces captured Mazar-i-Sharif.
8 August 1998: 1400 soldiers from the Hazara army, and additional 8000+ noncombatants killed. The Battles of Mazar-i-Sharif were a part of the Afghan Civil War and took place in 1997 and 1998 between the forces of Abdul Malik Pahlawan and his Hazara allies, Junbish-e Milli-yi Islami-yi Afghanistan, and the Taliban .
September 2022 Kabul school bombing. On September 30, 2022, a suicide bomber blew himself up at the Kaaj education center in Dashte Barchi, a Hazara neighborhood in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing at least 52 and 110 injured [2] [3] The majority of the victims were young female students. [4] [5] [6]
There is a famous story of 40 Hazara girls in Uruzgan committing suicide to escape sex slavery during the persecution. 30 mule loads; or roughly over 400 decapitated Hazara heads were allegedly sent to Kabul. The Sultan Ahmad Hazara tribe of Uruzgan was in particular severely persecuted.
More than half of the Hazara population was massacred by the Emirate of Afghanistan between 1888 and 1893, and their persecution has occurred various times across previous decades.
2011 Hazara Town shooting refers to a massacre of Hazara people on 6 May 2011 in Hazara Town, Quetta, Pakistan which left 8 dead and at least 15 wounded. The shooting took place early in the morning around 0630 hrs Pakistan Standard Time in a park when people were doing morning-exercises, playing cricket and football.