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Bodies of 3 Chinese Workers Found in a Kabul Apartment | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
KABUL, Afghanistan — Three Chinese workers were found dead under mysterious circumstances in an apartment in central Kabul on Friday, officials said, prompting the Chinese Embassy to urge the Afghan government to investigate to determine whether its citizens were specifically targeted. | KABUL, Afghanistan — Three Chinese workers were found dead under mysterious circumstances in an apartment in central Kabul on Friday, officials said, prompting the Chinese Embassy to urge the Afghan government to investigate to determine whether its citizens were specifically targeted. |
The police, who could offer only scant details of the killings late Friday, said an argument between the Chinese workers and several Afghans had led to the killings of two Chinese women, one Chinese man and an Afghan security guard. | |
The head of criminal investigations for the Kabul police, Gen. Mohammad Zahir, said that the bodies were discovered Friday morning, but that it was unclear when they had been killed. He added that he believed that the women were prostitutes and that the deaths did not appear to be politically motivated. Two other Chinese living in the apartment are missing, he said. | |
The Chinese authorities said in a statement on Friday that they were trying to determine the nature of the attacks, according to the China News Service, a state-run news agency. | The Chinese authorities said in a statement on Friday that they were trying to determine the nature of the attacks, according to the China News Service, a state-run news agency. |
“The incident is still under investigation, and it remains unclear whether Chinese people were specifically targeted,” said the report, citing a statement from the embassy. | “The incident is still under investigation, and it remains unclear whether Chinese people were specifically targeted,” said the report, citing a statement from the embassy. |
The Chinese Embassy in Kabul did not answer repeated phone calls Friday night. It was difficult to learn more about the deaths, because much of Kabul is shut down for the Islamic holiday of Id al-Fitr, which celebrates the end of the holy month of fasting for Muslims. | |
While Afghanistan is an ultraconservative Islamic country, prostitutes in the larger cities are not unheard-of. Brothels operate in hotels and within an informal network of residences, where prostitutes and clients are connected by cellphone. Often, women are put in touch with customers who meet them in residences and guesthouses, a method that has been far more difficult for the police to track. | |
The ethnic origins of prostitutes here vary. Some are Afghan, others are Chinese, and many arrive from the former Soviet countries to the north, like Uzbekistan. | |
Still, there was no evidence that the Chinese workers killed in the attack were involved in the sex trade. The owner of the apartment where they lived, Sher Ali, said he was unsure what the renters did. Mr. Ali said he had signed the rental agreement for $450 a month with a Chinese Muslim, a man the landlord thought to be pious. The landlord said that man had since been picked up for questioning by agents he believed to be with the Afghan intelligence service. | |
“All I know is that the man I rented the apartment to was a good Muslim,” Mr. Ali said Friday night at the scene, in the neighborhood of Kolola Pushta, an informal business district. | “All I know is that the man I rented the apartment to was a good Muslim,” Mr. Ali said Friday night at the scene, in the neighborhood of Kolola Pushta, an informal business district. |
For China, the deaths are a sad reminder of the instability on its doorstep if security in Afghanistan deteriorates. Since last year, the Chinese government has signaled that it is paying greater attention to Afghanistan ahead of the withdrawal of NATO forces in 2014. While the country shares only a sliver of a border with Afghanistan, officials in Beijing worry about risks to broader regional stability that could ripple into Xinjiang, a western region of China where the largely Muslim Uighur population has chafed at Communist Party controls. | For China, the deaths are a sad reminder of the instability on its doorstep if security in Afghanistan deteriorates. Since last year, the Chinese government has signaled that it is paying greater attention to Afghanistan ahead of the withdrawal of NATO forces in 2014. While the country shares only a sliver of a border with Afghanistan, officials in Beijing worry about risks to broader regional stability that could ripple into Xinjiang, a western region of China where the largely Muslim Uighur population has chafed at Communist Party controls. |
Chinese businessmen, restaurant owners and investors are no strangers to turbulent parts of the world, and Afghanistan is no exception. In recent years, flights from China to Afghanistan have been crowded with fortune seekers looking to sell goods and services that remain scarce in Afghanistan. The neighborhood surrounding the apartment building where the Chinese workers were killed is filled with Chinese-run stores selling a wide range of building materials. | |
But China’s larger promised investments in Afghanistan have been troubled. In 2008, two Chinese state-owned companies won the rights to the potentially huge Aynak copper mine in Afghanistan, but the start of production has been put off repeatedly because of threats from insurgents and the discovery of an ancient Buddhist archaeological site sitting atop the copper deposits. | But China’s larger promised investments in Afghanistan have been troubled. In 2008, two Chinese state-owned companies won the rights to the potentially huge Aynak copper mine in Afghanistan, but the start of production has been put off repeatedly because of threats from insurgents and the discovery of an ancient Buddhist archaeological site sitting atop the copper deposits. |
Chris Buckley contributed reporting from Hong Kong. | Chris Buckley contributed reporting from Hong Kong. |
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