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Six killed while praying after gunman storms Afghanistan mosque

Six killed while praying after gunman storms Afghanistan mosque

  • GettyImages-2150304433.jpg
GettyImages-2150304433.jpg© AFP via Getty Images

At least six people, including a child, were killed in Afghanistan’s Herat province after a gunman stormed a mosque, a Taliban official said on Tuesday.

he victims were offering prayers at the time of attack in the mosque which likely came under attack because it was a place of worship for the minority Shia Muslim community. The mosque’s imam was also among those killed, local media reports said.

An attacker entered the mosque and opened fire on Monday night in the Guzara district of northern Herat province, said Abdul Mateen Qani, a spokesperson for the Taliban’s Interior Ministry. The Taliban’s officials have launched an investigation, he added.

Another person was wounded in the attack when the attacker fled the mosque after opening fire, local reports said.

It is not immediately clear if the attacker belonged to any terrorist or militant group. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai condemned the attack on X: “I strongly condemn the attack on the Imam Zaman Mosque in Guzara district of Herat province.”

“I consider this terrorist act to be against all religious and human standards. I have expressed my deepest condolences to the families of the victims of this tragic incident,” the former Afghan president said.

The attack was also condemned by other officials in the region.

“UNAMA condemns last night’s attack on a Shia mosque in Herat which killed and wounded at least 7, including a child. As stated in UNAMA reporting: Investigations and accountability for perpetrators and protection measures for #Afghanistan’s Shi’a communities are urgently needed,” the United Nation Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said on X, formerly Twitter.

Afghanistan has seen a surge in terror attacks in the recent months after the Taliban took control of the country in August 2021 post the exit of the US and Nato forces.

The Taliban’s biggest rival in the region, Islamic State – Khorasan Province – an Isis affiliate, has frequently targeted and attacked schools, hospitals and mosques in Afghanistan after the departure of the US and Nato forces. 

  • Story by Arpan Rai: The Independent: 

St George’s Day 2024: Date, meaning and who England’s patron saint was

St George’s Day 2024: Date, meaning and who England’s patron saint was

You can expect to see more St George's flags than usual flying across England this weekend (Photo: Getty)

You can expect to see more St George's flags than usual flying across England this weekend (Photo: Getty)© Provided by The i

On Tuesday the patron saint of England will be celebrated as St George’s Day is observed.

Also known as the Feast of Saint George, the saint whose story involves slaying a dragon and rescuing a princess in the process, is also marked in Catalonia, the region of Aragon in Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Russia.

Here is everything you need to know regarding this year’s dates, the significance of the day and how the feast is celebrated, explained.

When is St George’s Day 2024?

St George’s Day is marked on 23 April every year, which this year falls on a Tuesday.

St George was thought to have died in AD303 after he was born sometime around the year AD280. It is believed that he was executed on this day for refusing to make a sacrifice in honour of the pagan gods during the persecutions of emperor Diocletian, making him a Christian martyr.

St George’s tomb can still be found in the Christian pilgrimage site of Lod, in modern-day Israel.

However, despite some protests, St George’s Day is not a bank holiday unlike St Patrick’s Day in Northern Ireland, and St Andrew’s Day in Scotland, meaning schools and businesses will open as usual on 23 April.

Who was St George?

Much mystery sounds the figure of St George due to lacking historical information. However, it is thought he was a soldier who fought in the Roman army and climbed the ranks to become personal guard to emperor Diocletian.

Contrary to common thought, St George was likely born in Cappadocia, modern-day Turkey, and died in Lydda, now Israel.

According to the saint’s popular story, he slayed a dragon and saved a princess in the tale found in Jacobus de Vorgine’s The Golden Legend, a 13th century selection of stories about the lives of saints.

According to the legend the only well in Silene, a town in Libya, was guarded by a dragon who required a daily human sacrifice for the townspeople to get water.

On the day of St George’s visit, the town’s inhabitants had selected a princess to be sacrificed.

But St George came to the rescue, slaying the dragon and saving the princess’s life, giving the people of Silene access to water before the town all then converted to Christianity as a sign of their gratitude to their hero.

How is St George’s Day celebrated?

In 1415 St George’s Day was made a national feast day and thus a holiday in England, and this continued until the 18th century.

Yet, since the Act of Union between England and Scotland in 1707 St George’s Day celebrations diminished.

Today, in the UK and other regions that observe the feast, flags bearing the St George’s cross are traditionally flown on houses and buildings, especially pubs, and people may display the symbol on a button or patch.

Pinning a rose blossom to your lapel or pocket is also a tradition, as it is associated with the saint’s death.

St George’s Day parades and medieval-themed festivals are common across England, while many pubs usually hold celebratory events and promotions. 

Story by Emilia Randall: The I 

18 Everyday Things Amish Women Aren’t Allowed to Do

   

18 Everyday Things Amish Women Aren’t Allowed to Do

18 Everyday Things Amish Women Aren’t Allowed to Do

The Amish culture is known for its simple way of life and adherence to traditional values.
While this lifestyle may seem appealing to some, there are certain restrictions that Amish women face that most modern women do not.
Take a look at these things that we take for granted that are off-limits to Amish women.
  • Story by Katy Willis: The Puzzlarium

Russian priest who led Alexei Navalny’s memorial service mysteriously suspended by Moscow church

Russian priest who led Alexei Navalny’s memorial service mysteriously suspended by Moscow church

FILES-RUSSIA-POLITICS-OPPOSITION-MEMOIR-NAVALNY

FILES-RUSSIA-POLITICS-OPPOSITION-MEMOIR-NAVALNY© AFP via Getty

A Russian priest who led the memorial service for the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been suspended for three years.

Dmitry Safronov, the Orthodox priest who presided over the service on 26 March, has been suspended from clerical duties by the Moscow Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church without specifying a reason, Reuters reported.

Navalny, Vladimir Putin’s most prominent critic, died in an Arctic penal colony in February. He was 47.

Navalny’s supporters claimed that he was murdered, an allegation denied by the Kremlin.

“Priest Dimitri Safronov, a cleric of the Church of the Intercession of the Holy Virgin on Lyschikova Hill in Moscow, is released from the duty of obedience, is prohibited from the priesthood for a period of three years without the right to give a blessing, wear a cassock and a priestly cross and is sent for three years to the church of St Pimen the Great in New Collars in Moscow to perform the duties of a psalmist and fulfil those assignments which the abbot will determine for him,” a statement signed by the Russian Orthodox Church’s head Patriarch Kirill and published on its website read, according to Haberler.

“At the end of the period of penance, based on feedback from the place of obedience, a decision will be made on the possibility of his further priestly service.”

More details about the priest were not immediately available.

Navalny died while he was serving a 19-year prison sentence on extremism charges that he had denounced as politically motivated. He was jailed after returning from Germany in January 2021 where he was recuperating from a 2020 nerve agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin.

Navalny’s memoir, which he started writing in 2020, is slated for publication in October. Titled Patriot and published by Alfred A Knopf, it has been described as the opposition leader’s “final letter to the world”.

Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, said in a statement released early this month by the publisher: “This book is a testament not only to Alexei’s life but to his unwavering commitment to the fight against dictatorship – a fight he gave everything for, including his life.”

Additional reporting with agencies

  • Story by Maroosha Muzaffar: The Independent

 

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