Mosa oletettavasti tietää mitä tekee, mutta hazaroilla ei kovin hyvin ole Talibanin aikana Afganistanissa mennyt:
https://thediplomat.com/2024/01/the-plight-of-hazaras-under-the-taliban-government/Undeniably, all communities in Afghanistan have suffered tremendously, but the Hazara minority has suffered disproportionately because of its distinct ethnic and religious identity. As an ethnoreligious minority, the Hazaras of Afghanistan have endured a long history of discrimination and systematic persecution. The Hazara community has suffered from enslavement, mass killings, and forced displacement throughout the modern history of Afghanistan. This suffering has continued into the present, aggravated alarmingly by the Taliban’s rise to power.
Since the Taliban took over in mid-August 2021, the situation has deteriorated because the group has not been able to, or is unwilling to, stop the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP) and other groups from attacking the Hazaras.
Following the Taliban’s conquest of Afghanistan, ISKP has intensified its operations against the Hazara community. According to Human Rights Watch, hundreds of Hazaras have been killed in suicide attacks in education centers, marketplaces, religious places, and on public transportation since the Taliban’s takeover. According to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), 49 Hazaras have been killed just in the past three months. Besides targeted attacks that ISKP claimed responsibility for, there was also “mysterious targeting of Hazaras” by unidentified and unknown perpetrators, which has added to the complexity of the security crisis. Unclaimed attacks encourage the unknown perpetrators to continue committing crimes without being blamed.
https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/09/13/afghanistans-hazara-community-needs-protectionThe Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), affiliated with ISIS, has claimed responsibly for killing 14 men in Daikundi province this week, the latest attack on the Hazara community in Afghanistan.
The killings took place in a remote border district between Daikundi, which has a predominantly Hazara population, and Ghor provinces, in central Afghanistan. The men were returning from a pilgrimage to Shia holy sites in Karbala, Iraq when gunmen opened fire on the group.
Since emerging in Afghanistan in 2015, ISKP has killed and injured thousands of Hazaras and members of other religious minorities in attacks targeting mosques, schools, and workplaces. After the Taliban took over Afghanistan in August 2021, ISKP has claimed responsibility for at least 17 attacks against Hazaras, killing and injuring more than 700 people.