Kabul, Jan 7 : The Afghan policewoman suspected of
killing a U.S. contractor at police headquarters in Kabul suffered from mental
illness and was driven to suicidal despair by poverty, her children
said.
The woman was identified by authorities as Narges Rezaeimomenabad,
a 40-year-old grandmother and mother of three who moved here from Iran 10 years
ago and married an Afghan man.
She loaded a pistol in a bathroom at the
police compound, hid it in her long scarf and shot an American police trainer,
apparently becoming the first Afghan woman to carry out such an
attack.
Narges also tried to shoot police officials after killing the
American. Luckily for them, her pistol jammed. Her husband is also under
investigation.
Her son Sayed, 16, and daughter Fatima, 13, described how
they tried to call their parents 100 times after news broke of the shooting,
then waited in vain for them to come home.
They recalled Narges's severe
mood swings, and how at times she beat them and even pulled out a knife. But the
children said she was consistent in bemoaning poverty.
"She was usually
complaining about poverty. She was complaining to my father about our
conditions. She was saying that my father was poor," Sayid said in an interview
in their damp, cold two-room cement house.
On the floor beside him were
his mother's prescriptions and a thick plastic bag filled with pills she tried
to swallow to end the misery about a month ago. On another occasion, she cut her
wrist with a razor, Sayed said.
"My father was usually calm and sometimes
would say that she was guilty too because it wasn't a forced marriage. They fell
in love and got married."
There was no sign in their neighbourhood of the
billions of dollars of Western aid that have poured into Afghanistan since the
ouster of the Taliban in 2001, or of government investment.
The lane
outside their home stank of raw sewage.
Dirty, stagnant water filled
holes in dirt roads nearby, where children in tattered clothes played and
butchers stood by cow's hooves in shops choked by dust.
Afghanistan is
one of the world's poorest nations, with a third of its 30 million residents
living under the poverty line.
The sole distractions from the daily grind
appeared to be a deck of playing cards and a compact disc with songs from
Iranian pop singers, scattered on the floor of a room where Narges would lock
herself in and weep, or sit in silence.
At times, Narges would try to
focus on building her children's confidence, telling them to be guided by the
Muslim holy book, the Koran, to tackle life's problems.
Sayed and Fatima
said she never spoke badly of the U.S. presence in Afghanistan or of President
Hamid Karzai's government.
Neighbour Mohammad Ismail Kohistani was
dumbfounded to hear on the radio that Afghan officials were combing Narges'
phone records to try to determine whether al Qaeda or the Taliban could have
brainwashed her into carrying out a mission.
But he was acutely aware of
her mental problems and often heard her scream at her husband, whose low-level
job in the crime investigation unit of the police brought home little
cash.
Kohistani, who operates a small sewing shop with battered machines,
never imagined his neighbour could be accused of a high-profile attack that
raised new questions about the direction of an unpopular war.
"I became
very depressed and sad," said Kohistani, sitting on the floor few feet from a
tiny wood-burning stove in Narges's home, alongside family photographs and a
police training manual.
Fatima would often seek refuge in Kohistani's
house when her mother's behaviour became unbearable. "She did not hate us, but
usually she was angry and would not talk to us," said Fatima, her eyes moist
with tears.
Nevertheless, she missed her mother. The children were
staying with a cousin.
"I ask the government to free my mother, otherwise
our future will be destroyed," said Fatima.
Officials described it as
another "insider shooting", in which Afghan forces turn on Westerners they are
meant to be working with to stabilise the country. There have been over 52 such
attacks so far this year.
The shooting at the police headquarters may
have alarmed Afghanistan's Western allies. But some Afghans have grown numb to
the violence.
Kohistani's 70-year-old father Omara Khan, who sports a
white beard, sat twirling prayer beads beneath a photograph of Narges in a black
veil beside one of her husband.
Asked what he thought of the attack, he
laughed.
"This is common in Afghanistan," said Khan, who lived through
decades of upheaval, including the 10-year Soviet occupation and a civil war
that destroyed half of Kabul and killed some 50,000 civilians.
"People
are killed every day."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Mental illness, poverty haunted Afghan policewoman who killed American
Mental illness, poverty haunted Afghan policewoman who killed American
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