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AFP
Kabul
Distressed Afghans held vigils on Thursday to mourn a beloved Japanese doctor who transformed barren swaths of eastern Afghanistan and spent decades caring for the sick, and to demand justice for his murder.
Tetsu Nakamura, 73, was shot to death Wednesday in Jalalabad, the main city in the eastern province of Nangarhar where he had worked since the 1980s. He was killed along with five Afghan guards and colleagues in an attack no-one has yet claimed, and which the Taliban condemned.
Even in a country inured to brutal violence and daily bloodshed, Nakamura’s killing came as a horrifying shock to many Afghans.
In Kabul, more than 100 people from across Afghan society held a candlelit vigil for Nakamura, holding signs calling him a “true hero”.
“Dr Nakamura was an icon of humanity,” said Hekmat, who only uses one name, an activist at the vigil.
“He was here for the kids and for many years to serve the Afghan people and provide them a sustainable livelihood.”
Nakamura had devoted 35 years of his life to healing Afghans and Pakistanis and eventually became an honourary citizen of his adopted home.
Nakamura had also issued stark warnings of the dangers of desertification in Afghanistan, and his organisation built wells and irrigation canals that changed dusty expanses of Nangarhar into green, tree-lined fields.
According to Japanese news agency Jiji Press, Nakamura’s family members were en route to Afghanistan from the western Japan city of Fukuoka. His wife and eldest daughter are expected to return home with his body next week, Jiji reported.
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06/12/2019
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