Euractiv.com with AFP Est. 2min 16-01-2023 Gunmen shot dead Mursal Abizada, an Afghan former lawmaker, and one of her bodyguards in the capital Kabul in a night-time attack at her home, police said on 15 January 2023. [Twitter] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Print Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Gunmen shot dead an Afghan former lawmaker and one of her bodyguards in the capital Kabul in a night-time attack at her home, police said on Sunday (15 January). Mursal Nabizada had been a member of parliament in the US-backed government that was overthrown by the Taliban in August 2021. “Nabizada, along with one of her bodyguards, was shot dead at her house,” Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said. Mursal Nabizada former MP ( A Pashtun Lady) from Laghman province is killed in her home in #Kabul, She couldn’t leave #Afghanistan after Taliban takeover & was staying in Kabul. Mursal was found dead at her home last night. She was shot in the head & chest. #PashtunLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/SxlnDxcJa4 — Khalid Amiri (@KhalidAmiri01) January 15, 2023 “The security forces have started a serious investigation into the incident,” he said, adding that a brother of the former lawmaker was also wounded in the attack, which took place during the night between Saturday and Sunday. Nabizada was a “fearless champion for Afghanistan”, former lawmaker Mariam Solaimankhil said on Twitter. “A true trailblazer – strong, outspoken woman who stood for what she believed in, even in the face of danger,” she wrote. “Despite being offered the chance to leave Afghanistan, she chose to stay and fight for her people,” she added. Nabizada, 32, hailed from the eastern province of Nangarhar, and had been elected as a member of parliament from Kabul in 2018. “I am sad and angry and want the world to know!” tweeted Hannah Neumann, a member of the European parliament, in response to the killing. “She was killed in darkness, but the Taliban build their system of gender apartheid in full daylight.” Women had worked in prominent positions across Afghan society in the two decades since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, with many becoming judges, journalists and politicians. Many women in such professions have fled the country, however, since the Taliban returned to power. Taliban authorities have rapidly squeezed women out of almost all areas of public life, banning them from secondary and higher education, public sector work and even from visiting public parks and baths. They have also ordered women to cover their bodies in public, ideally in an all-encompassing burqa. Read more with Euractiv Top US lawmaker objects to potential F-16 sale to TurkeyThe Biden administration has told Congress it is preparing the potential $20 billion sale of F-16 fighter jets to Turkey, sources familiar with the matter said on Friday (13 January), sparking an immediate objection from a senior US lawmaker.