Afghan president cuts short speech after disturbance

September 10, 2007 - 0:0

KABUL (AFP) -- Afghan President Hamid Karzai cut short a speech to thousands of people in Kabul on Sunday after what one official said was a commotion outside the venue caused by thousands of people trying to enter.

Karzai, who has survived two assassination attempts, abruptly wrapped up the address after a bodyguard spoke to him, and ended the ceremony at the city's main stadium in honor of Soviet-era resistance commander Ahmad Shah Massoud.
""Dear brothers and sisters, with respect to everybody, we are finishing our ceremony here,"" the president said and left the stage, followed by other dignitaries.
An AFP journalist said noises from outside the stadium sounded like gunshots, but witnesses said they were caused by people throwing stones at a metal gate because they wanted to enter.
Defense Ministry spokesman Zahir Azimi told AFP ""thousands"" of people had been pushing the gates and throwing stones, demanding to be let into the venue.
The event was to commemorate the sixth anniversary of the killing of Massoud, who was assassinated by Al-Qaeda operatives on September 9, 2001 in what was Afghanistan's first suicide bombing.
A few hundred young men later shouted slogans against ""enemies"" of Massoud, who was perhaps the most internationally recognized leader of the resistance to the 1980s Soviet occupation and the 1996-2001 Taleban regime.
Kabul's already tight security is usually stepped up even further for major events, amid fears of attack by Taleban insurgents.