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The murder of Farkhunda Malikzada was committed by a Muslim mob in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 19 March 2015. [1] Malikzada, a 27-year-old Afghan woman, had been involved in an argument with a street vendor over his practice of selling amulets when he publicly accused her of burning the Quran, attracting a large group of people from the Shah-Do Shamshira Mosque. [2]
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Hazara people make up the second or the third largest ethnic group in Afghanistan, making about 20%–25% of the total population of Afghanistan (Some suggest the real population might reach 30%) where they mainly inhabit the Hazaristan region, [1] as well as parts of Pakistan (especially Balochistan) and Iran.
Rod Serling wrote the teleplay, [2] [1] and John Frankenheimer directed. [2] [1] Rod Steiger and William Shatner starred. Serling originally wrote the story about the lynching of a young African-American in the Southern United States. Due to objections from the program's commercial sponsors, who were concerned with offending white Southern ...
The episode was very well received among critics. It currently holds a perfect 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. [3] The A.V. Club writers Zack Handlen and Emily VanDerWerff gave the episode an A rating. [4] Another positive review came from IGN writer Roth Cornet, who gave the episode a 9.0/10 "amazing" rating. [5]
This is a list of characters in the television series Spooks (known as MI-5 in some countries) is a British television spy drama series. It originally aired its first run on BBC One , for 10 series, from 13 May 2002 to 23 October 2011.
Robert "Bobby" Wade Nash (Peter Krause) is the Captain of Station 118 of the Los Angeles Fire Department and later Athena's husband. A recovering alcoholic, before arriving in Los Angeles Bobby lived in Minnesota where his wife and two children died in a fire caused by a faulty propane heater (which he had been using while he was drunk in an empty apartment of the building they were living in ...
The A.V. Club's Emily VanDerWerff gave "Crossfire" a "B" grade, and felt that the editing was lacking in an otherwise good episode. [3] Cinema Blend's Jesse Carp was disappointed with the episode, finding Brody's motivations to be unconvincing and the CIA's storyline to be inconsequential. [4]