I HAVE been troubled by suggestions that, as a result of the Innocence of Muslims movie, eight South Africans in Kabul, Afghanistan, have lost their lives; it is more correct to say that they died when a 20-year-old suicide bomber known only as Fatima drove a truck full of explosives into their van as they were being driven to the airport and they were blown to smithereens.
True, in claiming responsibility for the attack, an insurgent group, Hezb-i-Islami, said it was carried out to avenge this stupid film. "The bombing was in retaliation for the insult to our Prophet," a spokesman told a news agency.
But I suspect that, movie or not, Fatima was not long for this world, and was going to go out with a violent bang anyway. Hezb-i-Islami is reportedly the second largest insurgent bunch in Afghanistan after the Taliban and has been fighting the US-led troops and the government there for a decade or so.
The bombing was the second such suicide attack in ten days, and once again raised doubts about stability in the region as NATO accelerated a troop withdrawal plan ahead of a handover to Afghan authorities by the end of 2014. In other setbacks, more than 50 Western troops have been shot dead by their Afghan colleagues this year already. It is, accordingly, a dangerous place, and any foreigner working there is presumably aware of the risks in doing so.
Commentators have pointed out that it is extremely rare for women to carry out such attacks in Afghanistan. In fact, it's quite unusual to see women drivers in Kabul.
That, presumably, is another reason Fatima had to go; given the designated role of women in these fundamentalist societies, the notion of a female suicide bomber seems perversely progressive, and surely a blow to the morale of any self-respecting male jihadist. What next, one wonders; they'll be allowing girls to go to school?