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Then-president Hamid Karzai called for the men to be hanged even before their trial was held last month, and he signed their death sentences shortly before leaving office a week ago.
The armed gang members, wearing police uniforms, stopped a convoy of cars returning to Kabul at night from a wedding in Paghman, a scenic spot near the capital popular with day-trippers.
The attackers tied up men in the group before raping at least four of the women and stealing valuables from their victims.
They were found guilt at a nationally-televised trial that lasted only two hours, and the sentences were quickly confirmed by the appeals court and the Supreme Court.
“The court’s verdict on the execution of five men guilty in the Paghman robbery and rape case will be implemented tomorrow,” Atta Mohammad Noori, chief of staff at the attorney general’s office, told AFP Tuesday.
“It is set to happen, unless there is a last-minute change in the decision.”
The August 23 crime has become a symbol of the violence that women face in Afghanistan, despite reforms since the Taliban era.
But the court process raised major concerns over Afghanistan’s justice system.
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