Hundreds Gather To Commemorate Afghan Woman Lynched By Mob

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WATCH: A human rights group in Kabul staged a reenactment of the brutal beating of Farkhunda Malikzada, who was killed by an angry mob one year ago. The 27-year-old student of Islamic law was pummeled to death and her body was burned after she was falsely accused of destroying a copy of the Koran. (RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan)

Hundreds of Afghans have taken to the streets in Kabul to commemorate the death anniversary of a woman killed by a mob.

In March last year, a Kabul mob brutally attacked 27-year-old Farkhunda Malikzada outside a shrine in the Afghan capital, after one of the men in the group shouted that she had burned a Koran, the Muslim holy book -- an accusation that was later found to be false.

The brutal slaying stunned the country and led to calls for reform of the judicial system, long plagued by corruption, partisanship and incompetence -- and stronger protection for women from violence.

Hundreds of people, some wearing masks bearing an impression of her bloodied face, rallied to demand justice for Farkhunda on March 17.

Protesters, some with fake blood on their faces, chanted "Justice for Farkhunda!" on the banks of Kabul River where the frenzied mob turned on her.

Some demonstrators reenacted her grisly death, illustrating public anger over a Supreme Court ruling last week that upheld reduced sentences for the men convicted of her murder.

The court vacated the death penalty in four cases, reduced prison terms to 20 years in three others and 10 years in the fourth. It also cut the sentences of nine other defendants.

WATCH: The mother of a 27-year old Afghan woman who was beaten to death by a Kabul mob in March, says the brutality her daughter faced was "beyond imagination."

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'Brutality Beyond Imagination': Mother Speaks Of Daughter's Murder By Afghan Mob

With reporting by RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan and AFP