[9][4] In reaction, on 11 November 2015, 2,000–20,000[4][8] protestors marched 10 km (6.2 mi) through Kabul carrying the coffins of the seven victims to the presidential palace, Arg.
[5] The 11 November protest was self-managed and calm, with human chains formed at the sides of the march to leave pavements available for non-participating pedestrians.
[4] Several demonstrations with similar demands calling for improved security took place around Afghanistan in the days following the 11 November Kabul protest.
[5][1] Tabassum organisers, including Khadim Karimi, contacted activists of non-Hazara ethnic groups to encourage them to participate together in the protests.
[1] Alizada objected to patriarchal language, with women protesting in Nangarhar with posters stating "Hazara and Pashtun are brothers" (Dari: هزاره و پشتون برادر, Hazara wa Pashtun baradar) and pamphlets in Kabul addressing potential participants as "brother".