From Yahoo/Reuters:
“UN says over 200 former Afghan military, officials killed
since Taliban takeover”
More than 200 members of Afghanistan's former military, law
enforcement and government have been killed since the Taliban took over, the
U.N. mission in Afghanistan said on Tuesday, despite a "general
amnesty" for old enemies. The mission said in a report it had recorded at
least 218 extrajudicial killings with links to the Taliban from their takeover
of Afghanistan in mid-2021 up to June. "In most instances, individuals
were detained by de facto security forces, often briefly, before being
killed," the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said.
Senior Taliban leaders have said there is an amnesty for
former government officials and members of the military by order of their
supreme leader. The Taliban-led foreign affairs ministry said in response to
UNAMA that it had not received reports of any cases of non-compliance with the
order and any cases that did occur would be investigated.
U.N. human rights chief Volker Turk said the killings were a
"betrayal of the people's trust" since the victims had been assured
they would not be targeted. U.N. rights office spokesperson Jeremy Laurence
said the scale of killings was "shocking" and expected the true count
to be higher. UNAMA said about half of the killings it recorded occurred in the
four months after the Taliban took over, as U.S.-backed foreign forces were
withdrawing, in August 2021, and 70 were recorded in 2022. "For the
majority of violations discussed in this report, there is limited information
regarding measures taken by the de facto authorities to investigate incidents
and hold perpetrators to account," UNAMA said, referring to the Taliban
administration. "The apparent impunity with which members of the de facto
authorities continue to commit human rights violations against former
government officials and ANDSF members is of serious concern," UNAMA said,
referring to the old Afghan National Defence and Security Forces.
In total, UNAMA had recorded 800 incidents of human rights
violations connected with the Taliban against former government employees and
military including arbitrary arrests, disappearance and torture. The majority
were against former members of the security forces and police, the mission
said. The Taliban-led foreign affairs ministry said their supreme spiritual
leader had issued the amnesty order and another order against torture or
ill-treatment of people in custody. It denied state sanctioned extra-judicial
killings or targeting people who fought in or worked for the foreign-backed
former government. "No military staff of the previous administration has
been arrested, detained or tortured because of his activities in the security
institutions," it said in a statement that the U.N. issued with its
report. "Those employees of the previous administration who joined the
opposition groups of the Islamic Emirate (the Taliban administration) or had
military activities to the detriment of the system, have been arrested and
introduced to judicial authorities."
^ It is not surprising that the Taliban has lied about the
General Amnesty. They have lied about everything else since regaining control –
especially Women’s Rights. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/un-says-over-200-former-063551802.html
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