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Harrowing accounts emerge of the Taliban’s reign of terror in Kunduz: Amnesty international

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Mass murder, gang rapes and house-to-house searches by Taliban death squads are just some of the harrowing civilian testimonies emerging from Kunduz as Afghan forces today claimed to have regained control of key areas of the northern city, Amnesty International said.

The organization has spoken to numerous people, the majority of them women, who have fled Kunduz since Monday, when the Taliban launched a sudden assault on the city. Women human rights defenders from Kunduz spoke of a “hit list” being used by the Taliban to track down activists and others, and described how fighters had raped and killed numerous civilians.

“The harrowing accounts we’ve received paint a picture of a reign of terror during the Taliban’s brutal capture of Kunduz this week. The multiple credible reports of killings, rapes and other horrors meted out against the city’s residents must prompt the Afghan authorities to do more now to protect civilians, in particular in areas where more fighting appears imminent,” said Horia Mosadiq, Afghanistan Researcher at Amnesty International.

“Heavy fighting continues as Afghan forces try to regain full control and restore law and order in Kunduz. Protecting civilians from further onslaught and serious abuses at the hands of the Taliban is of the utmost importance.

“Many humanitarian agencies have bravely continued their work in and around Kunduz over the past days. They must be granted access to carry out their life-saving work. With thousands forced from their homes, it is also crucial that all parties agree to a humanitarian corridor that allows civilians to leave the city safely.”

Taliban ‘hit list’

One woman who provides assistance to victims of domestic violence in Kunduz and escaped to safety in a nearby province told Amnesty International that Taliban fighters were using a “hit list” to track down their targets. It allegedly includes the names and photos of activists, journalists and civil servants based in Kunduz.

The woman said the Taliban’s roadblocks on exit routes from the city forced her and numerous other women and men to flee on foot. They trekked for more than seven hours over rough terrain, leaving them exhausted and with bloodied feet.

When the Taliban took control of the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and other government and NGO offices in Kunduz on Monday, they gained access to reams of information about NGO staff, government employees and members of the security forces – including addresses, phone numbers and photos.

Since then, Taliban fighters have allegedly been using young boys to help them to conduct house-to-house searches to locate and abduct their targets, including women.

Another woman human rights defender had her home and office burned and looted by Taliban on Tuesday night. Taliban fighters kept calling her to ask about the whereabouts of the women whom she had been helping.

She and several other women managed to receive assistance for themselves and their children to flee to safety. But she told Amnesty International she and her family escaped with nothing more than the clothes on their backs and were left terrified by the ordeal.

Mass murder and rape


According to local activists, Taliban fighters also raped female relatives and killed family members, including children, of police commanders and soldiers, especially those working for Afghan Local Police (ALP). The Taliban also burnt down the families’ houses and looted their belongings.

The relative of a woman who worked as a midwife in Kunduz maternity hospital told Amnesty International how Taliban fighters gang-raped and then killed her and another midwife because they accused them of providing reproductive health services to women in the city.

The Taliban released all the male prisoners held in Kunduz and gave them arms to fight against government forces. Female prisoners were raped and beaten, then the Taliban abducted some and released others.

An eyewitness told Amnesty International that a civilian woman in his neighbourhood had been shot amid fighting between Taliban and the Afghan security forces. Taliban fighters responded to her screams of pain by entering her house and shooting her point blank in the head, forcing her husband to watch her die.

“When the Taliban asserted their control over Kunduz, they claimed to be bringing law and order and Shari’a to the city. But everything they’ve done has violated both. I don’t know who can rescue us from this situation,” a female human rights defender from Kunduz told Amnesty International.

Fear of revenge attacks

As Afghan government forces regain control of Kunduz, Amnesty International calls on them not to retaliate against any captured or injured members of the Taliban. Any Taliban fighters suspected of serious violations of human rights or international humanitarian law must be investigated and prosecuted in fair trials without recourse to the death penalty.

“Breaking the cycle of violence and returning to the rule of law means ensuring that Afghan troops and authorities do not mete out revenge on any prisoners, which would amount to a war crime,” said Horia Mosadiq.

Afghanistan: Harrowing accounts emerge of the Taliban’s reign of terror in Kunduz | Amnesty International
 
I think it is nothing unexpected out of Taliban...I would have been surprised..if things could have been otherwise..
 
Mass murder, gang rapes and house-to-house searches by Taliban death squads are just some of the harrowing civilian testimonies emerging from Kunduz as Afghan forces today claimed to have regained control of key areas of the northern city, Amnesty International said.

The organization has spoken to numerous people, the majority of them women, who have fled Kunduz since Monday, when the Taliban launched a sudden assault on the city. Women human rights defenders from Kunduz spoke of a “hit list” being used by the Taliban to track down activists and others, and described how fighters had raped and killed numerous civilians.

“The harrowing accounts we’ve received paint a picture of a reign of terror during the Taliban’s brutal capture of Kunduz this week. The multiple credible reports of killings, rapes and other horrors meted out against the city’s residents must prompt the Afghan authorities to do more now to protect civilians, in particular in areas where more fighting appears imminent,” said Horia Mosadiq, Afghanistan Researcher at Amnesty International.

“Heavy fighting continues as Afghan forces try to regain full control and restore law and order in Kunduz. Protecting civilians from further onslaught and serious abuses at the hands of the Taliban is of the utmost importance.

“Many humanitarian agencies have bravely continued their work in and around Kunduz over the past days. They must be granted access to carry out their life-saving work. With thousands forced from their homes, it is also crucial that all parties agree to a humanitarian corridor that allows civilians to leave the city safely.”

Taliban ‘hit list’

One woman who provides assistance to victims of domestic violence in Kunduz and escaped to safety in a nearby province told Amnesty International that Taliban fighters were using a “hit list” to track down their targets. It allegedly includes the names and photos of activists, journalists and civil servants based in Kunduz.

The woman said the Taliban’s roadblocks on exit routes from the city forced her and numerous other women and men to flee on foot. They trekked for more than seven hours over rough terrain, leaving them exhausted and with bloodied feet.

When the Taliban took control of the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and other government and NGO offices in Kunduz on Monday, they gained access to reams of information about NGO staff, government employees and members of the security forces – including addresses, phone numbers and photos.

Since then, Taliban fighters have allegedly been using young boys to help them to conduct house-to-house searches to locate and abduct their targets, including women.

Another woman human rights defender had her home and office burned and looted by Taliban on Tuesday night. Taliban fighters kept calling her to ask about the whereabouts of the women whom she had been helping.

She and several other women managed to receive assistance for themselves and their children to flee to safety. But she told Amnesty International she and her family escaped with nothing more than the clothes on their backs and were left terrified by the ordeal.

Mass murder and rape


According to local activists, Taliban fighters also raped female relatives and killed family members, including children, of police commanders and soldiers, especially those working for Afghan Local Police (ALP). The Taliban also burnt down the families’ houses and looted their belongings.

The relative of a woman who worked as a midwife in Kunduz maternity hospital told Amnesty International how Taliban fighters gang-raped and then killed her and another midwife because they accused them of providing reproductive health services to women in the city.

The Taliban released all the male prisoners held in Kunduz and gave them arms to fight against government forces. Female prisoners were raped and beaten, then the Taliban abducted some and released others.

An eyewitness told Amnesty International that a civilian woman in his neighbourhood had been shot amid fighting between Taliban and the Afghan security forces. Taliban fighters responded to her screams of pain by entering her house and shooting her point blank in the head, forcing her husband to watch her die.

“When the Taliban asserted their control over Kunduz, they claimed to be bringing law and order and Shari’a to the city. But everything they’ve done has violated both. I don’t know who can rescue us from this situation,” a female human rights defender from Kunduz told Amnesty International.

Fear of revenge attacks

As Afghan government forces regain control of Kunduz, Amnesty International calls on them not to retaliate against any captured or injured members of the Taliban. Any Taliban fighters suspected of serious violations of human rights or international humanitarian law must be investigated and prosecuted in fair trials without recourse to the death penalty.

“Breaking the cycle of violence and returning to the rule of law means ensuring that Afghan troops and authorities do not mete out revenge on any prisoners, which would amount to a war crime,” said Horia Mosadiq.

Afghanistan: Harrowing accounts emerge of the Taliban’s reign of terror in Kunduz | Amnesty International

what barbarians -- I guess this is what u get when you mix illiterate thugs and religious fundamentalism
 
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The disgrace is that the Taliban started (at least according to the myth) when Mullah Omar heard of a girl who was abducted by a warlord and kept as a sex slave -- it is said that Mullah Omar rallied some fellow religious students and eventually freed the girl.

Perhaps it was a myth after all -- makes for a good story.
 
for 2-3 days forum was filled with taliban appologists (we all know who they are). where are they now?
 
for 2-3 days forum was filled with taliban appologists (we all know who they are). where are they now?

They are waiting. Someone will start a thread about how Pakistan is calling the shots in Afghan talks and then they will crawl out of the woodwork to brag about how they control the Taliban on a yo-yo.
 
for 2-3 days forum was filled with taliban appologists (we all know who they are). where are they now?

Morality only comes into the picture when it involves an individual person, however the statecraft of a nation suggest that decisions must be taken for the greater good. The NDS are supporting the TTP and its operations in the tribal areas of Pakistan, therefore its only natural that we return the favor in kind. The old Northern Alliance warlords purposely disrupted peace talks with the Taliban , by leaking the information that he was already dead. Now they can only blame themselves and I will guarantee you that the Afghan government will wish to continue the peace talks for a reconciliation. However by then the Taliban will speak from a position of strength and not weakness. Anyway who are you to lecture Pakistan, please continue your bullying tactics on Nepal and save your sermons for Sunday.
 
Hahaha now that you have been "Mercied-upon" by the mods, please worry about your health because whether it's a good taliban or bad, they both are bad for india.



RSS activist or not, he is right. "Good" Taliban/"bad" Taliban games are bad for everyone's health.
 
for 2-3 days forum was filled with taliban appologists (we all know who they are). where are they now?
Happens in every civil war. Happened in Russia, Spain, East Pakistan, Vietnam and everywhere else without someone labelling some group or side as terrorist.

Muktis did much worse and you guys supported them. It is better to look at your own behavior instead of pointing fingers at others.
 
Th
Hahaha now that you have been "Mercied-upon" by the mods, please worry about your health because whether it's a good taliban or bad, they both are bad for india.

They will march through Pakistan before they even try to enter India.....check out the OP article and see what would happen when they enter Pakistan. You can keep that Smile on your face and smirk when that happens.
 
Amnesty International often follows US and British policy agenda. They have made suspicious decisions several times in their history ( e.g, releasing damning accounts about a government as a spearhead to an upcoming US-backed coup)
Here is my source. Francis Boyle: Amnesty on Jenin

I am not saying Taliban are not capable of doing this. Anyone fighting a war is more than capable of engaging in genocide, rape and pillaging. But from a lot of reports I read in the past few days, Taliban had offered amnesty to any ANA soldiers who laid down their arms. And people were taking selfies with them in the streets, and all of this is from western newspapers.

But I guess only the people in Kunduz right now know the absolute truth.
 
The disgrace is that the Taliban started (at least according to the myth) when Mullah Omar heard of a girl who was abducted by a warlord and kept as a sex slave -- it is said that Mullah Omar rallied some fellow religious students and eventually freed the girl.

Perhaps it was a myth after all -- makes for a good story.
By all accounts Omar was a most honorable man besides I am no friend of the Taliban but one should always take these initial reports during the fog of war with a pinch of salt.kudos
 

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