The Guardian Australia

Afghans outraged at image of Australian soldier drinking from prosthetic leg

- Akhtar Mohammad Makoii

Afghan civil society leaders have reacted with disgust to photograph­s of an Australian special forces soldier drinking alcohol from the prosthetic leg of a slain Taliban fighter.

Images published by the Guardian on Tuesday showed a senior soldier who is still enlisted in the Australian Defence Force drinking beer from the leg in an unofficial bar on a base in Tarin Kowt, the capital of Uruzgan province, in 2009.

Other pictures show soldiers appearing to dance with the leg, taken from a suspected Taliban fighter killed in a raid the same year, and which the squadron took with them as they were redeployed in Afghanista­n, according to a former trooper.

“It is the most disgusting, shocking and horrific image I’ve ever seen,” Hayatullah Fazly, a member of the provincial council in Uruzgan, told the Guardian, speaking on the phone from his office in Tarin Kowt.

“It is more painful when you consider that [the soldiers] were here to help us and make us feel safe. It’s shameful.”

The publicatio­n of the images follows the release last week of a redacted four-year inquiry into Australian special forces’ conduct in Afghanista­n that linked soldiers to the murders of 39 prisoners and civilians and cruel treatment of two other Afghans.

It also found “credible informatio­n” that 25 serving or former ADF personnel were involved in serious crimes or at least had been accessorie­s to them. None of the alleged victims were combatants.

One alleged incident, heavily redacted in the report, is described as “possibly the most disgracefu­l episode in Australia’s military history”.

A special investigat­or’s office has been set up to prosecute the alleged crimes detailed in the report.

Zabiullah Farhang, a spokesman for the Afghan Independen­t Human Rights Commission, said the photos showed Australian soldiers “had no respect for the life of Afghans here”.

“This a true violation of internatio­nal human rights and also it is a war crime. We welcome the Australian prime minister’s efforts in creating an [office] to investigat­e it, this will help in discoverin­g more crimes.

“We ask the Australian government to hear and accept the demands of victims … [to help in] bringing the responsibl­e to justice. The special committee should also facilitate a way in which the victims can directly contact them,” he said.

Patricia Gossman, the associate Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said prosecutor­s needed to “investigat­e up the chain of command” and hold senior officers criminally liable if they knew, or should have known, about the alleged crimes and failed to prevent them or punish those responsibl­e.

“The Afghan government should speak up for the victims and demand a thorough and independen­t investigat­ion of all alleged crimes, prose

cutions of those responsibl­e, and adequate and swift compensati­on to the Afghans harmed by these crimes,” Gossman said.

The behaviour documented in the report and the images would strengthen Taliban propaganda without a robust mechanism for accountabi­lity, said Hassan Anwari, a civil activist in the town of Balkh.

“Looking at such atrocities done under the name of internatio­nal coalition forces will increase our distrust against them and raises the possibilit­y that forces of other countries may also have done such things to our people,” he said. “It will also strengthen the Taliban in their propaganda against internatio­nal forces. I strongly ask the responsibl­e bodies to look into it.”

 ??  ?? A senior Australian soldier drinks beer from a prosthetic leg thought to belong to a Taliban fighter killed by special forces in Afghanista­n. Photograph: Supplied
A senior Australian soldier drinks beer from a prosthetic leg thought to belong to a Taliban fighter killed by special forces in Afghanista­n. Photograph: Supplied

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia