Houston Chronicle

Accused of rape and torture, exiled Afghan vice president returns

- By Rod Nordland

KABUL, Afghanista­n — After more than a year in exile, Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum returned to his native Afghanista­n on Sunday facing criminal charges of rape and kidnapping, as well as accusation­s of brutality, human rights abuses and killing his first wife.

Dostum also remains the country’s first vice president.

Waiting to greet him Sunday at Kabul’s internatio­nal airport was a government delegation and, apparently, a suicide bomber.

An array of top officials met his plane and, despite the criminal charges against him, they gave him safe passage — not to jail, but to his office and home, in a deal that Afghan officials have said was negotiated by President Ashraf Ghani in the wake of widespread protests and unrest among his fellow Uzbeks.

Moments after he left the airport, however, a suicide bomber detonated explosives at the traffic circle at the exit, killing 20 people, including nine members of a security detail assigned to Dostum, and wounding 90 others, according to police and health officials.

“Just as we passed the roundabout, we heard a boom. I said, ‘Oh God,’” Dostum told a crowd of thousands of supporters gathered outside his office in downtown Kabul to cheer his return.

“I pray that all the wounded survive,” Dostum said.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the suicide attack, according to SITE, the extremist monitoring group.

His supporters dismissed the many charges against Dostum.

“He is a leader who has millions of supporters,” Mullah Mohammad Qasim said. “All of those allegation­s against him are baseless lies.”

The government insisted that the criminal charges remained active, even though they date from November 2016 and have resulted in no arrests.

Dostum and nine of his bodyguards are accused of abducting a political opponent, Ahmad Ishchi, and of beating and raping him repeatedly.

Dostum is accused of war crimes, including allowing his men to suffocate thousands of Taliban prisoners in locked truck containers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States