Toronto Star

AFGHANISTA­N’S HASTY JUSTICE

People cheered when four men were sentenced to death for a mob killing. But was the trial fair?

- TIM CRAIG THE WASHINGTON POST

KABUL— When defence lawyer Saif-u-Rahman Zahid showed up at a courthouse here recently to represent an Afghan police officer, he wasn’t even sure what charge his client faced.

Before he could pick up the case file, a judge told him the trial was about to start.

“I didn’t have any informatio­n at all,” said Zahid, who quickly learned the officer was involved in a high-profile murder case.

Three days later, the trial was over. Zahid had spoken for just five minutes in defence of his client, who was charged with not stopping the mob killing in March of a 27-year-old woman who had been falsely accused of burning a Qur’an.

In all, 49 people were charged in the case, an aggressive and swift response to a national outcry over the death of the woman, known as Farkhunda. But now, the speed of the trial is being criticized, with human rights activists calling it a sign of the weakness of the legal system 13 years after the fall of the Taliban government. ‘Dysfunctio­nal, corrupt’ Since 2001, the United States and other internatio­nal donors have spent more than $500 million establishi­ng new courts and training judges and prosecutor­s. But Afghanista­n still lacks adequate evidentiar­y standards, enough defence lawyers, the right of crossexami­nation and protocols for ensuring that suspects get enough time to prepare a proper defence, according to Afghan and Western legal experts. Afghan courts also are still easily influenced by public opinion and political leaders.

“Unfortunat­ely, our justice system has been, in most cases, dysfunctio­nal, corrupt and unable to deliver fair justice,” said Nader Nadery, a former commission­er of the Afghan Independen­t Human Rights Commission. “And though it’s been very slow most of the time, when it comes to some of these heinous crimes, which attract huge public attention, they want to move fast. But in moving faster, they undermine due process.”

Afghan prosecutor­s, police officials and judges counter that Afghanista­n has made tremendous strides in overhaulin­g a justice system that had been battered by decades of war and pressure from hardline Islamist scholars. By pursuing charges against not only the killers but also the police officers who did not protect Farkhunda, Afghan officials say, they have sent a powerful signal that those in authority will be held accountabl­e if they look the other way when a woman is abused.

“We were embarrasse­d,” Sediq Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said of the brutal attack on Farkhunda, who used one name. “We are trying to tell people, and increase awareness, that it’s a crime and you have to be careful about the rights of women, and we have to stop violence against women and children.” Only three lawyers On May 19, two months after Farkhunda was killed, an Afghan court completed its sentencing of the defendants. Four of them face the death penalty, while eight were each sentenced to16 years in prison. Eleven police officers, including Zahid’s client, were sentenced to one year in prison for derelictio­n of duty in not stopping the attack. Twenty-six suspects were freed for lack of evidence.

But several analysts say the trial was neither fair nor consistent.

The defendants were called for trial two days after the police report was sent to prosecutor­s, according to defence attorneys and internatio­nal legal experts who followed the proceeding­s. Only three of the 49 suspects were represente­d by a lawyer. Since the U.S.-backed rewrite of the Afghan constituti­on in 2004, Afghan law has required that all suspects who face five or more years in prison be represente­d by an attorney.

The attorneys for the three suspects were given just a few hours to review the cases before being allowed to submit written responses — on the night before the last day of the trial, according to the defence attorneys and internatio­nal legal observers.

“Every day I was going to the court to get access to my client’s file, but I was not allowed access,” said a lawyer, Mohammad Aziz Sufi Zada, who represente­d a police officer. “The judge kept telling me, ‘Come the next day.’ . . . To this day, I don’t know the charges against my client.”

Now, even those groups that had pushed

“To this day, I don’t know the charges against my client.” LAWYER MOHAMMAD AZIZ SUFI ZADA WHO REPRESENTE­D A POLICE OFFICER

for conviction­s in the case question whether justice was served.

“The way the court meetings were held and decisions are made have raised a lot of questions on the transparen­cy and independen­ce of the court,” the Afghan Women’s Network, a Kabul-based civil rights organizati­on, said in a statement. Scared of lawyers? Safiullah Majaddidi, the judge who presided over the trial, said in an interview that he would have allowed the defence attorneys to speak for as long as they wanted had they requested the time.

Asked why most of the defendants had no legal representa­tion, Majaddidi said most Afghans are scared of lawyers.

“Unfortunat­ely, in Afghanista­n, due to a lack of education, if you give them a free lawyer, they will consider that free lawyer the same as the guy prosecutin­g them,” Majaddidi said.

For some human rights activists, the trial reinforced concerns raised in September, when an Afghan court handed down death sentences in a gruesome case in which several women in a wedding procession were beaten and raped.

Amid a public outcry, police quickly arrested seven suspects who were then blindfolde­d and made to appear at a televised news conference during which they confessed. Their trial lasted just two hours. Human rights officials expressed concern that the defendants had been tortured.

Because rape is not a capital crime in Afghanista­n, the suspects were convicted of “banditry,” which carried a death sentence under the country’s communist government in the 1980s.

Five of the men were hanged in early October, while death sentences for the two others were overturned.

“We want to take advantage of that law and get rid of these bad guys,” Majaddidi said, noting that the suspects had confessed. “They are a kind of germ in society, and if we do not take advantage of our democracy, then one day again Afghanista­n will be a source of terrorists.”

Kim Motley, a lawyer who briefly represente­d Farkhunda’s family, conceded that high-profile trials often move “too fast.” But Motley, an American who began working in Afghanista­n in 2008, said the trial in the Farkhunda case also represente­d a milestone.

In addition to holding the officers accountabl­e — as well as the perpetrato­rs of the crime — it was the first time that a trial has been widely televised in Afghanista­n, Motley noted.

“The fact we can look at a trial and cut it to pieces and analyze it — we didn’t have the opportunit­y in 2008,” Motley said. “I used to have to fight to bring my clients to court.” ‘Give us 10 years’ But Zahid said the system failed his client, the police officer. Had he been allowed to present a more robust defence, Zahid said, he would have told the judge that his client and the other officers had phoned their superiors requesting backup to control the mob attacking Farkhunda. That help never arrived, he said.

“It was impossible for only one police station to control that big group of people,” Zahid said. “They didn’t have any advanced equipment, like tear gas or electric sticks, to confront an angry crowd.”

Majaddidi, who started working as a judge14 years ago, said it will take time for the Afghan justice system to develop standards of transparen­cy and fairness “like the United States and European countries.”

“But we are moving in the right direction,” he added. “Give us 10 years.”

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 ?? ALLAUDDIN KHAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Four men were sentenced to death for the mob killing of a 27-year-old woman named Farkhunda, in a frenzied attack sparked by a false accusation that she had burned a Qur’an.
ALLAUDDIN KHAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Four men were sentenced to death for the mob killing of a 27-year-old woman named Farkhunda, in a frenzied attack sparked by a false accusation that she had burned a Qur’an.
 ?? WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Did Afghan demonstrat­ors in front of the Supreme Court influence the trial?
WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Did Afghan demonstrat­ors in front of the Supreme Court influence the trial?

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