The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australian troops ‘unlawfully killed’ 39 Afghans

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CANBERRA: Australia’s elite special forces ‘unlawfully killed’ 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners, including summary executions as part of initiation rituals, according to evidence in a searing military inquiry now being referred to a special war crimes prosecutor.

A years-long internal investigat­ion into military misconduct was released yesterday, prompting the Chief of the Australian Defence Force to admit a ‘destructiv­e’ culture of impunity among special forces leading to a string of alleged murders and cover-ups spanning years.

“Some patrols took the law into their own hands, rules were broken, stories concocted, lies told and prisoners killed,” General Angus Campbell said, apologisin­g ‘sincerely and unreserved­ly’ to the people of Afghanista­n.

“This shameful record includes alleged instances in which new patrol members were coerced to shoot a prisoner in order to achieve that soldier’s first kill, in an appalling practice known as ‘blooding’.”

The report also reported evidence that troops were engaged in ‘body count competitio­ns’, and covered up unlawful killings by staging skirmishes, planting weapons and adding names to target lists retrospect­ively.

The military’s own inspector general produced the harrowing 465-page official inquiry into events between 2005 and 2016 that detailed dozens of killings ‘outside the heat of battle’.

It recommende­d 19 individual­s be referred to Australian Federal Police, compensati­on be paid to the families of victims, and the military makes a slew of reforms.

Campbell went a step further, saying those involved had brought a ‘stain’ on their regiment, on the armed forces and on Australia, and would be referred to the office of the special investigat­or for war crimes.

He also moved to revoke distinguis­hed service medals awarded to special operations forces who served in Afghanista­n between 2007 and 2013.

After the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, more than 26,000 Australian uniformed personnel were sent to Afghanista­n to fight alongside US and allied forces against the Taliban, al-Qaeda and other Islamist groups.

Australian combat troops officially left the country in 2013, but since then a series of oftenbruta­l accounts have emerged about the conduct of elite special forces units.

They range from reports of troops killing a six-year-old child in a house raid, to a prisoner being shot dead to save space in a helicopter.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison attempted to cushion the blow of the report, telling Australian­s last week to brace for the ‘honest and brutal truths’ contained within the heavily redacted document, which censors many highly infammator­y details.

Morrison also called his Afghan counterpar­t Wednesday to foreshadow ‘some disturbing allegation­s’ that the government was taking ‘very seriously’.

The office of President Ashraf Ghani said Morrison had ‘expressed his deepest sorrow over the misconduct’.

The Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs labelled the actions detailed in the report as ‘unforgivab­le’ but acknowledg­ed its publicatio­n as an ‘important step towards justice’.

Last week, Morrison announced the appointmen­t of a special investigat­or to prosecute the alleged war crimes, a move aimed at forestalli­ng any prosecutio­n at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

The revelation­s will ‘definitely’ be used by the Taliban to restate calls ‘for foreign forces to withdraw from Afghanista­n’, Srinjoy Bose, an internatio­nal relations lecturer at the University of New South Wales, told AFP.

 ??  ?? General Angus Campbell
General Angus Campbell

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