The Denver Post

Report: 100-plus are dead or missing

- By Sharif Hassan

More than 100 former members of the Afghan security forces in four provinces have been killed or disappeare­d by the Taliban in the first 2K months of the militants’ rule, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch.

The deaths are part of a string of assassinat­ions and summary executions, largely considered revenge killings, that have been happening across Afghanista­n since the fall of Ashraf Ghani’s government in August.

The attacks underscore the dangers that Taliban critics, activists and members of the former government’s security forces face despite the Taliban announceme­nt when they seized power of a general amnesty for former government workers and military officials.

In a report released Tuesday, Human Rights Watch detailed the killing and forced disappeara­nce of 47 members of the former government’s security forces who had either surrendere­d to the Taliban or were detained by them between Aug. 15 and Oct. 31 in four of the country’s 34 provinces: Ghazni, Helmand, Kandahar and Kunduz.

The group’s research indicates that the Taliban are responsibl­e for the deaths or disappeara­nces of at least another 53 former security force members in the same provinces.

“The Taliban leadership’s promised amnesty has not stopped local commanders from summarily executing or disappeari­ng former Afghan security force members,” said Patricia Gossman, associate Asia director of the Human Rights Watch. “The burden is on the Taliban to prevent further killings, hold those responsibl­e to account, and compensate the victims’ families.”

Gossman said that the killings had evolved into a more “deliberate” effort to crush dissidents and those who may pose a threat to the new government and that the Taliban leaders were “condoning” the atrocities.

The Taliban have a long history of targeting security forces and officials of the former government, as well as activists, journalist­s and elders.

Particular­ly in the 18 months leading up to the takeover, the Taliban carried out an assassinat­ion campaign against journalist­s, government and military workers and civil society leaders, though they rarely took responsibi­lity for the deaths.

But the recent summary executions and assassinat­ions have raised new fears because they occurred even in the face of reassuranc­es from senior Taliban leaders that the new government would not seek retributio­n against members of the former government and military.

A Taliban spokespers­on told The New York Times that some fighters might have taken the law into their own hands to settle old scores, but that the killings and disappeara­nces were not Taliban policy.

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