City
Epaper

Nearly 500 ex-Afghan officials killed, kidnapped by Taliban: Report

By ANI | Updated: April 13, 2022 13:00 IST

The Taliban, after seizing power in Afghanistan, have murdered or kidnapped about 500 former Afghan officials, military personnel and those believed to have collaborated with the United States.

Open in App

The Taliban, after seizing power in Afghanistan, have murdered or kidnapped about 500 former Afghan officials, military personnel and those believed to have collaborated with the United States.

The Taliban takeover in Afghanistan took place last August amid a complete withdrawal of US troops, yet an investigation conducted by New York Times revealed that about 500 former state officials and military personnel were either murdered or forcibly disappeared within six months of the Taliban resurgence, Sputnik reported.

Citing New York Times investigation, Sputnik further reported that the paper confirmed 86 killings in Baghlan Province alone, with 114 people missing in Kandahar Province. "The paper said the Taliban are exploiting the amnesty as a trap to lure soldiers out of hiding."

"They summoned me to the police headquarters. I figured because of the amnesty they might just ask a few questions...They started beating me and threw me in a well while telling me, 'You've fought against us for many years and killed so many of our best people.' I really believed that they were going to kill me. So many of my fellow soldiers were also thrown into the water well. These brutalities still continue to this day," a former Afghan military commander, who claimed anonymity told the NYT, according to Sputnik.

However, the Taliban officials have denied killings, saying the allegations are baseless and used as a propaganda tool by their opponents "in order to mislead the opinion of the world" about the Taliban.

The paper said that its staff conducted an investigation for seven months, using various methods to verify the data, including forensic video examinations, local media reports, and interviews with survivors, witnesses and family members of the victims, Sputnik reported.

The situation of human rights in Afghanistan has worsened since the collapse of the Afghan government and the Taliban's return to power in August last year. Thousands of Afghans fled the country fearful of the Taliban revenge and widespread violations of human rights.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: TalibanNew York TimesTalibansTaliban movementProminent talibanPashtun taliban
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalKhyber Pakhtunkhwa Attack: 33 killed 14 injured as militants ambush vehicles in Pakistan; Disturbing Visuals Emerges

CricketTaliban Thanks India for Its Support as Afghanistan Reaches T20 World Cup 2024 Semifinals

InternationalPakistan: Deports Over 800 Afghan Refugees via Torkham and Spin Boldak Crossing

OpinionsWhat if Taliban takes over Pak?

InternationalWomen, girls deserve full access to education: US envoy Thomas West on Taliban ban

International Realted Stories

InternationalCanada goes to polls on April 28

InternationalOman, UAE boost bilateral trade, investment ties at Advantage Oman Forum

InternationalDubai Municipality to highlight its pioneering tourism projects at Arabian Travel Market 2025

InternationalIndian diaspora in Frankfurt holds protest against J-K terror attack

InternationalRAK hosts 'Visual Rhythms of Art and Photography' exhibition