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Independent. 29 November 2001. How our Afghan allies applied the Geneva
Convention [as if the US had nothing to do with these events].

The bodies of the dead lay everywhere. Some were laid out in roads to be
taken away, others were still lying on the ground where they died,
slowly beginning to decay in the morning sun.

An Afghan soldier leant over a body, his hands working intently in the
dead
man's mouth, clutching a long thin instrument. He was trying to wrench
the fillings out of the corpse's teeth even as the flesh began to rot
around them.

The outside world got to see what the war in Afghanistan was really like
yesterday. For the first time reporters were allowed into Qalai Janghi,
the old mud-walled fort outside Mazar-i-Sharif where hundreds of Taliban
prisoners of war had been killed in a pitched battle with American and
British special forces and Afghan soldiers under command of General
Abdul Rashid Dostum.

Inside the fortress reporters saw a scene of devastation. Rubble was
piled high where buildings had collapsed. The charred remains of trees
had to be cleared away from the entrance before the bodies could be
taken away. The Americans had bombed the quarters from the air.
Yesterday the Afghan soldiers were busily stripping the bodies of
everything they could find. One soldier, his head wrapped in a white
turban stepped over the dead, swinging the boots he had taken from their
feet. Another dressed in a long blue Afghan shirt carried four machine
guns he had taken.

Several of the bodies were recognisably Arabs and Pakistani. The foreign
Taliban volunteers believed to be loyal to Osama bin Laden but who
surrendered were brought to the fort from the besieged city of
Mazar-i-Sharif.

Amnesty International yesterday demanded a full inquiry into why
hundreds of prisoners of war who should have been protected under the
Geneva Convention were slaughtered .

The Americans insisted they only bombed Qalai Janghi because their own
personnel were under threat. They said the Taliban prisoners seized
weapons and attacked their Afghan captors along with CIA agents who were
interrogating them. Yesterday it was confirmed a CIA agent named Johnny
Michael "Mike" Spann, 32, was among the fort's dead.

General Dostum striding through the slaughtered yesterday in a long
flowing brown shirt and leather jacket, insisted his soldiers had
treated the prisoners humanely. As he spoke, a soldier kicked the body
of a man who was lying on his side to make sure he was dead.

The body rolled over to reveal that the man's arms had been tied
together behind his back.

Several of the dead men's arms had been tied together above the elbow,
some with their own black turbans.

General Dostum publicly denied the practice but an Afghan soldier under
his command admitted he and his comrades had been tying the prisoner's
hands when the fighting started.

Reporters inside counted 150 bodies yesterday. Between 300 and 400
foreign Taliban volunteers were seen surrendering to General Dostum's
troops. They are all believed to have been brought to Qalai Janghi,
which means more than 150 bodies are missing.

Many of them could have been lying in the rubble in the fortress. There
were few Taliban survivors. General Dostum warned reporters not to
wander the scene of the battle, because he claimed, two of the foreign
Taliban were still alive and could be hiding in the fortress posing as
dead.

At least one Pakistani Taliban was captured alive in Mazar-i-Sharif
apparently after he escaped during the fighting. He has since
disappeared and nobody expects him to be seen alive again. Olivier
Martin of the International Red Cross who was inside Qalai Janghi when
the fighting began yesterday described how he had to flee the battle. He
had gone to the fortress to ensure they were being looked after in
accordance with the Geneva Convention.

"We heard some shooting start, and then they started firing rockets," Mr
Martin said. "We climbed onto the roof where we had to take shelter
beside some of General Dostum's troops who were firing back at the
Taliban."

By that time he said it was clear that the Taliban prisoners were
heavily armed.

Mr Martin said he was not able to see how the violence started, but
General Dostum claimed the revolt had begun after a grenade attack by
Taliban prisoner skilled two of his best generals

Yesterday there was no explanation on how the prisoners managed to get
their hands on the arsenal to enable them to hold out for three days.

The secrets of what and whom really started the killing, may have died
with them.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch said it seemed that the shootings
represented a "serious war crime."


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews

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