http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/01/world/asia/young-girl-and-boy-found-beheaded-in-afghanistan.html?_r=1&ref=asia


Young Girl and Boy Found Beheaded in Afghanistan
By GRAHAM BOWLEY and TAIMOOR SHAH
Published: August 31, 2012 
KABUL, Afghanistan — The decapitated bodies of a 7-year-old girl and a 
12-year-old boy found Friday in the country’s south and east continued a spate 
of grisly beheadings in Afghanistan this week. 


The body of the boy was discovered in the rural Panjwai district of Kandahar 
Province in the south, where the Taliban retain command of some areas despite 
regular clearing operations by American and Afghan forces. 

Residents and officials said the Taliban had killed the boy because his brother 
and uncle were members of the local police. The Taliban denied killing him. 

There was no immediate explanation for the killing of the girl, whose body was 
found in a garden in the Tagab district of eastern Kapisa Province, said the 
governor of Kapisa, Mehrabudin Safi. Mr. Safi said she had been killed 
Thursday. “So far it is not clear to the security forces who was behind this 
beheading,” he said. “The Taliban have not claimed responsibility for it.” 

On Sunday, 15 men and 2 women were beheaded in a Taliban stronghold in Helmand 
Province, in the south. 

The boy who was killed had been sent by his father from their home in the Zhari 
district to Spirwan in the Panjwai district to borrow money from a landowner on 
Wednesday. The journey would take at least a couple of hours through a dusty 
desert region of mud-brick villages and vineyards in western Kandahar. But four 
Taliban fighters on motorcycles picked up the boy, local officials said. 

“He was killed because I am supporting the government,” said the boy’s uncle, 
Mullah Zianullah, who was a former Taliban commander in Panjwai but last year 
joined the peace and reintegration process in Kandahar and is now leading the 
local police in Spirwan. “There is nothing else except killing.” 

Mullah Zianullah has a reputation for tough dealing with the Taliban, ordering 
his officers to shoot insurgents on the spot, residents said. The Taliban, in 
turn, had warned him that no one in his family was safe. 

A village elder who did not give his name offered another reason that the boy, 
who was not named, set out through Taliban territory: he had worked on a poppy 
field last year but had not been paid and was going to claim his wages. 

Whatever the reason for the boy’s journey, as soon as the Taliban discovered 
his family’s involvement with the Afghan Local Police, a local militia trained 
by American forces, they were swift with their punishment, local officials 
said. 

“The boy was beheaded immediately and his headless body dumped on the main road 
in Spirwan,” said Javed Faisal, the spokesman for the Kandahar governor. 

A spokesman for the Taliban, reached by phone, denied the accounts. “Our 
supreme leader strictly prohibited beheading,” said the spokesman, Qari Yousuf 
Ahmadi, referring to the Taliban leader Mullah Muhammad Omar. “We are not only 
rejecting it, but condemning whoever carried it out.” 

But this was no consolation for the boy’s uncle, who said in a telephone 
interview that he could not go to Spirwan to claim his nephew’s body for fear 
of further Taliban retribution. 

“We have been told by people living there that the body was buried there, but 
we cannot go to bring the body back and the other people are afraid to help 
us,” he said. 

Graham Bowley reported from Kabul, and Taimoor Shah from Kandahar, Afghanistan. 
Jawad Sukhanyar contributed reporting.


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