From: Miroslav Antic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: 100 non-Afghan PoWs killed in prison revolt: Kunduz falls; US
adviser shot dead 

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

100 non-Afghan PoWs killed in prison revolt: Kunduz falls; US adviser
shot dead 

 KABUL, Nov 25: The dramatic two-week siege of Kunduz, the final Taliban
bastion in northern Afghanistan, was drawing to a close on Sunday with
mass surrenders by the Taliban and rival opposition commanders striking
a deal on who will control the coveted city.

Up to 100 non-Afghan Taliban prisoners of war were reported dead at a
Mazar-i-Sharif jail after staging a bloody uprising on Sunday, witnesses
in the city west of Kunduz said.

Details were sketchy, but the incident came after acting president
Burhanuddin Rabbani pledged that Alliance forces would not harm
surrendering foreigners - mostly Pakistanis, Arabs and Chechens linked
to Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network - who defended Kunduz alongside
the Afghan Taliban.

"Although they have committed some war crimes in Afghanistan they come
under the general amnesty that we have declared and they are pardoned if
they put their guns down," Rabbani said.

Uzbek warlord Abdul Rashid Dostam and his main force, reported to have
taken control of Kunduz early on Sunday, were poised three kms to the
west to allow ethnic Tajik forces the honour of entering the city first,
a Tajik commander said.

"Following a meeting of the military chiefs of the northern provinces, I
have been designated the future governor of Kunduz and I must be the
first to enter the city," explained Commander Mohammad Daoud.

He was speaking to reporters in Khanabad hours after his troops swept
through the town 20 kms east of Kunduz without firing a shot.

The fall of Kunduz will leave the Taliban with Kandahar, their spiritual
home, as the only large city under their control; they also hold a few
mainly desert provinces in southern Afghanistan's ethnic Pakhtoon
heartland. 

Before a planned UN conference on Tuesday in Bonn to discuss the
political future of Afghanistan, Rabbani opened the door for the
eventual participation "as individuals" of some Taliban members in a
future interim government.

The Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) news agency reported that
troops loyal to Dostam seized control of Kunduz early on Sunday after
2,500 of his men moved into the city overnight.

Dostam sent a top officer into the commercial and industrial city of
30,000 to dismantle militia defences and ship Taliban and Al Qaeda
prisoners west to his headquarters in Mazar-i-Sharif, AIP said.

Scores of foreign fighters were among 400 to 600 prisoners of war who
died in the violent uprising at the Mazar-i-Sharif jail where they are
being held, an interpreter who was near the prison at the time of the
revolt said. 

He said POWs disarmed their guards after killing a senior Alliance
commander with a hand grenade; a vicious gunbattle ensued and "a lot of
people, perhaps a hundred" were killed.

Another Northern Alliance commander, Sadreddin, said Khanabad fell to
his forces on Sunday without a fight. "We entered the town from four
directions and encountered no resistance," he said.

Some 3,000 to 9,000 Taliban troops, around a third of them foreigners,
entrenched themselves in Kunduz after the November 11 fall of
Mazar-i-Sharif, resisting the ensuing Alliance blitz across the north,
west and center of the country.

Some 700 Afghan and 600 foreign Taliban surrendered to the Alliance on
Saturday - but not without incident.

Rabbani said two surrendering Chechens hurled a grenade at Alliance
officers on Saturday, killing one and wounding another, in the second
incident of its kind in Kunduz on the same day.

Britain's ITV news network said a Taliban soldier blew himself and two
Alliance fighters up with a hand grenade in a suicide attack that also
wounded a commander and an ITV journalist.

Alliance forces in Maidan Shar, the scene of heavy fighting near Kabul
over the past three days, said peace returned to the area with the
surrender on Sunday of 200 holdouts, who denied however that they had
any ties with the Taliban.

The Alliance said up to 2,000 Taliban fighters were entrenched in the
area when fighting erupted on Thursday, but a regional commander said it
was all "a local problem - everybody who had a gun came out to fight."
"They wanted to defend their families, they thought they would be
killed," he said. "It was not because they were supporters of Mullah
Omar. Now we are together, we want to be at peace."

Rabbani told a press conference here that Taliban who "are not
criminals" could take part in a future Afghan administration. "Taliban
authorities and officials can participate in the interim government as
individuals, not as the Taliban party, if they are selected through
the... loya jirga," he said.

Hundreds of Pakhtoons meeting in Attock asked for a multinational
peacekeeping force to restore order in the country.

The meeting convened by the Ahmedzai, Afghanistan's largest Pakhtoon
tribe, also called for a demilitarized Kabul and urged delegates to the
Bonn conference to fulfil theirr "historical responsibility. They also
dangled the promise of an amnesty to persuade the Taliban to surrender
Kandahar peacefully, saying they would send a delegation to talk to
militia commanders "and maybe Mullah Omar" to avert a bloodbath.

"They should come to the negotiating table," a spokesman for the meeting
said. "It is a chance to save themselves, save the country and save
innocent people." "Taliban, especially moderate Taliban, should be given
an amnesty," he said. "They should give up their guns and go back to
their villages. 

As far as the "foreign terrorists" are concerned, the spokesman said,
"it is up to the world community to decide."

Rabbani said the Alliance would send an 11-member delegation - including
one woman - to Bonn, where a total of 21 people have been invited.

The hardcore foreign element of the Taliban force, mostly recruited
through Al Qaeda, were reported to have executed dozens of Afghan
colleagues in Kunduz to prevent them surrendering.

A fresh sighting of Osama bin Laden - at a fortified encampment 56 kms
southwest of Jalalabad - was reported on Sunday by the New York Times,
quoting a Kabul official.

US ADVISER KILLED: A US adviser was killed on Sunday in a shootout in
Mazar-i-Sharif during a prisoners' revolt by hundreds of surrendering
foreign Taliban forces, witnesses said.

There was no independent confirmation of the death, which could be the
first combat casualty suffered by the United States in their
seven-week-old military offensive.

US defence officials in Washington denied any serviceman had been killed
but did not directly address whether another category of US personnel
might have been involved. -AFP/Reuters
http://www.dawn.com/2001/11/26/top1.htm


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