-Caveat Lector-

http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/09/30/wtal30.xml





I was one of the Taliban's torturers: I crucified people
(Filed: 30/09/2001)


In an astonishing interview with Christina Lamb, the Afghan leader's former
bodyguard reveals the full brutality of the fundamentalist regime sheltering
Osama bin Laden


"YOU must become so notorious for bad things that when you come into an area
people will tremble in their sandals. Anyone can do beatings and starve
people. I want your unit to find new ways of torture so terrible that the
screams will frighten even crows from their nests and if the person survives
he will never again have a night's sleep."

These were the instructions of the commandant of the Afghan secret police to
his new recruits. For more than three years one of those recruits, Hafiz
Sadiqulla Hassani, ruthlessly carried out his orders. But sickened by the
atrocities that he was forced to commit, last week he defected to Pakistan,
joining a growing number of Taliban officials who are escaping across the
border.

In an exclusive interview with The Telegraph, he reveals for the first time
the full horror of what has been happening in the name of religion in
Afghanistan. Mr Hassani has the pinched face and restless hands of a man
whose night hours are as haunted as any of his victims. Now aged 30, he does
not, however, fit the militant Islamic stereotype usually associated with
the Taliban.

Married with a wife and one-year-old daughter, he holds a degree in business
studies, having been educated in Pakistan, where he grew up as a refugee
while his father and elder brothers fought in the jihad against the
Russians. His family was well off, owning land and property in Kandahar to
which they returned after the war.

"Like many people, I did not become a Talib by choice," he explained. "In
early 1998 I was working as an accountant here in Quetta when I heard that
my grandfather - who was 85 - had been arrested by the Taliban in Kandahar
and was being badly beaten. They would only release him if he provided a
member of his family as a conscript, so I had to go."

Mr Hassani at first was impressed by the Taliban. "It had been a crazy
situation after the Russians left, the country was divided by warring groups
all fighting each other. In Kandahar warlords were selling everything,
kidnapping young girls and boys, robbing people, and the Taliban seemed like
good people who brought law and order."

So he became a Taliban "volunteer", assigned to the secret police. Many of
his friends also joined up as land owners in Kandahar were threatened that
they must either ally themselves with the Taliban or lose their property.
Others were bribed to join with money given to the Taliban by drug
smugglers, as Afghanistan became the world's largest producer of heroin.

At first, Mr Hassani's job was to patrol the streets at night looking for
thieves and signs of subversion. However, as the Taliban leadership began
issuing more and more extreme edicts, his duties changed.

Instead of just searching for criminals, the night patrols were instructed
to seek out people watching videos, playing cards or, bizarrely, keeping
caged birds. Men without long enough beards were to be arrested, as was any
woman who dared venture outside her house. Even owning a kite became a
criminal offence.

The state of terror spread by the Taliban was so pervasive that it began to
seem as if the whole country was spying on each other. "As we drove around
at night with our guns, local people would come to us and say there's
someone watching a video in this house or some men playing cards in that
house," he said.

"Basically any form of pleasure was outlawed," Mr Hassani said, "and if we
found people doing any of these things we would beat them with staves soaked
in water - like a knife cutting through meat - until the room ran with their
blood or their spines snapped. Then we would leave them with no food or
water in rooms filled with insects until they died.

"We always tried to do different things: we would put some of them standing
on their heads to sleep, hang others upside down with their legs tied
together. We would stretch the arms out of others and nail them to posts
like crucifixions.

"Sometimes we would throw bread to them to make them crawl. Then I would
write the report to our commanding officer so he could see how innovative we
had been."

Here, sitting in the stillness of an orchard in Quetta sipping tea as the
sun goes down, he finds it hard to explain how he could have done such
things. "We Afghans have grown too used to violence," is all he can offer.
"We have lost 1.5 million people. All of us have brothers and fathers up
there."

After Kandahar, he was put in charge of secret police cells in the towns of
Ghazni and then Herat, a beautiful Persian city in western Afghanistan that
had suffered greatly during the Soviet occupation and had been one of the
last places to fall to the Taliban.

Herat had always been a relatively liberal place where women would dance at
weddings and many girls went to school - but the Taliban were determined to
put an end to all that. Mr Hassani and his men were told to be particularly
cruel to Heratis.

It was his experience of that cruelty that made Mr Hassani determined to let
the world know what was happening in Afghanistan. "Maybe the worst thing I
saw," he said, "was a man beaten so much, such a pulp of skin and blood,
that it was impossible to tell whether he had clothes on or not. Every time
he fell unconscious, we rubbed salt into his wounds to make him scream.

"Nowhere else in the world has such barbarity and cruelty as in Afghanistan.
At that time I swore an oath that I will devote myself to the Afghan people
and telling the world what is happening."

Before he could escape, however, because he comes from the same tribe, he
spent time as a bodyguard for Mullah Omar, the reclusive spiritual leader of
the Taliban.

"He's medium height, slightly fat, with an artificial green eye which
doesn't move, and he would sit on a bed issuing instructions and giving
people dollars from a tin trunk," said Mr Hassani. "He doesn't say much,
which is just as well as he's a very stupid man. He knows only how to write
his name `Omar' and sign it.

"It is the first time in Afghanistan's history that the lower classes are
governing and by force. There are no educated people in this
administration - they are all totally backward and illiterate.

"They have no idea of the history of the country and although they call
themselves mullahs they have no idea of Islam. Nowhere does it say men must
have beards or women cannot be educated; in fact, the Koran says people must
seek education."

He became convinced that the Taliban were not really in control. "We laughed
when we heard the Americans asking Mullah Omar to hand over Osama bin
Laden," he said. "The Americans are crazy. It is Osama bin Laden who can
hand over Mullah Omar - not the other way round."

While stationed in Kandahar, he often saw bin Laden in a convoy of Toyota
Land Cruisers all with darkened windows and festooned with radio antennae.
"They would whizz through the town, seven or eight cars at a time. His
guards were all Arabs and very tall people, or Sudanese with curly hair."

He was also on guard once when bin Laden joined Mullah Omar for a bird shoot
on his estate. "They seemed to get on well," he said. "They would go fishing
together, too - with hand grenades."

The Arabs, according to Mr Hassani, have taken de facto control of his
country. "All the important places of Kandahar are now under Arab control -
the airport, the military courts, the tank command."

Twice he attended Taliban training camps and on both occasions they were run
by Arabs as well as Pakistanis. "The first one I went to lasted 10 days in
the Yellow Desert in Helmand province, a place where the Saudi princes used
to hunt, so it has its own airport.

It was incredibly well guarded and there were many Pakistanis there, both
students from religious schools and military instructors. The Taliban is
full of Pakistanis."

He was told that if he died while fighting under the white flag of the
Taliban, he and his family would go to paradise. The soldiers were given
blank marriage certificates signed by a mullah and were encouraged to "take
wives" during battle, basically a licence to rape.

When Mr Hassani was sent to the front line in Bagram, north of Kabul, a few
months ago, he saw a chance to escape. "Our line was attacked by the
Northern Alliance and they almost defeated us. Many of my friends were
killed and we didn't know who was fighting who; there was killing from
behind and in front. Our commanders fled in cars leaving us behind.

"We left, running all night but then came to a line of Arabs who arrested us
and took us back to the front line. One night last month I was on watch and
saw a truck full of sheep and goats, so I jumped in and escaped.

"I got back to Kandahar but Taliban spies saw me and I was arrested and
interrogated. Luckily I have relatives who are high ranking Taliban members
so they helped me get out and eventually I escaped to Quetta to my wife and
daughter.

"I think many in the Taliban would like to escape. The country is starving
and joining is the only way to get food and keep your land. Otherwise there
is a lot of hatred. I hate both what it does and what it turned me into."

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to