Friday 25 June 2010

..............The Taliban Hangs an 8 Year Old..........

***aricle reprinted from www.theage.com.au***

THE Taliban's execution of an eight-year-old accused of ''collaborating'' with foreign forces has proved too much even for Afghans hardened by three decades of fighting.

''Islam does not permit anyone to sentence a minor to execution,'' said Mawlawi Mehr Del, deputy head of the Muslim clerical council in Helmand. ''It is against Islam, against sharia. God may be extremely upset with them. Those who do something like this are neither jihadis nor Taliban, they are enemies of human life.''
Islamic law prohibits the execution of anyone under 18. The Taliban's own code of conduct, drawn up by the movement two years ago, stipulates that no commander may order the execution of minors.


But a senior Taliban member, Mullah Abdul Bari, suggested that code of conduct did not apply in Helmand: ''The code has been changed for Helmand because the number of infidels there has increased, and the Taliban don't have the time to hold trials.'' That meant that local commanders in Helmand province are allowed to use their own discretion to pass judgment on people accused of spying and punish them accordingly.

Witnesses said the execution of the child, named Delawar, took place in a garden near his home in the village of Heratian in the Sangin district of Helmand.
About a dozen men took part in the hanging death of the child, whom they accused of spying for British forces.
Sangin resident Taza Gol, 60, said the boy screamed for his parents as the militants put a rope around his neck.
''I am very scared,'' Mr Gol said. ''The Taliban had suspended such executions, but now they have started again. Who knows how many more will be executed without trial.''


The child's father, Abdul Quddus, who initially reported that the Taliban had killed his son, now claims ''ghosts'' killed his son. He has declined to talk further.
The child's grandfather, Naqibullah, said his son, Abdul Quddus, is afraid to leave his house for fear the Taliban will kill him for reporting his son's murder to authorities. He also claimed that his grandson was killed because the child's father was too poor to pay the $US600 ($A688) local Taliban commanders had attempted to extort from him.


''Abdul Quddus's relationship with the Taliban had got worse recently,'' Naqibullah said. ''For this reason, the Taliban asked him for money as a tithe, but he didn't have the money. The regional Taliban commander, Hajji Malem, was upset with him and then hanged his son the next day under the pretext he was spying.''

Leaders of the Alokozai tribe, to which the dead child's family belong, demanded that the Taliban provide an explanation for the boy's death. ''If the Taliban do not have reliable evidence, then the Alokozai tribe will take a stand against the Taliban,'' they said.

Faruq Nangialai, 35, said he spoke for many in the region when he condemned the lynching. ''As a result of this action, people have developed an extreme hatred of the Taliban,'' he said.
Mohammad Ilyas Dayee is a reporter in Afghanistan who writes for the Institute for War & Peace Reporting, a non-profit organisation that trains journalists in areas of conflict.

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4 comments:

Wonder Man said...

oh my god... I can't believe that

Anonymous said...

...meanwhile in the United States a woman got a life sentence for letting a 13 y.o boy touch her breasts...


I am so pleased to live in Europe....

Unknown said...

This is just awful!

SteveA said...

In the name of what was this boy hanged...I think that they are veil and coward as they use religion as a front! Only God can save their souls!

Hopefully this boy can be viewed as a martyr of the innocent and the rise against the Taliban can begin within their own den!