Taliban prisoner release re-opens wounds for victims' families

The upcoming release of about 400 Taliban prisoners in a move hoping to bring peace has left the families of victims devastated and bewildered.

Taliban prisoners are released from Pul-e-Charkhi jail in Kabul, Afghanistan, 13 August 2020.

Taliban prisoners are released from Pul-e-Charkhi jail in Kabul, Afghanistan, 13 August 2020. Source: Afghanistan's National Security Council

The decision to release hundreds of the Taliban's most dangerous prisoners has stirred painful memories for the loved ones of those killed in Afghanistan's war, with many questioning whether the move will help bring peace.

About 400 inmates are expected to be set free in the coming days, after which the Taliban have said they will sit for direct peace talks with the Afghan government.

The prisoner swap deal has been brokered by the United States.

One of those set to be released is rogue Afghan soldier Hekmatullah, who murdered three Australian officers in 2012.

The Afghan sergeant was charged over the 2012 deaths of Lance Corporal Stjepan Milosevic, Sapper James Martin and Private Robert Poate in Afghanistan.
The soldiers, all from Queensland, were killed when Hekmatullah opened fire with an automatic weapon.

Two other diggers were wounded in the attack, which occurred inside a patrol base 20km north of Tarin Kowt in Oruzgan province.

The soldier admitted to the shooting and was originally sentenced to death.

Mr Morrison has written to the US president, pleading with him to prevent the killer walking free from Kabul's Pul-e-Charkhi prison.

"Hekmatullah was responsible for murdering three Australians, and our position is that he should never be released," Mr Morrison told reporters in Canberra earlier in August.

"We do not believe that his release adds to peace in this region. That is the position that we will continue to maintain and we'll maintain it strongly.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has said the US-backed release is a necessary development highlighting the "cost" of making peace.
For some victims' families, it is a step too far.

It "felt like being stabbed in the heart with a knife", said Juma Khan, 77, as he recalled watching Afghan leaders gather to debate and eventually approve the release.

Khan's son, Aziz Ahmad Naween, an IT specialist, was killed in a massive truck bombing near the German embassy in May 2017 while heading to work. He was 24.

"We all want peace, but they never asked for our opinion, the victims," Mr Khan said.

"That was the worst day of my life. I fell unconscious on seeing the body of my young son in a coffin," he told AFP at his home in Kabul.

"I don't believe that the decision to release them will lead to any peace in this country any time soon."
Taliban prisoners are released from Pul-e-Charkhi jail in Kabul, Afghanistan, 13 August 2020.
Taliban prisoners are released from Pul-e-Charkhi jail in Kabul, Afghanistan, 13 August 2020. Source: Afghanistan's National Security Council
The Afghan government has already freed about 5,000 Taliban prisoners under a swap fleshed out in a deal between the US and the insurgents in February.

While the former inmates have pledged not to pick up arms, Mr Ghani on Thursday acknowledged some of the 400 currently being released likely "pose a danger both to us and to (America) and to the world".

'How could they do that?'

In an op-ed in the Washington Post on Friday the president also said that the families of those killed by the militants had paid a heavy price.

"The cost of releasing these 5,000 prisoners meant, among other things, denying justice and healing for the families of those they murdered," Mr Ghani wrote.

"We have paid with our lives - tens of thousands of Afghan lives, including even our tiniest, most precious and innocent lives."

The truck bombing killed more than 150 people and wounded hundreds more in Kabul's highly fortified diplomatic quarter in the deadliest attack since 2001.
No group claimed the attack, but the government blamed the Taliban-allied Haqqani Network.

An official list of the 400 prisoners seen by AFP includes a militant involved in that attack, and the release has triggered international condemnation.

The family of French woman Bettina Goislard, a United Nations refugee worker who was shot dead by Taliban militants in 2003, has opposed the release of her killers.

"Such a decision to free (them) made on the basis of horse-trading would be, to us, her family, inconceivable," Bettina's family told AFP.

The decision also shocked Shahnaaz Ahmadi, 42, whose 45-year-old husband Faiz Ali Ahmadi was killed in the same truck bombing.

"It was unbelievable... and hard to watch what was happening," said Shahnaaz, who watched thousands of Afghan elders and stakeholders debate the release at last week's "loya jirga" meeting.

"How could they do that? We all cried that day," the mother of seven told AFP.

'Time for forgiveness'

Shahnaaz's husband was a security guard at a telecommunications company. Her teenage daughter, Gulbahar, still mourns his death.

"We have endured so much hardship since losing my father, both financially and emotionally," Gulbahar said.

"They should have been executed long back. I can never forgive them for taking my father from me."
However, Abdul Rahman Sayed, whose 34-year-old brother Ahmad Farzam was killed in a 2018 attack at Kabul's luxurious Intercontinental Hotel, is ready to forgive and move on for the sake of peace.

"If I, as the brother of a victim of this war, objects in releasing the killer of my brother, then this war is going to continue forever," Sayed, a resident of Kandahar said.

"Now is the time for forgiveness and tolerance."


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Published 16 August 2020 6:51pm


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