In Panjshir, the Taliban arrested and brutally killed members of the family of Mavlawi Hesamuddin, one of the leaders and most prominent religious figures of the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan.
HINDU KUSH, KUNDUZ, May 27 - Sangar, Hasib Sangar, Jamshid Badakhshi. Recently, the number of killings of captives of the National Resistance Front by the Taliban has increased, while the Front claims that it did not kill Taliban captives.
The correspondent of the Sangar website reports from Panjshir that the Taliban forces brutally killed Mohammadshah Mujahid and his son Javid Mujahid (in the photo), residents of the village of Kal'a in the Pariyan district.
A source at the Kojan camp of the Resistance Front in Pariyan told the Sangar website that Mohammadshah, the chief of staff of the Kojan camp, secretly went to his home in aylak on June 4 to visit his family.
“Spies, approximately from among his relatives and fellow villagers, inform the Taliban about this, and at about 12 o'clock at night their vanguard of southern Pashtuns and Badakhshans surrounds his house. He and his son were armed, but the presence of the women and children of the family did not allow them to resist. They gave up,” the source said.
According to him, on the way, Javid, seeing how the Taliban humiliate and beat his father, tried to attack them with his hands tied, after which he was shot dead.
“The Taliban brutally tortured Mohammadshah, pulled out his eyes, blinded him, and then beheaded him on the way to the center of the district,” the source said.
Muhammadshah Mujahid was about 65 years old. During the jihad against the USSR and the First Resistance to the Taliban, he was one of the commanders of Ahmad Shah Massoud, the leader of the jihad and the resistance of Afghanistan. During the Republic, he did not cooperate with the pro-American governments, but immediately joined the Second Resistance under the leadership of Ahmad Massoud, and was the head of the Kajawe headquarters, one of the three bases of the Resistance Front in the Pariyan region.
Muhammadshah Mujahid is the cousin of Mawlawi Hesamuddin, the former head of the Ulema Council and now a member of the leadership of the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan.
But this is not the only case of torture and killing of captives in recent wars in the Hindu Kush. On June 2, the Taliban beat to death Ahmad Munir, a shepherd from Malaspa village, Bazarak district. June 4 - The commander of the National Resistance Front, Ali Sabzmuhammad, from the village of Taghabi Dakhane, Khust district, Baghlan province, was arrested and later shot.
On the same day, the Taliban also shot and killed Jangul Mirzad and his brother Tamim Mirzad and Faizagha Rahimi, three Resistance Front soldiers, from the Chamal Warda base in the Karbashi valley of Panjshir province. On the night of June 6, the Taliban shot and killed Sohrab, the son of Mehrabuddin, and his younger sister in the village of Souk, Firing district, Baghlan province, in front of his family. He was also a resistance soldier.
Another shocking case is the killing of four young people (in the photo) in the Tagab district of Badakhshan province, which was reportedly carried out on May 31 by Taliban air force commander Mawlawi Amanuddin.
A source familiar with the details of the crime told Sangar that the brothers Abduljabbar and Najibullah and their cousin Talabuddin, residents of the village of Tirgaran, and Mohammad Israil, a resident of the village of Bashand in the Varduje district, were detained by Amanuddin's people in their homes and taken to the Tagab region and were shot.
“All these young people were former soldiers and officers of government forces who arrived in Badakhshan from Iran a month ago and lived a normal life. Amanuddin is also from Bashand village. When informed of their presence, apparently due to a feud with Israil, a fellow villager of his, he orders his gunmen to arrest them all. To stage "а clash with the resistance" and win favor with the Taliban, he took the guys to the remote Katubala valley in the Tagab region and shot them. Everyone had their hands tied,” he said.
The “operation” and the murder of resistance members were officially confirmed by the Taliban according to the “scenario” of Amanuddin, but photos of murdered young people with their hands tied got into the network.
Mawlawi Amanuddin, commander of the Taliban Air Force, is one of the commanders of the Tajik Taliban who contributed to the fall of the republic and are actively involved in the fight against the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan. In April, in the Ragistan district of Badakhshan province, he and his men shot dead six resistance youths after deceiving them with an oath taken on the Holy Quran.
Meanwhile, Sangar's sources in the National Resistance Front report that not a single captured Taliban was killed by them.
“The laws of resistance, according to the Koran, forbid killing of captives. Our forces have captured dozens of Taliban, but not one of them has been killed,” the source said.
The killing of captives is strictly prohibited under international and Islamic law, but the Taliban, who claim to uphold Islamic values, in most cases acted contrary to their statements, killing captives either individually or in groups.
The problem is that these documented human crimes are covered by the local media but are always ignored by the global media and human rights organizations. In general, the international community has never paid much attention to crimes against humanity, especially the genocide in Afghanistan.
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