In the space of a day, both the Northern Alliance and the Taliban
were reported to have committed actions that constitute war crimes.
On November 12, as they advanced deep into Taliban territory on
their campaign toward Kabul, Alliance soldiers killed enemy combatants
who had surrendered and were begging for their lives. Not only did
they murder captives, they also looted and mutilated their corpses.
This is a war crime, under Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions
of 1949, which states: "Persons taking no active part in the
hostilities, including members of the armed forces who have laid
down their arms and those placed hors
de combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause,
shall in all circumstances be treated humanely."
On November 13, in the northeastern city of Kunduz, a Taliban commander
announced that he was defecting and invited the Northern Alliance
to enter and take control of the town. As the Alliance troops approached,
they were ambushed by Taliban rockets. Many were killed in the sudden,
chaotic retreat.
While the laws and customs of war do not prohibit ruses, decoys
and other deceptive maneuvers (for example, staging an assemblage
of ships when a land attack is actually being prepared), the Geneva
Conventions (Article 37 of Protocol 1) do expressly prohibit "acts
inviting the confidence of an adversary to lead him to believe that
he is entitled to
protection under the rules of international
law." In falsely defecting and promising allegiance to the
Northern Alliance and in treacherously offering the city of Kunduz,
the Taliban committed an act of perfidy.
Fighting still rages in Kunduz among various factions of Taliban
and the Northern Alliance. The splintering of the Taliban, and bitter
rivalries among Taliban chiefs, has intensified concern about the
possibility of war crimes, and so has the continued Northern Alliance
refusal to accept authentic offers of surrender.
Related chapters from Crimes of War: What
the Public Should Know
Soldiers,
rights of
POW
camps
Protected
persons
War crimes, Categories of
Hors
de Combat
Perfidy
Selected
Articles in the Media
War
Stories - Unconventional Unwisdom
How the Bush administration is breaking the rules of war.
By Scott Shuger
MSNBC, December 6, 2001
Dead
lie crushed or shot, in the dust, in ditches, amid the willows
By Luke Harding in Mazar-i-Sharif
The Guardian, November 29, 2001
How
our Afghan allies applied the Geneva Convention
Prisoners massacred, the dead plundered for boots,
guns and even gold teeth
By Justin Huggler in Mazar-i-Sharif
Independent, November 29, 2001
Bloodbath
at Afghan fort
By Angus Roxburgh
BBC News, November 27, 2001
Afghan
Warfare: Taliban Trick Throws Rebels Into Retreat
By Dexter Filkins
The New York Times, November
14, 2001
Executions
of P.O.W.'s Cast Doubts on Alliance
By David Rhode
The New York Times, November
13, 2001
Selected
Reports from NGOs
Afghanistan:
ICRC position on alleged ill-treatment of prisoners
Press
Release 01/69
12 December 2001
Afghanistan:
Mazar-i-Sharif inquiry
Amnesty International Press Release
Amnesty International, November 29, 2001
Afghanistan:
Urgent Need to Decide How to Prosecute Captured Fighters
Human Rights Watch, November 26, 2001
"Afghanistan:
Northern Alliance Must Accept Surrender Offer; Executions of Taliban
Defectors in Kunduz Also Condemned."
Human
Rights Watch.
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