அரசாங்கம் ஒரு தாலிபானின் உடலை தரவில்லை என்பதால், ஒரு ஆப்கானிய டாகடரை பிடித்து அவரது தலையை துண்டித்துள்ளார்கள்.
Taleban claim to have beheaded Afghan doctor
(AFP)
5 June 2007
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - The extremist Taleban said it beheaded an Afghan doctor Tuesday after the government failed to hand over the body of top military commander Mullah Dadullah.
The insurgent movement threatened at the weekend to execute the doctor and three male nurses, who had been captured in late March, if the body was not handed over Tuesday morning.
‘We had told the government to hand over the body of Dadullah. Since they didn’t hand us the body, we beheaded one of the doctors named Abdul Khalil,’ Taleban spokesman Shohabudin Atal told AFP.
There was no independent confirmation of the claim.
‘We’ll kill the rest of them unless the government contacts us over the issue,’ Atal said.
Dadullah, said to have been the Taleban’s top military strategist, was killed about three weeks ago in the armed forces’ biggest success against the movement.
After his body was shown to the media, he was buried at a secret location in the southern province of Kandahar.
Provincial governor Asadullah Khalid reiterated Tuesday that he would hand Dadullah’s body to his family on their request.
‘We have buried him and will show the location to any of Dadullah’s family if they ask,’ the governor said.
‘So far, no one from his family has asked for the body,’ he said.
Dadullah’s position at the head of rebel fighters in southern Afghanistan was taken by one of his brothers, Mansoor Dadullah, who issued the latest ultimatum through Atal.
The late commander had a reputation for brutality and was said to have presided over the beheading of other hostages. The Taleban have distributed propaganda videos showing some of the beheadings.
The all-male team of a doctor, three nurses and a driver was seized days after Kabul freed five Taleban prisoners in exchange for an Italian journalist, whose Afghan driver and interpreter were beheaded.
The deal was widely condemned and the government said it would not be repeated.
A Taleban commander said at the time that the movement wanted more of its prisoners freed in exchange for the Afghan medical team.
The fate of the team was overshadowed by the subsequent kidnapping of two French nationals and three Afghans. The Afghan nationals were freed May 26, weeks after the two foreigners were freed.
இவர்கள் கண்ணை மறைக்கும் மதவெறி விட்டு, வன்முறை மார்க்கத்தை விட்டு அமைதி மார்க்கம் வரவேண்டும் .
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