|
Tuesday,
November 27, 2001
N.
Alliance kill scores of Taliban fighters in Kunduz
By
Ellen Knickmeyer
Associated Press
KUNDUZ,
Afghanistan Stomping on the faces of captured Taliban
and shooting others as they lay wounded, opposition forces
rampaged through Kunduz on Monday, staking claim to the Talibans
last northern stronghold. Gawking crowds ringed Taliban fighters
dying in the streets.
Talib!
Talib! little boys jeered as they ran alongside trucks
carrying terrified Taliban prisoners. Bedraggled, middle-aged
Afghan Taliban members sat in the vehicles with their arms
bound behind them.
 |
|
Tanker
Abdulwali, 22, cheers as his fellow fighters prepare
to take the Afghan cities of Khanabad and Konduz on
Sunday, Nov. 25. Both cities were captured by evening.
|
Some alliance
fighters turned immediately to Kunduzs spoils, hauling
off captured Taliban pickup trucks, cars and vans on tow lines
two, three or even four vehicles deep.
Kunduzs
fall followed a two-week siege of this grimy market city of
100,000 people where thousands seen as the hard core of Taliban
and allied foreign Islamic militia had holed up. Foreigners
Arabs, Pakistanis and others loyal to Osama bin Laden
feared northern alliance fighters would kill them in
cold blood if they gave up.
An agreement
worked out by leaders called for amnesty for the Afghan Taliban
and for the foreigners to be confined and put on trial. Alim
Razim, an adviser to alliance commander Rashid Dostum, said
the alliance freed most of the 5,000 Afghan Taliban who surrendered
and imprisoned 750 they suspected of being foreigners.
But when
one main contingent of alliance forces moved in at daybreak
Monday, Taliban were lying in wait and opened fire
with rocket-propelled grenades and rifles in hours-long battles.
The alliance had claimed to have taken Kunduz on Sunday.
The last
stand ended dismally for the Taliban. Witnesses said at least
10 Taliban died in one morning firefight alone.
Angry
over the attack, northern alliance fighters roamed the dust-covered
streets of this gray town, blasting away at wounded Taliban
lying crumpled against store awnings.
Three
other fly-covered Taliban lay dead in empty market stalls.
Each mans big toes had been looped together with cords
to prevent his escape while alive. Kunduz residents said the
northern alliance had captured the wounded men in fighting
Sunday, then shot them Monday.
All told,
perhaps 100 foreign and local Taliban died in fighting early
Monday, with another 10 northern alliance dead, alliance security
official Rahman Ali said.
Alliance forces were going house-to-house, flushing out Taliban,
he said.
On the
main street at midafternoon, one burly, bearded Afghan Taliban
appeared to be trying to win over uniformed soldiers who had
hauled him from hiding.
Within
seconds, the fat man was down on the ground, rifle butts smashing
into him. Alliance fighters stomped on his face as he lay
writhing, firing a shot into the air to drive back a too-curious
crowd.
Fighters
finally threw the mans body, inert, into the back of
a truck.
And this
was treatment for the Afghan Taliban; foreign fighters were
nowhere in sight. Ali, the security official, looked at a
loss when asked to which prison captured Taliban were being
taken. Individual commanders were taking the prisoners, he
finally said.
o where
would be worked out later.
Northern
alliance fighters particularly hate foreign fighters, and
consider them invaders of their country. Fighters on the front
outside Kunduz often spoke forgivingly about their fellow
Afghans in the Taliban but pledged in bloody terms
to fight the foreign Islamic militia to the death.
But even
fellow Afghans have a history of savage massacres in back-and-forth
captures of cities. Taliban and opposition fighters both are
accused of killing hundreds of unarmed prisoners in reprisal
massacres during their yearslong war.
Ali and
alliance Gen. Daoud Khan said hundreds of Arab fighters broke
away and fled to nearby Chardara, just west of Kunduz. Ali
said the fighters were surrounded by Monday afternoon, with
nowhere to run.
Kunduzs
people mostly Pashtuns stayed separate from
the savagery, dealt out by Kalashnikov-brandishing troops
pouring into the city by the thousands.
Shops
remained shuttered and women and children were nowhere to
be seen. Ethnic Tajik men and others ventured out to gawk
at the military hardware going by and offered clues
to the depth of the anger felt toward the Taliban and foreign
fighters.
Kunduz had been under Taliban control for five long years,
said Taj Mohammed, wearing the green, flowing robes of ethnic
Tajik men.
Kunduzs
Taliban leaders had limited movement from the city without
permission, whipped residents on the streets at the slightest
provocation and abused the citys minorities in favor
of the Pashtun majority, he said.
During
the rule of the Taliban, we were prisoners. We were servants,
the white-bearded man said.
Now,
we are free, he said, smiling gently and pressing
his hand to his heart.
|