Via Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty:
Officials in Afghanistan say that 17 civilians, including two women, have been beheaded in the southern Helmand Province‘s Kajaki district.
The discovery comes on a particularly grim day, with 10 Afghan troops killed and two NATO soldiers shot dead in separate attacks, also in Afghanistan.
The civilians, including two women, were apparently beheaded overnight on August 26 near the village of Zamindawar in southern Helmand Province, a Taliban stronghold.
Helmand provincial government spokesman Daud Ahmadi told RFE/RL’s Radio Free Afghanistan that the insurgents appeared to have been seeking to punish the villagers for allegedly urging local people to stage an uprising against militants.
“These 15 civilian [men] and two women were killed allegedly for having contact with the government,” Ahmadi said. “The enemy is afraid, because people are increasingly rising up against them and people want them to leave their areas. I think [the people’s] plans were discovered.”
Ahmadi said it remained unclear who was behind the slayings.
Motive Uncertain
Some news agencies quoted local officials as saying the victims were punished for holding a mixed-gender music party.
Nematullah Khan, chief of nearby Musa Qala district, said the villagers had organized a party with music, and one local official said he suspected the two women had been dancing.
The Taliban, who are active in the area, have in the past been blamed for decapitating local villagers, mainly over charges of collaborating with Afghan and NATO forces.
News agencies quoted a tribal elder as saying the area has seen a surge in beheadings in recent months, and that at least three villagers were beheaded during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
On this day..
- 2020: Lezmond Mitchell
- Feast Day of St. Alexander of Bergamo
- 1810: Santiago de Liniers
- 1791: Whiting Sweeting, who slew the first U.S. cop to die in the line of duty
- 1864: William Howe, deserter
- 1806: Johann Philipp Palm, press martyr
- 1874: Private Joseph Michaud, the first in Manitoba
- 1825: Stephen Videto, Indian giver
- 1823: Natty and Louie, Demerara rebels
- 2008: Behnam Zare, pleading for his life
- 1857: Adolf Schlagintweit, intrepid explorer
- 2004: Enzo Baldoni