Slava Novorossiya

Slava Novorossiya
Showing posts with label Islamic Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic Justice. Show all posts

Sunday, July 18, 2021

TALIBAN JUDGE WANTS A RETURN OF SHARIA LAW TO AFGHANISTAN

A Taliban judge has given a terrifying glimpse into life under the Islamist group and the fate that awaits Afghanis if the country falls back under their control. Gul Rahim, 38, spoke matter-of-factly about cutting hands and legs off thieves, issuing permits for women to leave their homes and toppling walls on gay men as a form of execution in his Taliban-controlled district in central Afghanistan. He added that his aim is to introduce the Sharia law punishments across the whole of the country if the Taliban can re-take control once America departs, saying: 'That was our goal and always will be.' 

I will post the news link before giving my comments.

 

Taliban judge Gul Rahim in Afghanistan (Screenshot: Bild)

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2021/07/14/taliban-afghanistan-gay/]


Gay men will be crushed to death by pushing a WALL onto them as part of nationwide return to Sharia law in Afghanistan under the Taliban, one of the Islamist group's judges reveals

·         Gul Rahim, 38, Taliban judge, has given a glimpse of life under the Islamist group 

·         Spoke matter-of-factly about chopping off the hands and legs of thieves 

·         Said gays should be stoned to death or killed by having a wall toppled on them 

·         Women can leave the house, he insisted, though have to get a permit first 

By Chris Pleasance for MailOnline

A Taliban judge has given a terrifying glimpse into life under the Islamist group and the fate that awaits Afghanis if the country falls back under their control. 

Gul Rahim, 38, spoke matter-of-factly about cutting hands and legs off thieves, issuing permits for women to leave their homes and toppling walls on gay men as a form of execution in his Taliban-controlled district in central Afghanistan.

He added that his aim is to introduce the Sharia law punishments across the whole of the country if the Taliban can re-take control once America departs, saying: 'That was our goal and always will be.' 

The Taliban claim they have already taken control of 80 per cent of Afghanistan since NATO withdrew its forces from the country, leaving local troops to deal with the Islamists. The threat of Sharia law is already very real for many.

Rahim revealed his vision of justice in an interview with German newspaper Bild, speaking to a reporter close to the central Afghan province where he has been based for several years.

Speaking about a recent case he adjudicated, he said a man was found to have stolen a ring from a house - so he ordered that his hand be cut off.

'I asked the owner of the ring if he would also ask that the thief's leg be hacked off because he not only stole the ring but broke in, which means that he had committed two crimes,' he added. 

'But the owner of the house agreed that only the hand would be chopped off.'

In another recent judgement, he ordered that a gang caught kidnapping and smuggling people should be hanged.

'Depending on the crime, we can start with fingertips or fingers. For worse offenses, we cut the wrist, elbow, or upper arm. Death by stoning or hanging is the only option for the greatest crimes', he said.

Asked what punishments the Taliban considers for gay men, he replied that there are only two options.

'Either stoning or he has to stand behind a wall that falls on him. The wall must be 8ft to 10ft high,' he said.

As the Taliban quickly retakes territory amid America's departure from the country, many women are trying to leave - afraid of living life under the Islamist group.

Rahim did little to assuage those fears when he insisted that women will be allowed to leave the house under Taliban rule, though will have to obtain a permit first. 

Women will also be allowed to do to school, he said, though only if their teacher is female and they wear a compulsory hijab.

   

Abû Zayd pleads before the Qadi of Ma'arra (1334).

Rahim's bleak descriptions of Taliban 'justice' recall the worst years under the previous Islamist government that emerged in the 1990s and ruled until it was driven from power during the American invasion.

In one famous image that recalls the horrors of those years, a man accused of murder is seen sitting in the middle of the national football stadium behind a pickup truck where another man is holding an AK47 rifle.

Moments after the picture was taken, the man was shot dead as part of a day of executions watched by some 35,000 people.

  

An unhappy wife is complaining to the kadı about her husband's impotence. Ottoman miniature.

Now, more than 20 years on from those images being taken and as America brings its 'forever war' to an end, there are fears the scenes could soon repeat themselves as the Taliban rapidly recaptures vast swathes of the country.

The group now boasts that it is in control of some 80 per cent of Afghanistan after a lightning-fast offensive on rural areas - though observers say the true figure is somewhere around 30 per cent.

In many areas the fighting has been fierce and bloody, with the government fighting and losing on multiple battlefields.

In some places commanders have simply abandoned their posts or else negotiated surrender with the militants to be allowed to go home.

But in others, the government insists it has performed a tactical retreat in order to concentrate its forces in major town and cities where it expects to make its defensive last stand later this year in the face of a near-inevitable Taliban assault.

While western leaders hope that fighting will end with some form of power-sharing deal between the government and Taliban, many fear the Islamists will emerge victorious and seize back control over the country.

If that happens, then Rahim's grim vision of life could become a daily reality.

Commanders have already warned that several of Afghanistan's provincial capitals are surrounded by the Taliban, will militia groups recruited by the government to hold them off already complaining of a lack of weapons and ammunition.

Fighting is currently taking place around Kandahar, Ghazni, Lashkah Gar, Pul-e-Khumri and Taluqan, officers said.

Meanwhile a battle has raged for days in the western city of Qala-i-Naw, which was overrun by the Taliban last week before a counterattack by government forces.

'We ask the government to implement a proper plan for suppressing the Taliban,' Hasan Hakimi, a civil society activist in central Ghor province, told Tolo News after more districts fell to the insurgents yesterday. 

Despite the risks, the US is pushing ahead with its withdrawal and expects to have all of its forces out of the country before the end of August.

On Monday, the top US general in Afghanistan relinquished command at an official ceremony in Kabul - bringing America's departure from the country a step closer. 

General Austin 'Scott' Miller - the highest-ranked officer on the ground in Afghanistan - handed command to General Kenneth McKenzie.

Miller has been in Afghanistan since 2018, but in May was charged by commander-in-chief President Joe Biden with organising the final withdrawal of US troops, to be completed by the end of August.

Since May, most of the 2,500 American troops have left, and the US has also handed over to Afghan forces Bagram Air Base, from where coalition forces carried out operations against the Taliban and jihadist groups for the past two decades.

About 650 US troops are expected to be stationed in Kabul to guard Washington's sprawling diplomatic compound, where Monday's ceremony took place.

Top Afghan officials and military officers attended the ceremony inside the heavily fortified green zone.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9780437/Taliban-judge-says-gays-killed-toppling-wall-group-takes-Afghanistan.html

   

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2017/06/open-letter-to-anti-death-penalty.html


MY COMMENTS:

            Let me assure my readers here this: I DO NOT AND NEVER support sharia law and I AM NEVER in favor of putting LGBT people to death. I only support the death penalty for murderers and other death-related crimes. If that Qadi (Sharia Judge) would only limit the death penalty to murderers and not to LGBT people, I will not mind.

Those Prisoner Rights Activists who fight for the rights of murderers should only campaign to end the death penalty and any judicial punishments at the right time but they always do it at the wrong time.

            If you really want to end the death penalty (and any judicial punishments), you should not do it here in America where we execute people for First Degree Murder and not extrajudicial trials. If you go to the Taliban and campaign for them to end the death penalty, they will not listen to you but have you beheaded instead. However, they are the right people that should abolish the death penalty, because they are committing judicial murder. So please go there instead and ‘rescue’ more innocent people being executed.

            If you see how naïve Pope Francis was in what he said about ISIS, he is no morally different from those Prisoner rights activists who give all kinds of excuses that murderers have bad childhood and they should not be executed (or given LWOP). Bear in mind, murderers do not respect you just like ISIS hates Pope Francis. 

OTHER LINKS:

https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2021/07/14/taliban-afghanistan-gay/

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=147775950771736&id=101692122046786

https://www.facebook.com/groups/3350621811720081/posts/4116992851749636/

 

https://soldierexecutionerprolifer2008.blogspot.com/2021/07/somalian-executed-by-firing-squad-for.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qadi

http://soldierexecutionerprolifer2008.blogspot.com/2013/07/life-is-cheap-in-norway-christian.html

 

Thursday, August 29, 2019

AFGHAN SGT HEKMATULLAH SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR THE MURDER OF 3 AUSTRALIAN TROOPS


No remorse...Sgt Hekmatullah murdered three Aussie troops as they were relaxing on a remote patrol base in Uruzgan province in late August 2012. Picture: Four CornersSource:Supplied
  

Afghan soldier loses final appeal against death penalty for murdering three Australian troops
AN Afghan soldier who murdered three Australian troops has lost his final appeal against the death penalty.
Jeremy Kelly
News Corp Australia Network October 27, 20144:29pm

AN Afghan soldier who murdered three Australian troops has lost his final appeal against the death penalty.

The fate of the remorseless killer, Sgt Hekmatullah, now rests in the hands of the families of those he killed and the Afghanistan’s recently-elected president.

The secret judgment against Hekmatullah, which the country’s Supreme Court has consistently refused to discuss, was confirmed by diplomatic and prison sources in Kabul and also by the killer himself during a jailhouse interview this month as part of a Four Corners investigation into the incident.

Hekmatullah was convicted and sentenced to death, which in Afghanistan is usually by hanging, of the murders of Lance Corporal ‘Rick’ Milosevic, Sapper James Martin and Private Robbie Poate as they were relaxing on a remote patrol base in Uruzgan province in late August 2012.

Two other Diggers were wounded.

The case has recently been examined in a coronial inquest in Brisbane, the first of its type involving the death of the 41 Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan.

Evidence was heard about a failure to communicate a heightened risk of insider attacks, in which local forces turn their weapons against foreign mentors, to the slain men’s platoon.
The finding of the inquest will be handed down at a later date.

The killer, Hekmatullah, evaded attempts to be captured after the shooting, fleeing the base and ultimately being secreted by the Taliban across the border to Pakistan. He was arrested in February 2013 and after months of interrogation, during which he said he was blindfolded and could hear English-speaking voices while being tortured, he confessed to the murders.

In December last year, he was sentenced to death, a verdict upheld later in an appeal court.
His final chance of overturning or having the sentence commuted to a lengthy prison term, was refused by the Supreme Court in a hearing some months ago.

He is imprisoned in the high-security wing of Kabul’s Pul-e Charkhi jail, sharing a block with former Australian soldier, Robert Langdon, who was sentenced to 20-years jail for murdering an Afghan colleague while working as a private security guard.

Langdon, like Hekmatullah, had been sentenced to death but under a provision under Afghan law, paid his victim’s family US$100,000 to offer forgiveness, which allowed the Supreme Court to commute the sentence to a prison term.

Hekmatullah has requested the families forgive him but has also vowed to kill again, saying he was inspired to kill after watching a Taliban propaganda video that showed foreign soldiers desecrating the Koran.

Today we remember, Private Robert Poate, Sapper James Martin and Lance Corporal Stjepan Milosevic, all three men were deployed as part of the 3RAR Task Group. On the evening of the 29th of August 2012 at around 9.45pm (local time) at Patrol Base "Wahab" in the Baluchi Valley region in Uruzgan province, a rouge Afghan soldier in the Australian camp collected an assault rifle, took cover and fired about 30 rounds into a group of Australian's who were only about five metres away. Private Robert Poate age 23 from Canberra and Sapper James Martin age 21 from Perth were killed instantly. Lance Corporal Stjepan Milosevic age 40, a father of two from Brisbane died while being evacuated for medical treatment. Two other Australian soldiers were wounded in the "Insider Attack". Private Robert Poate and Sapper James Martin were on their first deployments to Afghanistan. Lance Corporal Stjepan Milosevic, "Milo" to his mates had previously served in Iraq in 2010 was also on his first deployment to Afghanistan. All three men were based at Brisbane's Gallipoli Barracks. Their sacrifice will never be forgotten.
"Lest We Forget"
   
The relatives of Hekmatullah’s victims, however, appear uninterested in any mercy.

“He showed absolutely no mercy to our boys,” Pte Poate’s father, Hugh told Four Corners.

“He killed them in the prime of their lives. They had done nothing to him other than befriend him and he turned around and just killed them in premeditated cold-blooded murder, so I’m rather hoping that the sentence will be carried out.”

All decisions on the enforcement of the death penalty are made by Afghanistan’s president, Ashraf Ghani.

Diplomats in Kabul had believed Mr Ghani is unlikely to order the execution of any of the prisoners on death row but that view has softened in recent weeks.

Mr Ghani, to the surprise and disappointment of many of his western backers, did not intervene after his predecessor, Hamid Karzai, signed off on his last day in office on the execution of five men convicted of gang rape and another, of unrelated kidnapping charges.

All six men were hanged on October 8.

The Enemy Within screens tonight on Four Corners, ABC, 8.30pm.

[PHOTO SOURCE: http://teamuzunovmedia.blogspot.com/2013/09/officer-incompetence-in-afghanistan.html]
  

Disgraced sergeant Hekmatullah shows no remorse for killing of Australian Diggers
Jeremy Kelly in Kabul, News Limited Network
January 12, 2014 5:37pm
 
AN AFGHAN soldier on death row for shooting dead three Australian soldiers is unrepentant, saying he should be rewarded and would do it again if released.

Disgraced sergeant Hekmatullah said he became maniacal after an Afghan colleague on the base he was stationed shared with him a mobile phone clip that showed a report about US soldiers burning Korans in Afghanistan.

"There were some real nasty thoughts that I had in my head," he told News Corp Australia in an interview inside Kabul's Pol-e Charkhi prison.

"I saw that video and went crazy."



It is the first time the 19-year-old has spoken publicly and provides a rare insight into the motives of an Afghan security forces member who has turned their gun against a foreign mentor.

Asked what we would like to say to the families of the soldiers he killed, Hekmatullah shrugged nonchalantly before he said: "I want them to forgive me so then I will be released."

When told that appeared unlikely, he replied: "Then don't forgive me. I would do it again if they burned more Korans."
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At least 140 Coalition troops, including seven Australians, have been killed in 85 so-called insider attacks, according to the Long War Journal, yet the perpetrators either are killed on the spot or trying to evade capture, or have successfully fled.

Hekmatullah is one of only two known offenders who it is publicly known has been caught and brought before the courts.

News_Image_File: Tragic loss ... Private Robert Poate was gunned down with his fellow Diggers while they were relaxing in a makeshift recreational area at Patrol Base Wahab in Oruzgan province.Extradited to Kabul in October, after spending about six months on the run in the Pakistan city of Quetta and a further eight months in the custody of that country's spy agency, Hekmatullah was sentenced to death in December during a secret court hearing.

He admitted to murdering Lance Corporal Stjepan (Rick) Milosevic, 40, Sapper James Martin, 21, and Private Robert Poate, 23 and was convicted also of grievous bodily harm to two other Australians, treason and involvement with a terrorist organisation.


The Australians were shot while they were relaxing or playing cards in a makeshift recreational area at Patrol Base Wahab, in Oruzgan province on the evening of August 29, 2012.

Hekmatullah in uniform and armed. Picture: Supplied Source:Supplied
  

Hekmatullah's motive had remained unclear since the incident and remains in dispute with Afghan investigators believing he had previous ties to the Taliban.

"We have a document that shows he was with the Taliban before this happened," said Brigadier-General Sayed Kamal Hashimi, head of prosecutions for the Afghan spy agency, the National Directorate of Security. He refused to provide details.

Handcuffed and sporting a patchy yet thick beard, in contrast to previous photos of him, Hekmatullah denied he was a Taliban infiltrator and spoke calmly about his short time in the Afghan army and his view on the foreign military presence.

"I had no problem with the Australians. I could have attacked them many times before. They came here to build schools and finish the Taliban but instead they burned Korans."

He was referring to a calamitous incident in February 2012, six months before the shooting, in which US troops started to torch more than 1600 religious texts, including an unknown number of Korans, after they were confiscated from inmates at the then US-run Bagram prison, north of Kabul.

The texts had been marked by inmates with extremist inscriptions but were mistakenly later sent to an incinerator on the base.

The incident led to five days of rioting in Afghanistan, in which dozens of people were killed and hundreds wounded.

When a fellow Afghan soldier gave him via Bluetooth a Taliban propaganda clip, which referenced both the Koran-burning incident and European newspapers publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, he said he started to plot what he called revenge.

"I watched this movie at 3pm. My guard duty was at 9pm and I decided to wait until after then. At first I went to a guard tower and asked the soldier there to give me his machine gun because I said I wanted to shoot the foreigners. He refused so I went down and used my M-16."

He fired two bursts of between 10-15 rounds each before fleeing the base into an area of thick vegetation.

"I ran and ran through the jungle until the helicopters came (about 30 minutes later) but thought they will see me if I keep moving.

"I decided to climb a mulberry tree and stayed there through the night."

In the morning, he said he spotted a farmer and approached him explaining he was an ANA soldier who had shot some foreign troops.

"The farmer told me to wait and soon he returned with two men who said they were Taliban. They gave the farmer 15,000 Pakistani rupees ($160) and we left."

The men ferried him by motorbike to another village where he said he was later put in a 4x4 pick-up, secreted under the cabin's rear seat and was told he was being driven to Kandahar.
"We were stopped on the way at a checkpoint and I could hear people speaking in English. I was told later the foreigners were stopping cars and using their computers to check people's fingerprints."

The trio drove several hours to Kandahar where they stopped for tea before they switched vehicles and drove over the Pakistani border.

He said he was then taken to Quetta, where he said he got a job as a house-hand, earning about $75 a month, before Pakistani spies swooped about six months later.

"I think they caught me because I was using my phone to call my relatives," he said.

Taken to court, a defiant Hekmatullah told the judge: "We are Muslim and it's our duty to protect the Koran. If you were a Muslim, you would give me a prize not a penalty."

He said he asked the judge to release him so he could re-join the Afghan National Army.
Instead, the judge sentenced him to death.

Appearing at times uninterested in his plight, Hekmatullah said he was willing to die in defence of his religion.

"If I die on the way to Allah, then so be it. If someone wants me to hang, then I will hang."

His case will now go to an appeal court before it is finalised by the Supreme Court in a process that usually takes months.

Any execution has to be personally approved by the Afghan President.

Imprisoned...Afghanistan's infamous Pul-e Charkhi Prison where Hekmatullah is being kept. Picture: Getty.Source:Getty Images
  

"The Australian Government as a matter of policy is opposed to the death penalty and makes its views known to foreign governments, including the Afghanistan government, on a regular basis," said a Defence spokesperson.

"However it is important to note, Hekmatullah is an Afghan citizen being tried by Afghan authorities under Afghan law."

According to the spokesperson, victim impact statements from the families of the murdered Australian soldiers were provided to the Afghan authority to support the prosecution of charges against Hekmatullah.

But Defence were unaware of any requests of forgiveness made to the families.
Additional reporting: Bakhshi Bakhshi

Death....Nooses hang at Pul-e-Charkhi prison, a fate that Hekmatullah could face. Picture: AFP/Wakil KohsarSource:AFP
   
God takes no pleasure in the death of sinners, so as to delight simply in their death; rather, he delights to magnify his justice by inflicting the punishment which their iniquities have deserved. A righteous judge who takes no pleasure in condemning a criminal, may yet justly command him to be executed so that law and justice may be satisfied, even though it is in his power to procure him a reprieve. – George Whitefield, Letter to Wesley, Bethesda in Georgia, Dec. 24, 1740
  
 

OTHER LINKS:
Families want death penalty to be carried out for Diggers’ assassin