Amnesty Writes To Clinton & Key Over Human Rights in Afghanistan
Scoop Exclusive: Amnesty International in New Zealand and the USA has written to both NZ PM John Key and USA Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton detailing a three step approach both countries can take to improving human rights and security for the Afghan
people.
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Open Letter to United States Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key:
Afghanistan: Three concrete steps to improve human rights for the Afghan people
Dear Prime Minister and Secretary of State
We are writing to you ahead of your meetings between 4-6 November to urge you to convey Amnesty International’s concern
about the deteriorating human rights and security situation in Afghanistan and to provide key recommendations that would
improve the security and well-being of the Afghan people.
Nine years after the international community helped bring President Hamid Karzai to power, Afghans face increasing
insecurity, erosion of the rule of law and human rights protections, poor governance and endemic corruption. As you are
no doubt aware, protecting the human rights of the Afghan people was often propounded as a justification for the October
2001 international intervention in Afghanistan to oust the Taleban regime from power. The Afghan government and its
international supporters, including the United States (US) and New Zealand (NZ), committed to a number of benchmarks for
improving respect for the rights of the Afghan people in the 2006 Afghanistan Compact, which identified improving
governance, rule of law and human rights as major pillars of development for Afghanistan’s future. These commitments
seem to have been discarded without fanfare, but the need for improving the human rights situation in Afghanistan is
even more urgent now.
In this context, Amnesty International has outlined below three concrete measures you can take to improve governance,
uphold the rule of law and human rights which would enhance security and stability – all of which can be implemented
immediately to improve the prospects for the Afghanistan’s future.
1. Improve the accountability of international and Afghan military and security forces
In view of the US government’s deployment of 30,000 extra troops in Afghanistan and New Zealand’s continuing deployment
of the Provincial Reconstruction Team and possible extension of the deployment of its Special Air Service (NZSAS),
Amnesty International urges you to do more to provide accountability and remedy for violations of international
humanitarian and human rights law. The current lack of accountability fuels and fosters resentment among Afghans that
international forces are above the law and accountable for their actions.
Amnesty International welcomed the move in June 2010 by the former Commander of US forces and the NATO International
Security Assistance Force, General Stanley McChrystal, to bring most US Special Operations forces under the same chain
of command as regular US and NATO forces for the first time.
However, those forces that remain outside the regular chain of command, such as the US Army's Delta Force and the Navy
Seals, civilian contractors, intelligence agencies as well as special operations units from other countries, must also
be held accountable for their actions and also be governed by the rule of law.
Amnesty International has welcomed the creation of the NATO Civilian Casualties Tracking Cell (CCTC) to investigate
claims of civilian casualties but is concerned that the unit continues to be under resourced and its mandate must be
expanded to cover OGAs and private contractors. International and Afghan military and security forces must develop and
implement a consistent, clear and credible mechanism or mechanisms for receiving complaints and investigating claims of
civilian casualties or injuries resulting from its military or other security operations.
2. No arbitrary detention or transfers to torture:
The increase in the scope of fighting in Afghanistan as a result of the troop surge and the NZSAS’ engagement in joint
operations with the Afghan Crisis Response Unit may lead to a rise in the number of persons detained. Without an
immediate improvement in the procedures for arresting, detaining, and trying detainees, it is likely that there will be
an escalation in the violations of international human rights and humanitarian law obligations with respect to
detainees. Amnesty International recommends that you adopt the following concrete measures to improve respect for the
rule of law:
• The US government should immediately grant all detainees held by US, whether in Bagram, Guantánamo Bay or any other US
detention facility, access to legal counsel, relatives, doctors, and to consular representatives, without delay and
regularly thereafter. In the absence of an effectively functioning independent and impartial judicial system in
Afghanistan, Bagram detainees must have access to US courts to be able to challenge the lawfulness of their detention.
Currently, US forces continue to detain around 900 Afghans without clear legal authority and without adequate legal
process.
• The USA and New Zealand must retain responsibility for the custody of the people your forces capture, and not hand
them over to the sole control of the Afghan authorities, until they no longer face the current risks of torture or other
ill-treatment, particularly at the hands of the National Directorate of Security (NDS).
• Both governments should urge the Afghan government to prohibit the NDS from detaining prisoners and allow independent
human rights monitoring of all detainees, including by the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, with access to
all places of detention and all detainees.
• Both governments should seek mechanisms to ensure fair trials without undue delay for those in detention, including
the option of mixed tribunals to try those apprehended in counter-insurgency operations by either Afghan or
international forces.
3. Guarantee human rights protections during reconciliation talks with the Taleban
The London Conference on Afghanistan which took place on 28 January 2009 marked the formal pledge by the Afghan
government to develop and implement a national Peace and Reintegration Programme to reintegrate what it calls moderate
elements of the Taleban into Afghan society.
Afghan civil society groups, in particular women's groups, have raised serious questions about the prospect for human
rights in Afghanistan if the Taleban are invited to join the political process. The Taleban have had a terrible record
for human rights abuses both in government and as insurgents. Today in areas under their control, as when in government,
the Taleban have severely curtailed the rights of girls and women, including the denial of education, employment,
freedom of movement and political participation and representation.
We call on you to ensure that human rights, including women’s rights, are not traded away or compromised during any
political process, including reconciliation talks with the Taleban in Afghanistan and that, in line with the demands of
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, Afghan women are meaningfully represented in the
planning stages and during the reconciliation talks.
The “National Stability and Reconciliation” Bill, which was passed by the Afghan parliament in March 2007, provides
immunity from prosecution for people who committed serious human rights violations including war crimes and crimes
against humanity, committed in the past 30 years. Under this legislation, people who committed serious human rights
violations and violations of the laws of war, including massacres, widespread enforced disappearances, and systematic
use of torture, rape, public executions and other forms of ill-treatment would be immune from criminal prosecution if
they pledge cooperation with the Afghan government. The legislation also provides that Taleban figures who agree to
cooperate with the Afghan government would also be immune from prosecution. Taleban members – just like any other
individuals - responsible for abuses of human rights, some of which also constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity,
and other crimes under international or national law, must be held to account for their actions, not be granted official
impunity.
The creation of such legal immunities is fundamentally incompatible with Afghanistan’s obligations under international
human rights and humanitarian law. Amnesty International is urges you as Afghanistan’s international partners to call on
President Hamid Karzai and the Afghan Parliament to immediately repeal this legislation.
As Afghanistan’s international partners seek to increase Afghan engagement in their development and reconstruction and
to follow through on pledges made at previous conferences, the implementation of each of the above steps would serve to
achieve objectives and improve the dire human rights situation in Afghanistan. It would also signal that the interests
of the Afghan people are the focus of their government and the international community.
We would welcome further discussion of these issues and are happy to provide any further information that would be
useful to you in improving governance, human rights and rule of law in Afghanistan.
Yours sincerely,
Patrick Holmes
Larry Cox
Chief Executive Officer
Executive Director
Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand
Amnesty International USA.