Government can’t rely on ISAF report into civilian casulties
23 March 2017
Amnesty International says New Zealand
Government can’t rely on the ISAF report into civilian
casualties in Afghanistan
Amnesty International’s Grant
Bayldon says the New Zealand
Government must act now to
swiftly launch an independent inquiry into allegations of
civilian deaths in Afghanistan.
Bayldon said today, “The
New Zealand Government can’t
rely on the veracity of
the ISAF report as they’re currently doing. We have
documented instances of ISAF reaching incorrect findings in
their reports and have also raised concerns about their
ability, as military forces, to conduct an impartial
investigation
into military conduct.”
In just one
example from 2013, ISAF reacted in the media to reports of
civilian casualties
caused by a drone strike. After
initially saying that it killed “10 enemy forces” and
that there were “no signs of civilians in the vicinity”,
it later acknowledged that three civilians were killed. A
United Nations investigation found that 10 civilians
were
killed.
In a 2014 report Amnesty International
noted, “A key requirement
of a good investigation is
that those responsible for carrying out the investigation
are independent of those implicated in the alleged
crimes...Other indicators of good investigations include
taking witness statements in a timely fashion, protecting
witnesses
from violence or intimidation, and drafting
detailed written reports of findings that are made public
within a reasonable
time.”
/ENDS