Afghanistan: Killing of human rights defender is a war crime

Responding to the news that Abdul Samad Amiri, the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission’s acting director in Ghor province, was kidnapped and killed by the Taliban, Amnesty International’s South Asia Campaigner, Samira Hamidi, said:

“This brutal act is a war crime. Even as the Taliban claims to be pursuing peace, it continues to kill people in the most gruesome way. Abdul Samad Amiri devoted his life to standing up for the rights of others, those who have no one else to speak for them. Our thoughts are with Abdul Samad’s family and his brave colleagues at the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.

“This tragedy underscores the grave dangers that human rights defenders in Afghanistan face. Threatened by all sides in a conflict that continues to claim civilian lives daily, they are left defenceless. The Afghan government and the international community must provide them with the protection they desperately need and not abandon them.”

Background

Shaharzad Akbar, Chair of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, said that Abdul Samad Amiri was kidnapped and then shot on 4 September 2019 by the Taliban while traveling back from from Kabul.

Last month, Amnesty International published a report entitled Defenceless Defenders: Afghanistan’s Human Rights Community Under Attack , which details how human rights defenders in Afghanistan are under intensifying attacks from both the authorities and armed groups as they face intimidation, harassment, threats and violence.

As part of its international “BRAVE” campaign for the rights of human rights defenders, Amnesty International is calling on the Afghan government and the international community to establish a protection mechanism for human rights defenders working in the country.