Newspaper urges execution of Taliban prisoners

AFGHANISTAN: The Afghan government should execute Taliban prisoners, an Afghan daily said yesterday, the day after the rebels…

AFGHANISTAN:The Afghan government should execute Taliban prisoners, an Afghan daily said yesterday, the day after the rebels killed the translator of an Italian journalist.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Taliban commander holding five Afghan health ministry officials said the militants would kill one of the hostages unless Kabul opened talks with the group.

Spokesman Shahabuddin Atal said translator Ajmal Naqshbandi had been beheaded on Sunday after the government refused to free several insurgent prisoners. Government officials later confirmed the man was killed.

"Martyring Ajmal Naqshbandi and their other crimes happen as the government shows extreme leniency towards Taliban prisoners," the daily Arman-e-Milliesaid in an editorial.

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"There has been no implementation of punishment for any criminal and killer Taliban who has been sentenced to heavy punishment by the judicial authorities," it said. "From now on, criminal Taliban should be executed."

Newly married, Mr Naqshbandi was seized in early March, along with La Repubblicareporter Daniele Mastrogiacomo and his local driver. The Taliban freed the Italian after about two weeks when Kabul released five of its senior members.

The swap happened after the group beheaded Mr Mastrogiacomo's driver, but the rebels had held on to his translator in an attempt to secure the release of more of their men.

Another daily, Cheragh, criticised President Hamid Karzai's government for failing to free Mr Naqshbandi but going ahead with a deal to secure Mr Mastrogiacomo's freedom and save Italy's fragile government from embarrassment.

"Mr Karzai, no doubt, you managed to save the Italian government from falling. But with regret, you could not save the life of an Afghan and someone who had voted for you," it said.

Mr Karzai condemned the execution and said Mr Naqshbandi's release had been part of the deal involving the Italian journalist.

"While efforts were going on from the government side for his release, this human killer group murdered him mercilessly," a presidential palace statement quoted Mr Karzai as saying.

A group representing Afghan journalists said the execution had caused local reporters to fear covering areas where the Taliban is active. As a sign of protest, some Afghan journalists vowed to omit Taliban comments or statements from their stories for a week and urged foreign media to follow suit.

The Mastrogiacomo deal was widely criticised in Italy and Afghanistan. Security experts said it would trigger more abductions of foreigners. Last week, two French aid workers were kidnapped along with three Afghan colleagues.