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UK war crimes probe launches with call for evidence

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The investigation into extrajudicial killings by British troops in Afghanistan was announced last year

An independent inquiry into alleged illegal killings by the British military in Afghanistan officially opened with a call for evidence on Wednesday. Investigation chairman Lord Justice Haddon-Cave promised to “do everything in our power” to “get to the bottom” of the scandal.

I would urge anyone, who has got any information or material, which they think may be relevant to the inquiry, to please get in touch with the inquiry team as soon as possible,” Haddon-Cave said in a statement on Wednesday accompanying the launch of a public website devoted to the inquiry. 

Allegations surfaced last year that UK Special Air Services (SAS) soldiers had slaughtered 54 Afghans in the Helmand province between 2010 and 2011 in circumstances that amounted to war crimes.

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FILE PHOTO. Members of the British armed forces return from Kabul, Afghanistan on August 28, 2021.
UK launches ‘independent’ probe into war crime allegations

In addition to determining whether special forces or other UK troops were responsible for “numerous” extrajudicial killings between 2010 and 2013 and whether any of those alleged crimes should be prosecuted, the probe is tasked with determining whether the Royal Military Police acted properly in its investigation of those crimes or whether it deliberately sought to cover them up – and “what lessons can be learned” from any deviant behavior.

It is just as important to exonerate the innocent as it is to bring anyone who broke the law to justice, Haddon-Cave said in his statement, “both for the reputation of the armed forces and the country.” 

Investigators can compel the appearance of witnesses and production of documents. However, Haddon-Cave declined to directly address a reporter’s question regarding whether the committee would be taking evidence from the Taliban, who returned to power in 2021 but retained a strong foothold in Helmand even when coalition forces had the upper hand nationally.

After examining “thousands of documents, many highly sensitive,” and holding “background briefings” about British military operations in Afghanistan, the probe will begin hearings about specifics, Haddon-Cave explained, acknowledging that much of the latter would have to be conducted behind closed doors due to the sensitive nature of special forces activities. 

The probe was announced in December after law firm Leigh Day filed a high court case on behalf of Sayfullah – an Afghan man who claimed his father, two brothers, and cousin were murdered during a SAS raid in February 2011 in southern Afghanistan. Another suit on behalf of the Noorzai family was later opened.


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