Military officials probe death of Afghan recruit



Afghan prosecutors had recommended a murder case against U.S. soldiers.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
GARDEZ, Afghanistan -- American military investigators have opened a criminal probe into allegations of murder and torture in the death of an 18-year-old Afghan army recruit while in U.S. custody last year.
The new inquiry, which will also focus on the alleged torture of seven other Afghan soldiers, was confirmed Monday by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command.
The previously undisclosed death occurred in March 2003 after the eight soldiers were arrested at a remote firebase operated here by the U.S. Army special forces, according to witnesses and an Afghan military investigation.
Motivation for those arrests remains cloaked in Afghan political intrigue. The action was requested by a provincial governor feuding with local military commanders, according to an Afghan intelligence report.
In the end, none of the eight men was charged with any crime or linked to anti-government conduct.
Allegations
The dead soldier, identified as Jamal Naseer, a member of the Afghan Army III Corps, was severely beaten over a span of at least two weeks, according to a report prepared for the Afghan attorney general. A witness described his battered corpse as being "green and black" with bruises.
Alleged American mistreatment of the detainees included repeated beatings, immersion in cold water, electric shocks, being hung upside down and toenails being torn off, according to Afghan investigators and an internal memorandum prepared by a U.N. delegation that interviewed the surviving soldiers.
Some of the Afghan soldiers were beaten to the point that they could not walk or sit, according to Afghan doctors and other witnesses.
Afghan military prosecutors looking into the event privately recommended more than a year ago that the Afghan attorney general's office pursue a murder case against unidentified American soldiers at the Gardez firebase. No action on the recommendation was taken, but the prosecutors say the case is still open.
The prosecutors' confidential 117-page investigative report recently was reviewed by a Washington-based nonprofit educational organization -- the Crimes of War Project -- and the information was provided to the Los Angeles Times.