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Tuesday, March 27, 2001

The Taliban do, on the whole, want to eliminate violence and return to peace

"Then a man took a kalashnikov from one of the Taliban, and aiming it awkwardly, pulled the trigger. Six or eight rounds rattled out in a sharp, loud burst and the muzzle of the weapon jerked upwards and to the right. The condemned man, still squatting, shuddered and spun round as the bullets hit him, seemed to hold himself upright for a moment and then toppled over onto his side. I saw him turning his head, craning his neck as if looking for something he had left behind. The crowd were on their feet shouting, then there was another short burst of fire and the body shook again. There were long shouts of 'Allahu Akbar'. The small pool of blood was mopped up with rags and, fifteen minutes later, two football teams filed out and started warming up."

London Review of Books. Jason Burke has covered Afghanistan and Afghanistan-related issues as a journalist and offers first-hand details of the curiously frightening extremist regime now running the nation. "The Taliban had arrived in Kabul on 26 September 1996. Their first target was President Najibullah... They found him quickly. He was beaten, castrated, dragged behind a jeep and then shot dead. His brother, too, was killed and their battered bodies were hung from a post by a steel noose in the centre of the city. Cigarettes were forced into their mouths and their pockets were stuffed with money."'

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This is the personal weblog of Grant Barrett, editor of the Double-Tongued Dictionary, a collection of words from the fringes of English. More about this site...

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