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WSWS : News
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: Afghanistan
Afghans besiege US base to protest arrests
By Kate Randall
28 July 2005
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Nearly 2,000 Afghans protested Tuesday outside the US air base
in Bagram, north of the Afghan capital, Kabul. Chanting Die
America! the crowd threw stones and tried to break down
an outer gate to the base, demanding the release of eight detained
villagers.
According to the Associated Press, Afghan troops fired warning
shots and used clubs to beat back the demonstrators, and US troops
also fired shots into the air. Smoke rose from tires set on fire
by the protesters. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
It was the biggest anti-US protest since demonstrations erupted
last May in Kabul, Jalalabad and other Afghan cities following
the publication of an article in Newsweek magazinelater
retractedthat reported the desecration of the Koran by US
interrogators at the Guantánamo Bay prison camp. Sixteen
people were killed and scores injured in those protests.
Following Tuesdays protests, the US military handed over
six Bagram villagers to Afghan authorities. (The US said only
six had been detained late Monday, following earlier reports of
eight.) The six included a former commander in the US-backed Northern
Alliance, an Islamic cleric, farmers and laborers.
The US claimed the men had materials used to make improvised
explosive devices in their possession and are thought to be planning
future attacks against coalition forces. The provincial
governor guaranteed the men would be presented for questioning
at any time US officials requested.
Demonstrators were angered that the men had been arrested without
consulting local Afghan authorities. We should be treated
with dignity, Shah Aghar, 35, told AP. They are arresting
our people without permission of the government. They are breaking
into our houses and offending the people. We are very angry.
Protesters who had massed outside the Bagram basethe
main US military headquarters in Afghanistanthrew stones
as six US military vehicles tried to enter the base. Soldiers
in the vehicles fired into the air with handguns. As the convoy
sped into the base, the crowd chased after it, trying to push
down a metal gate guarded by Afghan troops. Some of the protesters
were beaten by the guards with clubs, and most dispersed.
Thousands of American and other foreign soldiers live at the
Bagram base. It is ringed by several razor-wire fences and the
main entrance consists of a series of heavily guarded checkpoints.
Areas outside the bases perimeter contain land mines placed
during the Soviet occupation in the 1980s.
Bagram has become a symbol of the brutality that has characterized
the close to four-year US occupation of Afghanistan. A May 20,
2005 New York Times article, based on a 2,000-page file
compiled by US army investigators, confirmed that the US military
has carried out systematic physical and psychological torture
at the bases detention center. This included two documented
deaths of prisoners in December 2002 at the hands of US torturers.
(See Afghan president
feigns outrage over latest US torture revelations.)
According to an Afghan provincial governor, the night before
the Bagram protest about 50 suspected insurgents and two Afghan
soldiers died in an overnight battle in southern Afghanistan.
The US would not confirm the death toll. It was one of the bloodiest
clashes in the recent fighting that has erupted in Afghanistan
as the country heads into parliamentary elections, scheduled for
September 18.
The puppet regime of Hamid Karzai controls little of the country
outside of Kabul. US forces have suffered mounting casualties
in recent months, including the loss of 16 special forces troops
killed in the downing of a Chinook helicopter on June 28. Afghan
civilian casualties have risen in the aftermath of the incident.
A surge in violence has claimed the lives of more than 800 people
since March.
Since the US invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, 214 American
troops have been killed in the country. US casualties have increased
with each year of the war, with 60 deaths reported in the first
seven months of 2005 alone.
See Also:
US military reprisal in Afghanistan kills
17 civilians
[8 July 2005]
Helicopter downing highlights upsurge
in Afghan armed resistance
[4 July 2005]
Increasing attacks on US and
allies in Afghanistan
[23 June 2005]
Afghan president feigns outrage
over latest US torture revelations
[24 May 2005]
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