Afghans "killed in cold blood"?: British military is said to have shot unarmed people

Elite soldiers of the British army are said to have killed unarmed people in Afghanistan during night raids.

Afghans "killed in cold blood"?: British military is said to have shot unarmed people

Elite soldiers of the British army are said to have killed unarmed people in Afghanistan during night raids. A total of 54 people were shot in this way, reports the BBC. Investigations were specifically obstructed by the armed forces.

According to a BBC report, a British special forces unit may have been systematically killing unarmed people in Afghanistan. Mission reports indicate that the SAS (Special Air Service) unit shot dead a total of 54 people under suspicious circumstances in the southern Afghan province of Helmand over a period of six months in 2010 and 2011.

The reason for the assumption was a pattern of "strikingly similar reports" about Afghan men who, after being captured, are said to have tried to pull weapons or grenades out from behind curtains or furniture and were then allegedly shot in self-defense, the report said. The killings are said to have taken place as part of so-called "kill or capture raids". These are nightly raids on people suspected of being Taliban commanders or bomb makers.

The unarmed men were shot "in cold blood," the BBC program "Panorama" said, citing four years of research. Weapons were foisted on the shot Afghans to justify the killings, it said.

According to the BBC, the reports are said to have sparked concern at British Special Forces headquarters over a possible deliberate strategy of illegal killings by the unit. However, they were not passed on to the military police. The BBC report is based on court documents, leaked emails and own research on site.

A full-scale investigation into killings in Afghanistan by British military personnel was closed in 2019 without finding any criminal conduct. However, the BBC, citing unnamed military police sources, reported that the investigation was said to have been obstructed by the armed forces.

A spokesman for the British Ministry of Defense declined to comment on the details when asked by the BBC, but said British troops in Afghanistan had served with "courage and professionalism". He added: "No new evidence has been presented, but the military police will investigate any allegations should new evidence come to light."