No Time to Lose - Promoting the Accountability of the Afghan National Security Forces
By 2014, the Afghan national army and police – under the authority of the Ministries of Defence and Interior, respectively – are expected to assume full responsibility for the protection of Afghan civilians. But as international military actors prepare for withdrawal, there are serious concerns regarding the professionalism and accountability of the security forces they will leave behind.The civilian toll of the conflict in Afghanistan is getting worse each year. In 2010 at least 2,777 civilians were killed – the highest since 2001. Armed opposition groups continue to account for the highest number of civilian casualties and the most serious violations of human rights and humanitarian law; but the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) – financed, trained and equipped by the international community – also account for substantial civilian harm. At least 10 per cent of Afghan civilians killed in the conflict in 2010 were killed by their own security forces.
But civilian casualty statistics do not convey the full extent of harm caused to the civilian population by the ANSF. Human rights organisations have documented a series of alleged violations of human rights and humanitarian law on the part of the national security forces, including night raids carried out without adequate precautions to protect civilians, the recruitment and sexual abuse of children, mistreatment during detention, and the killing and abuse of civilians by local police seen by many communities as criminal gangs.
The international community has been pouring money into the war in Afghanistan for almost a decade, but serious efforts to strengthen the professionalism and accountability of the national security forces only really began in 2009. For the best part of a decade there has been a striking lack of attention to the development of qualified security personnel, and equally, a lack of attention to the institutional reform necessary to ensure accountability. There is no satisfactory mechanism by which an individual can lodge a complaint against the ANSF; nor for the processing of complaints; nor for the dissemination of findings or the payment of compensation. The military justice system functions only for those without political connections, there is no permanent institution devoted to investigating allegations of harm caused by the ANSF, and civilian casualties caused by the ANSF are not even counted by the government. As greater responsibility is handed over to the national security forces, there is a serious risk that unless adequate accountability mechanisms are put in place, violations of human rights and humanitarian law may escalate – and Afghan civilians will pay the price.
Combating abusive conduct on the part of the ANSF and the climate of impunity in which abuse takes place, as well as improving the government’s response to civilian harm caused during lawful combat operations, is a moral, political and legal imperative both for the international community and the Afghan government. Afghan communities have high hopes for their own security forces; but a perceived lack of accountability for violations, as well as ‘collateral damage’ followed by neither apology nor redress, undermines the perceived legitimacy of the Afghan government and makes those high hopes appear misplaced. All states also have a legal obligation to ensure respect for international humanitarian law, and this includes a duty to take action to stop violations. Some states have additional obligations under domestic law and policy regarding security forces they fund, train, arm, equip, or operate alongside.
As international forces prepare for a phased withdrawal of troops in the lead up to transition, time to develop the professionalism and accountability of the national security forces is running out. It’s not too late; but an adequate response will not be possible without genuine political will at the highest levels of civilian and military leadership, both Afghan and international.
Recommendations to the Afghan Government and the Inter-national Community:
1. Ensure that individuals put forward for inclusion in the ANSF are credibly and consistently vetted for gross violations of human rights.
2. Improve the quality of training for the ANSF. Training for the ANP must include sufficient emphasis on community-based policing, good governance, the rule of law and accountability; and all components of the ANSF should be trained in international human rights and humanitarian law as appropriate.
3. Increase the number of women in the ANSF, as well as in the design and implementation of training and mentoring programs.
4. Provide more substantial political and financial support to government institutions and mandated independent bodies that receive and investigate complaints against the ANSF, such as the Ministry of Interior’s Gender and Human Rights Unit and the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission.
5. Ensure that ANSF personnel who abuse their authority, violate codes of conduct or otherwise fail to fulfil their obligations under Afghan or international law are transparently investigated and appropriately disciplined and/or prosecuted.
6. Enhance efforts to ensure that the conduct of ANSF personnel is subject to independent oversight, and appropriate information made available to the public.
7. Ensure that incidents resulting in civilian harm are properly monitored and followed by credible, transparent investigations.
To the Afghan Government:
8. The Ministries of Interior and Defence should make a genuine commitment to ensuring that relevant codes of conduct are communicated to and understood by all ANSF personnel, as well as the public.
9. In consultation with international military forces and civil society representatives, develop a uniform, consistent, transparent procedure for the payment of compensation in the event of civilian harm.
To the US and the Afghan Ministry of Interior:
10. Suspend further expansion of the Afghan Local Police until appropriate vetting, training and oversight can be assured, previous initiatives have been evaluated, and independent monitoring of the program has been established.
11. Terminate community defence initiatives falling outside the formal structure of the Afghan National Police, and suspend all government funding for such initiatives.
To the EU:
12. Adopt guidelines for EU training missions so as to ensure that these missions build the recipient state’s capacity to promote respect for international human rights and humanitarian law.
To all states supporting the ANSF:
13. Develop mechanisms for improved public reporting regarding efforts to enhance the professionalism and accountability of the ANSF, and progress made.
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