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Afghan warlord accused of rights abuse awarded highest military rank
By Mushtaq MOJADDIDI
Kabul (AFP) July 3, 2020

U.S. soldier dies in vehicle rollover accident in Afghanistan
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 06, 2020 - The Department of Defense has announced that a soldier was killed over the weekend in a vehicle rollover accident in Afghanistan.

In a statement, the Pentagon said Spc. Vincent Sebastian Ibarria, 21, died Friday in Farah province.

"The incident is under investigation," the Saturday release said.

Ibarria was in Afghanistan in support of Operation Freedom's Sentinel, the United States' counter-terrorism mission in Afghanistan.

The San Antonio, Texas, native was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, Fort Drum, New York.

"The entire Warrior Team mourns the loss of Vincent," his brigade said on Facebook. "Our thoughts and prayers are with Vincent's family, friends and fellow soldiers."

The circumstances around his death were not released though the statement said his death was the result of an "accident."

Ibarria is the ninth U.S. soldier to be killed in Afghanistan this year, and was the most recent death since May when 1st Lt. Trevarius Ravon Bowman died in what has been classified as a non-combat-related incident.

A powerful Afghan warlord accused of kidnapping and raping a political opponent and of committing rights abuses for decades has been given the country's highest military rank, a top official said Friday.

Abdul Rashid Dostum, 66, was awarded the rank of marshal in a decree issued by President Ashraf Ghani, making him the only third such recipient in Afghan armed forces.

"I congratulate you on achieving the highest military rank of the country," Abdullah Abdullah, who now heads a high-profile council tasked with holding peace talks with the Taliban, wrote on his Facebook page Friday.

"Awarding the marshal rank is an appreciation to the thousands of mujahideen fighters who have been martyred and wounded over the years while defending the country."

Ghani's office was unavailable for comment, but some Afghan media networks reported that Ghani had issued a decree conferring the title on Dostum.

Dostum's spokesman welcomed the decision.

"This promotion should have been done many years ago, but we welcome that it has finally been done," Bashir Ahmad Tayenj told AFP.

Dostum had been vice president in Ghani's previous administration in 2014, but fell out with him and became an ally of Abdullah.

Both Abdullah and Dostum denounced the result of a September 2019 election that saw Ghani re-elected amid claims of fraud.

While Dostum called Ghani's victory a "coup", Abdullah bitterly opposed the win for months and even held a rival swearing-in ceremony as president on the same day when Ghani was formally sworn in for the second time.

Ghani and Abdullah ended their dispute in May, paving the way for launching peace talks with the Taliban.

In the political accord that ended Ghani and Abdullah's feud, it was agreed that Dostum be awarded the title of marshal.

- 'Beastly crime' -

Dostum, a burly Uzbek warlord, has been a powerful figure in Afghanistan's politics for decades.

He has switched allegiances many times since joining the Afghan army in the 1970s -- fighting for the Soviets against the mujahideen, and then with the alliance that helped overthrow the Taliban.

In Ghani's previous government, he had been vice president mostly in name only, having spent much of the time in exile in Turkey after being accused of kidnapping and raping Ahmad Eshchi, a political opponent, in 2016.

The charges against him and his bodyguards in this case remain active.

Eshchi's son Baktash Eshchi slammed Ghani and Abdullah when talks were on to promote Dostum.

"Instead of this award to Abdul Rashid Dostum, why did you not recommend that he be brought to court as any other law-abiding citizen for his beastly crime against my elderly father?" Baktash Eshchi wrote on his Facebook page in May.

Rights groups have also accused Dostum and his forces of committing widespread human rights abuses over decades, including killing thousands of Taliban prisoners in the aftermath of the US invasion in 2001.

Dostum has denied these allegations.

"All those people involved in Afghan conflict over the last four decades had armed militias, and human rights fell victim to the post-Taliban politics," said Kabul-based analyst Sayed Nasir Musawi.

"None of those people have been held accountable."

Over the years, Dostum has survived several attempts on his life, including one claimed by the Islamic State group in July 2018 in Kabul that killed 23 people, including a driver for AFP.

mam-us-jds/sst

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