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The film was researched by award-winning journalist Najibullah Quraishi.
Produced and directed by Irish filmmaker and former BBC producer Jamie Doran,
the film tells the story of thousands of prisoners who surrendered to the US
military's Afghan allies after the siege of Kunduz. According to the film, some
three thousand of the prisoners were forced into sealed containers and loaded
onto trucks for transport to Sheberghan prison. When the prisoners began
shouting for air, U.S.- allied Afghan soldiers fired directly into the truck,
killing many of them. The rest suffered through an appalling road trip lasting
up to four days, so thirsty they clawed at the skin of their fellow prisoners as
they licked perspiration and even drank blood from open wounds.
Witnesses say that when the trucks arrived and soldiers opened the containers,
most of the people inside were dead. They also say US Special Forces re-directed
the containers carrying the living and dead into the desert and stood by as
survivors were shot and buried. Now, up to three thousand bodies lie buried in a
mass grave.
Outraged human rights groups and lawyers are calling for an investigation but
the U.N. special envoy to Afghanistan refuses any U.N.-backed investigation
until the Afghan government can protect witnesses. Two of the witnesses in the
film have already been killed.
The film provides eyewitness testimony that U.S. troops were complicit in the
massacre of thousands of Taliban prisoners during the Afghan War.
The film has sent shockwaves around the world. It has been broadcast on national
television in Britain, Germany, Italy and Australia. It has been screened by the
European parliament. It has outraged human rights groups and international human
rights lawyers. They are calling for investigation into whether U.S. Special
Forces are guilty of war crimes.
But most Americans have never heard of the film. That’s because not one
corporate media outlet in the U.S. will touch it. It has never before been
broadcast in this country.
“Afghan Massacre” is produced and directed by award-winning Irish filmmaker
Jamie Doran. Doran is has worked at the highest levels of television film
production for more than two decades. His films have been broadcast on virtually
every major channel throughout the world. On average, each of his films are seen
in around 35 countries. Before establishing his independent television company,
Jamie Doran spent over seven years at BBC Television.
The film was researched by award-winning journalist Najibullah Quraishi, who was
beaten almost to death when he tried to obtain video evidence of US Special
Forces’ complicity in the massacre. Two of the witnesses who testified in the
film are now dead.
“Afghan Massacre: the Convoy of Death”- produced and directed by award-winning
Irish filmmaker Jamie Doran.