Taliban leaders respond to Prince Harry's reported claim in 'Spare' he killed 25 fighters in Afghanistan

Taliban leaders respond to Prince Harry's reported claim in 'Spare' he killed 25 fighters in Afghanistan

ABC NEWS

Harry’s reported comments have sparked outcries from senior Taliban officials.

Anas Haqqani, a senior aide and brother of interim Afghan Interior Minister Siraj Haqqani, tweeted that the people Harry claims he killed “were humans.”

“The ones you killed were not chess pieces, they were humans; they had families who were waiting for their return,” Anas Haqqani wrote. “Among the killers of Afghans, not many have your decency to reveal their conscience and confess to their war crimes. The truth is what you’ve said; Our innocent people were chess pieces to your soldiers, military and political leaders. Still, you were defeated in that ‘game’ of white & black ‘square.'”

Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesperson for the Taliban government, also issued a reply, noting the country of Afghanistan “will never forget such acts.”

“‘The recent confession by British prince Harry, who brutally killed 25 of our countrymen during his mission in Afghanistan, shows that such crimes are not limited to Harry but to all those occupying country forces who were in Afghanistan,” Karimi said in a tweet. “It is unfortunate that the Western countries consider themselves to be the defender & supporters of human rights, but in practical that’s their real manners. Afghanistan as Muslim nation will never forget such acts and will always defend its land’.”

Some former members of the British military are also speaking out about Harry’s reported revelations in his book.

Former Royal Marine Ben McBean, who lost two limbs in Afghanistan and shared an RAF flight out of the war zone with Harry, tweeted that the prince needs to “shut up.”

“Love you #PrinceHarry but you need to shut up!,” McBean wrote on Twitter. “Makes you wonder the people he’s hanging around with. If it was good people somebody by now would have told him to stop.”

Colonel Richard Kemp, a former Army commander in Afghanistan, told the BBC that Harry’s comments about his time in Afghanistan were “ill-judged.”

“I think he’s wrong when he says in his book that insurgents were seen just as being virtually unhuman – subhuman perhaps – just as chess pieces to be knocked over,” Kemp said. “That’s not the case at all. And it’s not the way the British Army trains people as he claims.”

Kemp continued, “I think that sort of comment that doesn’t reflect reality, is misleading and potentially valuable to those people who wish the British forces and British government harm, so I think it was an error of judgement.”

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Taliban leaders respond to Prince Harry's reported claim in 'Spare' he killed 25 fighters in Afghanistan

 

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