SECURITY — June 19, 2026

Body of former Afghan National Army officer found in Kapisa with signs of torture

Hashmatullah, who served as a company commander in the fourth battalion of the Silab Corps, was found at the Kapisa central hospital. The case coincides with United Nations documentation of multiple extrajudicial killings and instances of torture against former Afghan government personnel over the past three months.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV2 min read

Body of former Afghan National Army officer found in Kapisa with signs of torture
Image courtesy Amu TV

Local sources have reported the discovery of the body of Hashmatullah, a former Afghan National Army officer, at the central hospital in Kapisa province. Hashmatullah previously served as a company commander in the fourth battalion of the Silab Corps. Observers noted severe signs of torture on the body when it was found.

The circumstances of the death are not clear, and no group or individual has claimed responsibility. The Taliban have not commented on the incident or provided any information about an investigation.

This report emerges alongside a recent assessment by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. The mission recorded at least ten extrajudicial killings, twenty-one arbitrary arrests, and eight cases of torture against former government soldiers and officials in the preceding three months.

The pattern of incidents described in the United Nations report includes actions targeting individuals associated with the former Afghan administration. Local sources in Kapisa have not linked the death of Hashmatullah directly to any specific pattern, but the timing coincides with the period covered by the United Nations documentation.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Single outlet reporting the specific incident solely on the basis of unnamed local sources; no official confirmation, named attribution, or independent corroboration provided for the killing itself.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Amu TV: "concerning cases of human rights violations", "severe signs of torture", "worries about the security and human rights situation" - these phrases introduce emotional framing and advocacy tone by emphasizing victimhood and ongoing threats without direct attribution.

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SecurityKapisa, Hashmatullah, former ANA, torture, UNAMA

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