Material att använda vid överklagan eller verkställighetshinder (VUT). Sammanställt augusti 2018 av Lisa Carlgren,
Göteborg (organisationsforskare, frivillig familjehemsförälder). I syfte att
stötta afghanska ungdomar som fått avslag med hänvisning till att de kan leva i
en annan del av landet, samt de som inte längre är muslimer.
Lifos Temarapport Afghanistan, Kristna och Apostater 2017-12-21, om apostasi och hur information sprids.
Denna rapport, Kapitel 9 om informationsspridning i Afghanistan (generell
information om hur information sprids i nätverk och inom Talibanrörelsen lokalt
och nationellt). Rapporten handlar om apostasi, konvertering osv, men denna del
är generell och borde gälla för alla som hotas personligen av Talibaner.
”Afghanska lokalsamhällen är nära sammansvetsade, vilket
innebär att afghaner, generellt sett, vet vad som händer i deras distrikt och
när en ny person kommer till hemområdet eller passerar igenom det. Information
kan också spridas långväga genom de sociala nätverken. Talibanrörelsen synar
individer som är nykomlingar i områden under deras kontroll för att avgöra om
de är myndighetsinformatörer. De synar också individer som reser mellan
taliban- respektive regeringskontrollerade områden. Rörelsen har också ett
nätverk av informatörer som arbetar med underrättelser i städerna. Den digitala
tidsåldern har också medfört att de afghanska sociala nätverken alltmer brett
ut sig i sociala medier, vilket idag också möjliggör för talibanrörelsen att
följa personer online” (sid 23)
Not: stycket visar på hur svårt det kan vara att hålla sig undan Talibaner
oavsett var man befinner sig i landet.
“Det finns många lokala konflikter i det afghanska
samhället. Dessa konflikter medför ibland att man sprider illvilliga rykten som
ett sätt att komma åt sin fiende. I konvertitfallet med Abdul Rahman 2006 så
kom hans konversion upp till ytan och blev känd för myndigheterna på grund av
en vårdnadstvist, då han angavs av familjemedlemmar […]
I fall där endast den nära familjen har kunskap om att en
familjemedlem konverterat (oaktat om konversionen är genuin eller icke) kan det
dock finnas ett intresse av att hemlighålla detta om familjen vill skydda
personen. Det är dock individuellt hur olika familjer reagerar på en konversion
som företagits av en av dess medlemmar”. (sid 23)
Not: stycket visar på hur information generellt kan spridas om familjen är
illvillig, inte bara kopplat till konversion.
“Däremot finns det hos talibanrörelsen ett intresse av
att bedriva underrättelseverksamhet avseende individer på afghansk mark i syfte
att identifiera potentiella fiender. När det gäller afghaner som återvänder
från utlandet samt från regeringskontrollerat område till en hemort belägen i
ett talibankontrollerat eller starkt taliban-influerat område så är det därför
troligt att sådana individer synas av talibanrörelsen. Vid denna process är det
möjligt att de utöver sina fysiska nätverk och sin muntliga information också
kan försöka efterforska information som finns på internet, exempelvis i sociala
medier. Lifos betonar dock här att det är svårt att veta hur talibanrörelsens
exakta metoder för inhämtning av underrättelser går till”. (sid
24)
EASO Country of Origin Information Report
Afghanistan Individuals targeted by armed actors in the conflict. December 2017
Report from
the European Asylum Support Office, EU.
Taliban objectives:
”Targets of
deliberate killings or abduction by insurgents in 2016 include, according to
UNAMA, tribal elders, judicial staff, civilian government administration staff
and civilians alleged to be government spies, but also civilians who refused to
comply with insurgent instructions. In 2017, UNAMA added to this list
‘civilians perceived to oppose Anti-Government Element values’. Dr. Antonio
Giustozzi summarised the targets of the Taliban as individuals the Taliban
considers to be ‘misbehaving’. These include many of the individuals listed by
UNAMA above and in addition, Giustozzi adds ‘individuals of any category
selected by the Taliban as useful or necessary to their war effort, and who
have refused to collaborate’. For example, the Taliban are known to have cut
off the fingers of people participating in the elections of 2014 and targeted
staff of the Independent Election Commission. According to scholar Neamat
Nojumi, the targeting by the Taliban goes beyond those working for the Afghan
government. One’s adherence to the Afghan
Constitution or a liberal social or cultural view can also make a person a
legitimate target. He explained that this is why the Taliban target those
who participate in the elections or promote women’s rights.” (page 28)
Capacity [of the Taliban] to track and target individuals within larger
cities
”the
Taliban have a network of informants and conduct intelligence gathering in the
cities, although it is more difficult to track people in urban areas. Targeted
attacks in urban centre do occur. Some recent examples of targeting in Kabul
include gunmen on motorcycles and remote controlled IEDs. […] In Kabul, there
are at least 1,500 spies and informers of the Taliban, according to Giustozzi’s
2017 report for LandInfo, which was based primarily on interviews with Taliban
sources. According to these sources, different networks within the Taliban have
different surveillance assignments: the Haqqani network gathers information for
special operations (large-scale attacks on high profiles), while the Peshawar
Shura tracks wanted individuals. The Peshawar Shura is said to have around 500
spies and informers in Kabul. While the high profile attacks seem to take place
largely in the city centre, the targeted killings, including the ones with
magnetic IEDs, take place away from the city centre. Since 2016, the Taliban
have started a campaign of targeted killings of government officials and ANSF
members in Kandahar city”. (page 63)
Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada,
Afghanistan:
Whether the Taliban has the capacity to pursue individuals after they
relocate to another region; their capacity to track individuals over the long
term; Taliban capacity to carry out targeted killings (2012-January 2016), 15 February 2016, AFG105412.E,
Available at: http://www.refworld.org/docid/56d7f2670.html
“…the Taliban may be able to find a person who relocates to a different
area, and that they have been successful in doing so, particularly when
targeting their "well known or well positioned opponents"
“… the Taliban generally has the capability to track individuals, through
the use of "formal and informal communication" networks to obtain
information about a person's whereabouts”
“…the Taliban has shadow governors and military commanders in almost all
provinces; communication and information-sharing between the command structure
is likely, including in efforts to obtain information about a person's
background”
“…whether the Taliban will seek information about someone can depend on
the relationship between the commanders of the individual's province of origin
and the destination province (ibid.). Similarly, the AAN analyst indicated that
the strength of the local Taliban in the location where a person relocates to
can be a factor in whether their background is detected; Taliban checkpoints
and high levels of Taliban activity in an area increases the likelihood of
searches of personal belongings and questioning of travelers”.
“…
particularly in rural areas of Afghanistan, people are "extremely
perceptive of their environments" and "know when a new person comes
into the village or travels through it". Similarly, the AAN analyst stated
that unless an outsider has a very good cover story, their background is likely
to become known due to the close-knit nature of Afghan communities (AAN 20 Jan.
2016). The same source explained that factors impacting a person's ability to
conceal their background include: tribal/local connections to elders and
family, regional accent differences, last names which may refer to origin,
religious affiliation and prayer rituals, and higher education profiles which
may identify the individual as belonging to a higher social class (ibid.)”
Urban
areas: "it is more difficult to track people [who] have moved into urban
environments,
but even
there the Taliban have spies and members who can gather considerable
information" (13 Jan. 2016). The same source explained that tribal
networks still operate in urban areas, and gave the example of the Taliban
infiltrating and obtaining information from large refugee camps near Kabul (22
Jan. 2016). The analyst stated that the Taliban conducts local-level
intelligence gathering in Kabul, and therefore have been able to carry out
targeted attacks in some urban centres (AAN 20 Jan. 2016). A 2015 article by
the Christian Science Monitor reports on one instance in which a Western
journalist attended a large Pashtun wedding in
Kabul as a
guest of one of the Afghan attendees; several days later the attendee and his
family received threats and was accused of working as a spy for coalition
forces (18 Nov. 2015).”
Tribal and family connections
“when
people move from one location to another area where they have tribal or family
connections, this could potentially shield the person's background from being
uncovered; however, these same connections could also be their greatest
liability in the sense that a person's connections could also be used as a way
to locate the person (20 Jan. 2016). […] Afghans are a tribal people and this
allows them to, in part, know the circumstances of people in their tribe or
ethno-linguistic group. This is obviously easy to do at the local, district and
Provincial level of their home locality but because of extended families and
other dynamics, it [one's identity] is often hard to hide even when an Afghan
leaves their home locality”.
“the Taliban
"keep tabs" on people by exploiting tribal leaders' and families'
knowledge of the whereabouts of their family members or tribe members (ibid.).
Sources also report that the Taliban exerts pressure on family members of
wanted individuals and that a targeted person's family may be punished in their
absence […] in addition to exploiting tribal connections when pursuing a person
of interest, the Taliban can apply pressure and draconian measures on the
person's family members to gain information. This is probably their most
important means in tracking down a person: "tell me where he/she is or we
will kill your family." Such intimidation is usually a fairly successful
tactic. (ibid.)”
“if the
Taliban uncovers the background of an ordinary person, which the Taliban
perceives to be questionable, this would create problems for that person (22
Jan. 2016). The AAN analyst explained that if the person in question is someone
who has worked as an interpreter, for example, and relocates, if the Taliban
becomes suspicious of that person's background, they might contact another
district's commander to find out more about the individual (AAN 20 Jan. 2016).
The AAN analyst gave the view that the concern for someone in a situation like
that is about the possibility that their background would be found out in their
new location […] The Professor stated that the Taliban's tribal networks are
very well established and tribal law can cover long distances; people know what
is occurring in their district
and that
traditional ways of locating people through tribal networks still apply (22
Jan. 2016).”
“The AAN
analyst explained that when an individual wanted by the Taliban relocates or
returns to their province of origin and if their background is revealed,
depending on the individual's profile, as well as the political climate of the
day, that person could be killed, which has occurred (AAN 20 Jan. 2016)”.
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