Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Danish Siddiqui: Slain India journalist's parents take Taliban to court

About sharing

The parents of Pulitzer Prize-winning Indian photojournalist Danish Siddiqui are seeking legal action against the Taliban over their son’s death.

The 38-year-old Reuters journalist was killed last year after a Taliban ambush while reporting in Afghanistan.

His parents have moved the International Criminal Court (ICC) against six Taliban leaders.

Advertisement

They allege that the the Taliban took him into custody, tortured ad killed him before mutilating his body.

“Danish, our loving son, was murdered by the Taliban for simply carrying out his journalistic duties,” his mother, Shahida Akhtar, said in a statement.

Initial reports suggested that Siddiqui was killed in crossfire during the attack on 16 July in Kandahar’s Spin Boldak. But Reuters later reported that he was alive and taken to a mosque nearby for treatment. It remains unclear what happened after.

Indian officials and Afghan security officials also told Reuters that Siddiqui’s body was mutilated in Taliban custody after his death.

Other reports at the time quoted Afghan and Indian officials who said Siddiqui’s body was severely mutilated by the time it was handed to the Red Cross – although initial photos from the scene showed that it wounded but intact.

The Taliban however denied this and said the body was mutilated by the time they had found it.

But his parents refute the Taliban’s account.

“The Taliban targeted and killed Danish because he was a journalist and an Indian. That is an international crime,” their lawyer, Avi Singh, said.

“After his killing, his body was mutilated including being run over by a heavy vehicle. His body revealed marks of brutal torture and 12 bullet entry and exit points,” the statement released by his parents said.

Based out of Mumbai, Siddiqui worked with Reuters for more than a decade, where his photographs won him global praise and recognition -the most recent example being his photos of mass funerals held at the peak of India’s devastating second wave.

In 2018, he won the Pulitzer Prize in feature photography. He won it alongside colleague Adnan Abidi and five others for their work documenting the violence faced by Myanmar’s minority Rohingya community.

In July 2021, he was in Afghanistan covering clashes in the Kandahar region as the US and its allies were withdrawing troops ahead of a September 11 deadline set by US President Joe Biden.

“While our son will not come back, our petition will ease grief in the hope that someday justice will be done,” Prof. Akhtar Siddiqui, Danish Siddiqui’s father said.

Presentational grey line

You may also be interested in:

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Presentational grey line

Advertisement

Latest Tweets

You May Also Like

World

For many years we have seen how the Soft Power used by the Kremlin works exclusively through culture, exhibitions, musical groups presentations, etc. It...

United States

A child’s advice for coping with anxiety has gone viral after his mother shared it on Twitter. (Hint: It involves doughnuts, dinosaurs and Dolly...

United States

As health care workers prepare to enter the third year of the pandemic, we are experiencing disillusionment and burnout on an extraordinary scale. Many...

United States

In June a statistic floated across my desk that startled me. In 2020, the number of miles Americans drove fell 13 percent because of...

Copyright © 2021 - New York Globe