Under international humanitarian “laws of war,” if civilians appear to have been killed deliberately or indiscriminately, or as part of a disproportionate attack, the incident requires a prompt, thorough and impartial inquiry. If that inquiry shows that the laws of war were violated, a prosecution should be initiated.

As international forces in Afghanistan are effectively immune from Afghan legal processes, the U.S. military justice system is the only recourse for the families of those killed. However, the report notes that the “deeply flawed” U.S. military justice system is “essentially a form of self-policing.”

According to the report:

Further, the report documents the “lack of transparency on investigations and prosecutions of unlawful killings,” saying that the U.S. military continues to withhold overall data on accountability for civilian casualties and “rarely” provides any information on individual cases.

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Among the recommendations, Amnesty International encourages the Afghan government to ensure that accountability for unlawful civilian killings is guaranteed in the pending bilateral security agreement between Afghanistan and NATO—a stipulation that the U.S. government under President Barack Obama continues to push against.

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