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Killed Mujahideen



Kabul residents observe dead Taliban fighters, killed early November 13, 2001 in central Kabul November 13, 2001. Bodies of Taliban fighters lay ignored in a park and hanging from trees in the Afghan capital, young men raced to shave their beards and music played from loudspeakers. Kabul residents were coming to terms with the end of an era. But it was a new era that left many nervous. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)


An Afghan man and his son ride a bicycle past the body of a Taliban fighter killed early on the motorway three kilometers north of Kabul as Northern Alliance fighters approached the Afghan capital Kabul November 13, 2001. Bodies of Taliban fighters lay ignored in a park and hanging from trees in the Afghan capital, young men raced to shave their beards and music played from loudspeakers. Kabul residents were coming to terms with the end of an era. But it was a new era that left many nervous. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)


Afghan civilians observe dead Taliban fighters killed early morning on the motorway just north of Kabul as Northern Alliance fighters approached the Afghan capital Kabul November 13, 2001. Forces of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance entered Kabul after defeating Taliban forces north of the capital. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)


An Afghan civilian kicks a dead body, killed early morning on the motorway 3 km north of Kabul as Northern Alliance fighters approached the Afghan capital Kabul, November 13, 2001. Forces of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance entered Kabul on Tuesday as reports from across the country pointed to a collapse of Taliban rule. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
Tuesday 13 November 2001


An Afghan boy stands by a dead Taliban fighter killed on the highway north of Kabul November 16, 2001. The war against Afghanistan's Taliban and Osama bin Laden ran into Ramadan with the fundamentalist militia besieged in their southern stronghold of Kandahar and reports of U.S. air strikes there. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)


An Afghan man hurls a rock at a dead Taliban fighter on the highway north of Kabul November 16, 2001. Northern Alliance forces killed four Taliban who apparently tried to hijack a car and flee to the south. U.N. human rights commissioner Mary Robinson voiced concern November 19, 2001 about reports of summary executions of surrendered Taliban fighters in Afghanistan and said such acts violated the Geneva Convention on Human Rights. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)
 


Afghan children observe a dead Taliban fighter, killed early morning in central Kabul November 13, 2001. Greeted by cheering residents, opposition fighters captured Afghanistan's capital in defiance of international pressure to stay out, after the city was abandoned by the Taliban under cover of darkness. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)


This image from television shows bodies in a hospital room after U.S. special forces hurled grenades through the windows of the burning Mir Wais hospital in Kandahar, Afghanistan, Monday, Jan. 28 2002. U.S. special forces hurled grenades through the windows of the burning hospital Monday to finish off a nine-hour assault against six al-Qaida gunmen who had been holed up there nearly two months and vowed never to be captured alive. The operation, launched by U.S. and Afghan forces supported by helicopters before dawn, appeared to have settled into a standoff before the American troops lobbed about 16 grenades through the windows to blast out the last surviving gunmen. (AP Photo/ APTN) TV OUT


Afghan anti-Taliban fighters look through the pockets of of an al-Qaida fighter killed during combat in the Milawa Valley of the White Mountains of northeastern Afghanistan, Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2001. Anti-Taliban forces, backed by U.S. fighter jets, drove al Qaida forces from their mountaintop positions in intense fighting which led to at least one al-Qaida group offering to surrender. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)


Taliban Commander Mullah Faizal listens during talks between Taliban and Northern Alliance leaders in Mazar-i-Sharif November 22, 2001. All Taliban forces in the besieged northern Afghan enclave of Kunduz have agreed to surrender, Kunduz Taliban commander Mullah Faizal said early on Thursday. Mullah Faizal was speaking after talks with Alliance leaders in which he and his colleagues agreed to surrender. REUTERS/REUTERS TV


A Taliban soldier lies dead in Kunduz hospital after northern alliance forces ook over the Afghan city of Kunduz, Monday, Nov. 26, 2001. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)


A Taliban fighter who was fatally wounded in a fire fight during the takeover of Kunduz, Afghanistan lies dead in hospital Monday Nov. 26, 2001. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)