Afghanistan's government said it was disappointed with the "unexpectedly lenient" sentences US military courts have handed down to American soldiers convicted of abusing two Afghan detainees who later died.
A spokesman for President Hamid Karzai said Wednesday that US military prosecutors should appeal the cases and push for harsher penalties.
One soldier has been sentenced to two months in prison, another to three months. A third was demoted and given a letter of reprimand and a fine. A fourth was given a reduction in rank and pay.
"The punishments given to those soldiers were very light and unexpectedly lenient," said presidential spokesman Karim Rahimi. "This is a very serious issue. They should receive severe punishments."
He said the government was considering bringing the matter up with US authorities.
A member of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission was even harsher in his criticism.
"These punishments are a joke. They all should have got 20 years in prison or be sentenced to death," said Ahmad Shah Midad. "A person's life has been taken. They must be punished properly."
The courts-martial occurred in the US state of Texas over the past few weeks. The soldiers were charged in relation to the deaths of two Afghans who were in detention at Bagram, the main US base in Afghanistan, in late 2002.
One of the two was a 22-year-old taxi driver known only as Dilawar. The other was Mullah Habibullah, who was about 30.
The army has publicly acknowledged the two deaths and announced in October that up to 28 US soldiers face possible charges.
According to Human Rights Watch, which said it has obtained unreleased army reports, the two men were chained to the ceiling in standing positions, while their feet remained on the ground.
One of them was maimed over a five-day period, dying with his leg muscle tissue destroyed from blows to the knees and lower body,.
An autopsy performed by a medical examiner showed that Dilawar's legs were so damaged by blows that amputation would have been necessary, according to an Army report dated July 6, 2004.
Habibullah died of a pulmonary embolism apparently caused by blood clots formed in his legs from the beatings, according to a June 1, 2004, US military report.
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