Eilmeldung
ITGuerra Iran, a Hormuz colpite 3 petroliere. Usa revocano licenza vendita petrolio. LIVEINTLNew York City Building Evacuated Due to InstabilityBRTrês navios atingidos por projéteis no Estreito de OrmuzDEUSA widerrufen Lizenz für iranische Ölexporte – Ölpreise steigenARالسعودية تدين استهداف ناقلة نفط سعودية في مضيق هرمزESDesalojan ocho fincas en Barcelona por un socavón de ocho metros abierto por la tuneladora de la L9RUГлава РФПИ: Брюссель промывает мозги европейцам, пока Европа саморазрушаетсяPLUSA cofają zawieszenie sankcji na irańską ropęTRBozdoğan'da Yangın Kontrol Altına AlındıARالأرجنتين تنتزع بطاقة التأهل بصعوبة أمام مصر بعد جدل تحكيمي حول ركلة جزاء لمحمد صلاحITGuerra Iran, a Hormuz colpite 3 petroliere. Usa revocano licenza vendita petrolio. LIVEINTLNew York City Building Evacuated Due to InstabilityBRTrês navios atingidos por projéteis no Estreito de OrmuzDEUSA widerrufen Lizenz für iranische Ölexporte – Ölpreise steigenARالسعودية تدين استهداف ناقلة نفط سعودية في مضيق هرمزESDesalojan ocho fincas en Barcelona por un socavón de ocho metros abierto por la tuneladora de la L9RUГлава РФПИ: Брюссель промывает мозги европейцам, пока Европа саморазрушаетсяPLUSA cofają zawieszenie sankcji na irańską ropęTRBozdoğan'da Yangın Kontrol Altına AlındıARالأرجنتين تنتزع بطاقة التأهل بصعوبة أمام مصر بعد جدل تحكيمي حول ركلة جزاء لمحمد صلاح
Newsgather
BackTaliban Commander Sentenced to 42 Years for Kidnapping US Journalist David Rohde
Taliban Commander Sentenced to 42 Years for Kidnapping US Journalist David Rohde
In Entwicklung
Guardian International13.06.2026Crime6 dk okuma

Taliban Commander Sentenced to 42 Years for Kidnapping US Journalist David Rohde

Auf einen Blick

  • Haji Najibullah, a former Taliban commander, has been sentenced to 42 years in prison for his role in the 2008 kidnapping of US journalist David Rohde and other acts of violence.
  • Rohde, who was held for seven months, testified at Najibullah's sentencing, detailing the psychological torture he endured.
  • Najibullah pleaded guilty to hostage-taking and providing material support for terrorism.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

Haji Najibullah, a former Taliban commander, was sentenced for his role in the 2008 kidnapping of US journalist David Rohde and for leading militants who caused the deaths of US service members. The case concluded years after Rohde's daring escape.

Schriftgröße

Haji Najibullah appeared unbothered as he walked into Manhattan federal court earlier this week to learn whether he would face life behind bars for his role in brutal violence during his time as a Taliban commander – including the 2008 kidnapping of US journalist David Rohde.

Najibullah, who walked into the courtroom in shackles at about 9.50am Monday, sporting khaki jail garb and a black skullcap, could even be seen grinning at various points before proceedings started.

When the former New York Times reporter Rohde entered the courtroom about 10 minutes later, a female companion took note of Najibullah’s demeanor. “He smiled,” she could be heard whispering. “How dare he smile.”

“He lied to us and he is lying today,” Rohde said as he stood at the lectern during Najibullah’s sentencing. “He is refusing to take responsibility for his actions as I look at him right now.”

The courtroom showdown between Rohde and his one-time captor last week brought to an end a years-long saga that began with a planned interview that turned into a kidnapping, then months of detention before a daring escape and finally the capture and trial of Najibullah.

Najibullah was charged for his role in capturing Rohde and two Afghan associates and holding them hostage for some seven months. Najibullah was also charged with his leadership of Taliban militants who attacked US service members, leading to their deaths. Najibullah pleaded guilty on 25 April 2025 to hostage taking and providing material support for acts of terrorism resulting in death.

Rohde said Najibullah, who had previously spoken to media without incident, agreed to an interview. In a telephone call shortly before the planned sit-down, Najibullah then changed the meeting place. When the group showed up, the road was “blocked” and Najibullah’s men drove them to an undisclosed location in Afghanistan before taking them to Pakistan.

In the months that followed, Rohde was forced at gunpoint to make ransom videos that terrorized his “grieving” family, prosecutors said. Under constant fear of death, Rohde had to deliver the chilling lines demanded of him, such as: “If you don’t help me, I will die.”

Rohde apologized to his family during his address to the court. “It was a huge mistake to go to the interview,” he said, breaking into tears. “I will always regret it.”

“Hostage-taking is a cruel and cowardly crime,” Rohde said at one point, with Najibullah largely looking stone-faced during his statement.

Rohde, his translator, and driver left Kabul for the planned interview at about 7am on 10 November 2008. He left a letter at the Times’s Kabul bureau that read: “If I get kidnapped don’t publicize it. That will be easier for [my wife] + my family.”

He also left behind a note for his wife telling her to use money from his book advance for ransom, writing: “This is my responsibility. I love you so much and am sure this will be OK. Please go and be happy and move forward if things go very wrong.”

The missive chillingly foreshadowed months of what prosecutors described as “psychological torture”.

When they arrived at the meeting point, the translator called Najibullah who told them there was US military activity nearby, directing them to another location. There, machine gun-toting Taliban militants restrained and blindfolded them, transporting them to a house.

There, Najibullah used one of their mobile phones to call the newspaper’s Kabul outpost and told a staffer he was holding them captive because they were spies for coalition forces, prosecutors said.

Najibullah and his accomplices tried wielding their captivity as a tool to extract ransom payments and force the release of Taliban prisoners. Rohde and the other two hostages complied with Najibullah’s orders, fearing death or abuse if they refused, prosecutors said.

The men were shuttled between safe houses where they were forced to cook and clean. Rohde did whatever he could to get them released. He and another hostage “staged a hunger strike.” He pretended to be sick. At one point, he even faked a suicide attempt.

In June 2009, Rohde finally had a real chance. While cleaning, Rohde happened upon a car tow rope. He secreted the cord under a pile of clothes, prosecutors said. Rohde and his translator decided to try escaping with the rope.

On 9 June 2009, Rhode and his translator went to the roof when the guards were asleep. They used this rope to scale the compound wall and fled to a nearby Pakistani military outpost.

The guards let them in and they were brought to US authorities. Rohde, who with his wife wrote about this ordeal in the book A Rope and a Prayer: A Kidnapping from Two Sides, reunited with his family.

This harrowing saga came to a close with Najibullah’s sentencing. Najibullah’s defense asked Judge Katherine Polk Failla for an 18-year sentence; prosecutors pushed for life imprisonment, citing the “unimaginable pain” he caused victims.

Najibullah’s lawyer Andrew Dalack told Failla his client was born in Afghanistan and raised during the brutal Russian occupation. He tried escaping subsequent Taliban rule in Saudi Arabia, but was unable to stay after the US started war in Afghanistan, Dalack said.

Najibullah “had to choose a side” upon his return and joining the Taliban “felt like it was the only decision” he could make. Dalack insisted Najibullah was a “low-level” commander who is now “an enemy to the Taliban”.

“They killed his brother,” Dalack said. At various points during Dalack’s pitch for leniency, Najibullah could be seen touching his beard.

When it came time for Najibullah to speak, he apologized but, like Dalack, invoked context.

Najibullah, through a Pashto translator, said he “deeply” regretted his role in Rohde’s kidnapping while telling the judge that his involvement “brought terrible consequences” to his family, saying the Taliban “martyred” his brother because of Rohde’s escape.

He also criticized the US’s presence in Afghanistan, saying soldiers were sacrificed by “the bad policies made by powerful men in American leadership and Taliban leadership”.

When it came time for Failla to impose Najibullah’s sentence, Failla told Najibullah to rise.

As she handed down a 42-year sentence, Najibullah kept his hands in front of him. Rohde looked on from the gallery.

“Mr Najibullah, do you understand that is your sentence?” Failla asked.

“Yes, I understand,” Najibullah said.

Offene Fragen

  • What were the specific "bad policies" Najibullah referred to?
  • Will there be further legal action against other Taliban members involved?

Verwandte Themen

This article was originally published by Guardian International.

Ähnliche Meldungen

LA County Investigates Coroner's Office Employees Over Leaked Celeste Rivas Hernandez Case Details
In Entwicklung·1 sa önce

LA County Investigates Coroner's Office Employees Over Leaked Celeste Rivas Hernandez Case Details

Los Angeles County is investigating over a dozen employees at the Medical Examiner's office for allegedly accessing confidential files on 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez without authorization, following leaks of graphic details surrounding her death. The probe by the Department of Human Resources focuses on potential improper viewing of records before the autopsy report was public. The victim's body was found in September, and suspect David Anthony Burke was arrested in April and charged with murder.

The Independent World
11-Year-Old Pennsylvania Boy Loses Hand in Florida Alligator Attack
In Entwicklung·3 sa önce

11-Year-Old Pennsylvania Boy Loses Hand in Florida Alligator Attack

An 11-year-old boy named Brodie lost his hand in an alligator attack on June 27 while on a fishing trip with his father in Umatilla, Florida. The alligator, measuring 8 feet, 7 inches, attacked while Brodie was releasing a fish. His father intervened, saving his life, but Brodie's hand had to be amputated. The alligator was captured and killed. The incident is part of a series of alligator encounters in Central Florida.

The Independent World
Mehr zu diesem ThemaTaliban