A RUSSIAN ACCOUNT OF THE CABUL OUTBREAK.
ALLEGED HORRIBLE CRUEL TIES. 200 AGHANS BURNED ALIVE. The “Turkestanski Vedomosti ” contains a long account of English operations in Afghanistan, derived from Bagantin Khan, an envoy s: nt to Tashkent by the Afghan Governor of Mazar-i-Sherecf. The following curious details throw a light on the origin of* the. Cabal outbreak : On the day of the catastrophe Genera! Abdul Karim Khan summoned three battalions ol rifles (seraldi) to the Bala Hissar to give them their monthly pj|‘. The soldiers refused the one month’s salary proffered them by the Assistant Minister of War, and demanded money for two, as had been given to the battalions already sent to the Tchar villayet. Abdul Kaiium refused, on the ground that the latter bad been sent on active service. The troops continued their clamour and at last threats ened to break out into revolt, Abdul thereupon laughed at them, and told them they did not dare to do so, adding that if they had been brave men in war tune the English would have never been sitting that day in Cabul as their conquerors. These words w<*re hardly uttered when the whole of the solders, with cries of “ Hazavat,” rushed off to the Residency. Major Cavagnari, alarmed at the noise and hearing, the cries of “ Hazavat” immediately ordered the English to fire on the mob. This was done and ten Afghans fell dead* The troops, until then unarmed, rushed off to the barracks, and returning at the end of a few minutes, opened fire upon the house. The English tained a desperate defence, fir ng from every cranny upon the Afghans, Seeing that they could not force the Residency the Afghans fired it, and when the defenders dashed out they killed them to 4 man- Up to this moment the Afghan loss was thirty-five. The burnt body of Major Cavagnari was found in s box (the ‘Turkestanski Yedmosti’ puts. “?” after this); 400 bodies of theEnglish were counted among the slain.
We {.ass over the narrative of Yakoub. Khan’s subsequent movements and the defeat of Mahomed Jan, which contains nothing new. “ The English in occupying Cabul razed to the ground the Residency and then commenced to investigate the massacre. Desiring to punish th culprits and prevent similar deeds in the future, the English had recourse to terrible atrocities. In an. open space in the Bala Hissar they built an immense scaffold and hanged on .it in chains twelve to twenty men at a time, first drenching them with inflammable oils, and then setting light t a bonfire under their feet. In this manner many Afghans were slowly burnt alive. Upwards of 200 were thus treated, among them three holy personages of great sanctity, not only in Afghanistan bat also throughout the whole Mussulman world.” Referring to the subsequent successes of Mahomed Jan, the Afghan narrator, who was with him at the time ascribes as the “ source of his opposition and the rapidity with which the Afghans flocked to his banner, the needless des-. struction by General Roberts of the villages in the district of Cabul.”
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Temuka Leader, Issue 302, 9 October 1880, Page 2
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516A RUSSIAN ACCOUNT OF THE CABUL OUTBREAK. Temuka Leader, Issue 302, 9 October 1880, Page 2
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