The Afghan child “suicide” bomber and 8 year old Yemeni drone “spy”: Whose “truth” and whose “propaganda”?

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Spozhmay (alleged child “suicide” bomber) and Barq (alleged child drone “spy”)

Last week the Daily Mail ran a story about a child being recruited as a “suicide bomber” entitled “eight year old captured as she attempted to detonate suicide vest outside a police station in Afghanistan.” Most mainstream media produced their version of events. The girl, Spozhmay, claimed her brother allegedly a Taliban commander has sent her on this mission and many feared for her wellbeing http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2534657/Ten-year-old-girl-captured-attempted-detonate-suicide-vest-outside-police-station-Afghanistan.html

Some media Guardian for one, chose not to go further with allegations stating lack of evidence that Taliban were involved. The images of a confused and vulnerable child do indeed shock. However I am always wary of jumping to conclusions with such stories as to who might be responsible though believe every case should be independently investigated for the safety and welfare of the child and society.

Over the last couple of years I have noted several stories of alleged mass “poisoning” of schoolchildren in Afghanistan, some automatically attributed to the Taliban though they vehemently denied responsibility. I talked to friends on the ground who were also cautious, it later turned out that these incidents were likely caused by gas and water poisoning that could have been related to general health and safety issues not necessarily deliberate intent to harm http://rt.com/news/afghanistan-girls-school-poisoned-139/

There have been other mass “poisonings” of schoolchildren in Asia due to contaminated food, substandard vitamins and even taking supplements given at school incorrectly causing agitation on an empty stomach.

Here is the full denial from the Taliban with regard to the Spozmay case:-

The capture of a ten year old girl in Helman on charges of suicide bombing is plot to defame the Mujahideen

On Monday some media outlets claimed that the  forces of Karzai’s regime had apprehended a ten year old girl attempting to carry out a suicide bombing. This is not the first time that the officials of Karzai’s regime, faced with imminent defeat, have contrived such absurd accusations with the purpose of defaming the Islamic Emirate. Sometimes they spread false rumours that the Taliban have hanged a seven year old child, sometimes they claim that Taliban have sexually abused children, while at other times they claim that the Islamic Emirate recruits children to carry out attacks and bombings against their regime. The arrest of the ten year old girl, named Spogmy, is also part of the Karzai’s intelligence official’s fabrications aimed at defaming the Islamic Emirate. In truth these preposterous accusations have no reality.

Under the principles of Islamic law, young children are exempt from carrying out the responsibilities of Islam. The Islamic Emirate, in adhering to this principle, also does not allow such children to take part in armed conflict. The truth is that the fronts of the Mujahideen against the illegitimate regime of Karzai are full of the brave youth of Afghanistan and the Islamic Emirate has no need to recruit children for this task.

In the same manner that the Islamic Emirate considers the recruitment of children for armed conflict as contrary to the laws of war, similarly it also considers the use of children for propaganda purposes to be against all principles of morality and human dignity. In this light the Islamic Emirate strongly condemns the intelligence agents of Karzai’s regime for taking advantage of children and using their innocence in order to defame the Mujahideen.

The claim that the ten year old girl from Helmand was recruited by her brother, with the agreement of her parents, to become a suicide bomber is a complete fabrication and has no reality at all. When news of this  accusation spread the Islamic Emirate requested the local Islamic Emirate authorities in Helmand to conduct an investigation into the incident. After conducting a thorough investigation our local authorities informed us that this incident has no reality. Moreover they informed us that in the entire province of Helmand there is no Taliban commander by the name of Zahir. They confirmed that the Islamic Emirate in Helmand has never allowed anyone to recruit children for the purposes of carrying out attacks. Even the Karzai regime’s officials in Helmand have stated to the media that there are severe inconsistencies in the girl’s account. They are still investigating the specifics of this incident.

Wassalam

Qari Muhammad Yusuf Ahmadzai

Spokesperson of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan

4/3/1435

8/1/2014

There is often online censorship on insurgents for alleged “propaganda” and instigating violence yet we do not see the same level of censorship for governments that churn out false information on Afghanistan and drone civilians. Double standards are rife. Insurgent sites are often taken down while governments that destroy families at a wedding party in Yemen can tweet freely. We must consider propaganda aspects on all sides… in whose interests might it be to lay blame for incidents such as the girl suicide bomber at the door of the Taliban? It is a crucial time with withdrawal of troops, security agreements on and off the table, efforts being made for dialogue and fear of instability post 2014.

There is too much polarization within the media where stories that suit a western dominant narrative that Afghanistan is a “success story” and “mission accomplished” are widely published giving a false picture of occupation in Afghanistan as I argued in an earlier article. Take the narrative, “US and British soldiers are saving Afghanistan’s women from the brutal Taliban”… since occupation, reports show that violence against women has in fact increased and is more brutal. Again we hear about Taliban brutality towards females almost daily in western press but the horrors of night raids by occupying forces and women being shot rarely make the media.

The Daily Mail also wrote in the their article on Spozhmay that, “in July it emerged that Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan are bribing starving children as young as eight years old to plant deadly roadside booby traps, be decoys in ambushes and even act as suicide bombers.” Again all incidents must be thoroughly checked out. I found it interesting though that a lot less media attention was given to an allegation that the US had used an eight year old boy Barq al-Kulyabi (via a local male contact) as a “spy” to plant a drone chip to target and kill Sheikh Adnan Al Qadhy  and Aheikh Abu Ridhwan, in Yemen. In fact I believe I was the first to pick up and write on this story on 22nd April 2013  http://blog.approximatetargetfilm.com/yemen-video-released-claiming-child-used-to-plant-chips-to-guide-in-us-drone/

The reluctance from mainstream media was perhaps due to the fact that the allegations came from insurgents through a video they had released. The Daily Mail did not in fact cover this story until the 18th August, 2013 and then only after an independent journalist had attempted to claim an “exclusive” on this shocking allegation, 5 MONTHS after my original piece appeared online http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2395202/US-used-8-yr-old-boy-plant-chip-surrogate-father-kill-drone-strike.html

Whose “truth” and whose “propaganda”? We must indeed question all we read…

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Afghan Taliban share “Zabareen’s” thought provoking piece “A dangerous prisoner” …

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Posted on Jan 11th 2014, a day where protesters worldwide mark the 12th anniversary of the inhumane Guantanamo detention centre calling for closure and we remember those abused at Bagram jail, Afghanistan

The prisoner, who was hand cuffed and leg chained, was dragged to the room by two guards holding him on each side. In the middle of the court room was a large wooden table and on each side of the table there was a chair. On the left chair sat a red-faced American, his double-chin sagging low. The guards sat the prisoner right in front of this man. The prisoner’s leg chain was then locked to the steel bar of the table and his hand cuffs were tightened securely behind his chair. The prisoner’s blindfold was removed from his eyes. The prisoner opened his eyes and looked around the room. Beside the two guards who had dragged him into the room, there was also a third guard standing upright next to them. A fourth guard was standing in the corner of the room. Next to him sat another man, with piles of paper lying in front of him. This man glared angrily at the bewildered prisoner.  Soon after another man, who did not appear to be American entered the room. He placed a chair next to the man sitting in front of the prisoner and quietly sat on the chair. The prisoner had not yet fully taken stock of his surroundings and was still looking around the room when the red-faced American, sitting in front of him, grabbed his hair and turned the prisoner’s face towards him. This man was an interrogator who was in charge of the investigation and the man sitting next to him was typing the correspondence. The Interrogator began his questions:

Interrogator: “What is this place?”

Prisoner: “I am not sure… Maybe it’s Bagram.”

Interrogator: “Who am I?”

Prisoner: “I don’t know.”

Interrogator: “You will soon know me. But look straight at me and do not wander, and answer my questions truthfully.  Come close to me and pay full attention to what I say. Do not even look towards anything in the corners of your eyes.”

Interrogator: “What is your name?”

Prisoner: “Muhammad Noor.”

Interrogator: “Where are you from?”

Prisoner: “Helmand.”

Interrogator: “From which district?”

Prisoner: “Sangin.”

The Prisoner began to realize that the American sitting next to the Interrogator was writing down the whole correspondence and began to concentrate on his answers.

Interrogator: “Why have you been imprisoned?”

Prisoner: “I don’t know. Ask the men who imprisoned me.”

Interrogator: “What were you doing when you were captured?”

Prisoner: “I was fighting when they captured me.”

Interrogator: “Alright! Whom were you fighting?”

Prisoner: “The British.”

Interrogator: “Ok so you were fighting with British military forces when you were captured?”

Prisoner: “Yes that is correct.”

Interrogator: “Why were you fighting with the British?”

Prisoner: “Ask your forefathers this question!”

“Idiot!” barked the Interrogator angrily. “Think about what you say. You are under interrogation.” He continued.

Prisoner: “I am saying the truth. You are an American. So ask your fathers and forefathers why they fought the British in the eighteenth century.”

Interrogator: “Are you talking about the War of Independence of 1770?”

Prisoner: “Yes that very same war. Where the American fought the British for their independence.”

The Interrogator went into deep thought. He was biting his lips and rolling his eyes. The prisoner called out to him.

Prisoner: “Now you are rolling your eyes as if you don’t understand what I am saying?”

The interrogator replied in a low voice “I understand what you are saying. But our struggle against the British colonization was a war of independence because they had invaded our land”.

Prisoner: “So are you saying that Helmand isn’t our land or that the British have not invaded us?”

Interrogator: “There is a difference between invading and aiding. The British are helping us along with a number of other countries in order to aid the Afghans and to bring peace here. We want to develop your country and to help advance your civilization.”

Prisoner: “Aid us? Develop our country? civilizing us? Hah” The prisoner replied sharply. “What an ancient logic this is. This logic is more than 250 years old and was created by the British so that they could justify their aggressions against other people. Your forefathers, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, rejected this logic of Britain and took up arms against this colonization. By accepting this logic, have you not abandoned the values of your forefathers?”

The Interrogator’s eyes turned red. The typist had also stopped writing. He was struck by the what he saw intently looked at the interrogator to see what his reply would be.

The Interrogator, who was unable to rebut the Prison replied: “I think you are wrong and full of anger. And that’s why you are making up these lies.”

Prisoner: “No, never. As I said to you, I was fighting the foreign forces when I was captured.”

Interrogator: “In that case there is no need for this interrogation as you have already confessed to your crimes.”

Prisoner: “If wanting freedom and independence is a crime then your forefathers are also my co-convicts.”

Interrogator: “You seem like a teacher in history.”

Prisoner: “And the American’s are slack students of this field.”

Interrogator: “How so?”

Prisoner: “If you had even skimmed over history then you would not have bothered to invade Afghanistan. Because only those that are unaware of history and geography ever bother to invade us.”

Interrogator: “That is enough! Either shut your mouth or I will shut it for you!”

Prisoner: “You can shut my mouth but you will never silence the voice of my people.”

Interrogator: “Your people are just as stupid as you! Your nation only wants freedom and independence. The world has progressed so much and yet you desire death in exchange for freedom.”

Prisoner: “But I am not alone in this stupidity since your nation is also an accomplice in this foolishness. In 1775 your forefather, Patrick Henry, declared to a crowd in Virginia “Give us one of these two, death or freedom!”

The Interrogator’s mouth dried, he screamed out to the guards to remove the prisoner from the room. The prisoner was once again taken out of the room in his chains. The Interrogator lit a cigarette and turned to the typist asking “What did you write?”

Typist: “I only wrote his name and place of birth.”

Interrogator: “Only this?”

Typist: “The rest of what he said was not worth writing.”

Interrogator: “Indeed he has a big mouth. But I will teach him a lesson.”

The interrogator inhaled from his cigarette and motioned the typist to leave the room. He thought for a moment and then asked the typist “Leave the transcript here”.  After the typist had left, he wrote a note and attached it to the transcript. It read: “The prisoner named Muhammad Noor is extremely dangerous. If we do not kill him with a fatal injection during his transfer from Bagram he will incite other prisoners where ever we send him.”

The next morning a panel of military judges approved the interrogator’s recommendation. The dossier of Muhammad Noor was then given to officers for execution. In this council the interrogator was also present. He had been summoned in order to describe the details of his investigation. The interrogator was sitting on a chair next to the chief military judge. On the wall in front of him hung a painting of Thomas Jefferson. Under the picture were ascribed Jefferson’s famous words: “Every human being and human society on the face of this earth has the right to freedom and self-governance”.

Translated work of author ‘Zarabeen’ (shared by Islamic Emirate, Afghanistan)

Links

The Forgotten Guantanamo: Prisoner abuse continues at Bagram in Afghanistan

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/the-forgotten-guantanamo-prisoner-abuse-continues-at-bagram-prison-in-afghanistan-a-650242.html

Today marks the 12th anniversary of America’s Guantanamo Prison Disgrace

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jan/11/guantanamo-american-disgrace-never-happen-again

Gtayson on Guantanamo .. Free Shaker, Tariq, and Emad, protests, links and 12th anniversary video

https://activist1.wordpress.com/2014/01/11/grayson-on-guantanamo-free-shaker-tariq-and-emad-protests-links-and-12th-anniversary-video/ …

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Grayson on Guantanamo: Free Shaker, Tariq and Emad, protests, links and 12th anniversary video

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Shaker Aamer held for 12 years, never been tried, never been convicted and Tariq Ba Odah, in his 13th year at Guantanamo without charge, cleared in 2009, hunger striking for freedom

London Protest

MEDIA RELEASE: London Activists (London Guantanamo Campaign) to Mark Twelfth Anniversary of Guantánamo Bay with demonstration in Trafalgar Square, Saturday 11 January, 2-4pm

Activists wearing orange jumpsuits and black hoods will hold up placards in Trafalgar Square, outside the National Gallery, to mark the 12th anniversary of the opening of the Guantánamo Bay prison camp, and demand its closure.

The London Guantánamo Campaign [1] will host the demonstration, and speakers will include Jeremy Corbyn MP, Sarah Ludford MEP and Louise Christian, solicitor for former Guantánamo prisoners [2].

Aisha Maniar, a spokesperson for the London Guantánamo Campaign, says, “Twelve years on, the prison at Guantánamo Bay remains a stain on the current global landscape.

It is unfortunate that it has taken a near-fatal hunger strike by prisoners to remind the world, and Barack Obama, of his promise to close the facility. While a step in the right direction, recently renewed efforts by the US administration to reduce the number of prisoners and close the facility remain half-hearted.

“Where there is no risk to their safety, President Obama must ensure that prisoners cleared for release are repatriated immediately. In addition, periodic reviews of prisoners must be accelerated to ensure any further releases. Other states must step up their efforts by demanding the repatriation of their nationals and residents.

The British government can lead the way by using this anniversary to renew its demands for the return of hunger-striking British resident Shaker Aamer to his family in London. The time to act is now. There must be no more anniversaries.”

Contact: e-mail: london.gtmo@gmail.com

Website http://londonguantanamocampaign.blogspot.co.uk/

Guantánamo activists rally in front of the White House for President Obama close the prison   mos_def_gitmo_ff.si

Earlier protest at the White House, Mos Def undergoes the horror of being force-fed

US (Washington DC) Protest

Center for Constitutional Rights Media Release

Today 11th January 2014, marks the 12th anniversary of the arrival of the first men to be detained at Guantánamo. Today, 155 men are still detained at the prison. Many of these men have been cleared for years but remain imprisoned, trapped by politics. More than half of the men are Yemeni, and despite the president lifting his self-imposed ban on transfers to Yemen last spring, not one has been sent home since 2010. Join us today at noon in front of The White House to demand President Barack Obama release Yemeni men from Guantánamo. He cannot meet his promise to close the prison until he does so.

Website http://ccrjustice.org/

Guantanamo-protesta

Guantanamo links

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Emad Abdallah Hassan was ‘cleared for release’ in 2010, but continues to be incarcerated

The Guantanamo Experiment: Letter from detainee on Gitmo’s 12th year https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/americas/9167-the-guantanamo-experiment-letter-from-detainee-on-gitmos-12th-year

CagePrisoners Giving a voice to the voiceless http://www.cageprisoners.com/

 images

Andy Worthington: How to write to a prisoner

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http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2014/01/10/on-the-12th-anniversary-of-the-opening-of-guantanamo-please-write-to-the-prisoners/

Reprieve: Sami al Haj 12th Anniversary Message on video

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doNEfCg1QNw

Carol Anne Grayson: The right not to be forcefed

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https://activist1.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/guantanamo-the-right-not-to-be-force-fed/

Why I went on solidarity hunger strike

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https://activist1.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/guantanamo-solidarity-hunger-strike-why-i-gave-up-food-for-a-week/

Thanks to LGC and other activists for sharing images.

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Waziristan: Tribal people caught between drones, Pakistan army and insurgency

Guest post by Pakistani journalist Gohar Mehsud

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Drone strikes from the US and assaults on civilians from the military

Due to the endless fight amongst foreign, local militants, Pakistan Army and U.S. predator drones, every aspect of life in Pakistan tribal areas especially South & North Waziristan has become a hell on earth.

The US Predator Drone attacks coupled with the long-standing presence of foreign militants in Northern and Southern Waziristan, the remote and lawless tribal areas of Pakistan have imprisoned local tribes and their leaders between outsiders, using the tribal lands to wage a battle. South and North Waziristan have boundary lines with the Afghanistan Provinces of Paktika, Khost and Paktia. The use of US drone strikes in the tribal areas of Pakistan against militants started in 2004, when the Pakistani Taliban first ever commander Nek Muhammad was killed on the 18th June 2004. Initially Pakistani Government took responsibility for Nek Muhammad’s death but afterwards in 2006, American broadcast television network PBS Front Line reported that he was killed in a US drone attack not by the Pakistan Army.

During a recent visit to North Waziristan, I observed the locals in big trouble, almost all day and night you will hear the sound of drones in the air, sometimes you will be able to see them clearly. Similarly, you can feel and observe the Taliban openly there as well, having guns and a dreaded outlook. On the roads you will find many check posts of Pakistan army searching and investigating people in the long-standing lines.

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Militancy rife in the region

A small business man in Miranshah, headquarter of North Waziristan told me during this visit that now a day here is an uncertain situation, “you can face anything in the form of drone attack or in the shape of militant abduction or punishment”. He further said that, “Our businesses, schools and hospitals had been destroyed due to the war torn situation in the area… military operation or shelling happen at any time.” He added that recently in the National Assembly session, Minister for States and Frontier Regions (Safron), Lt General (retd) Abdul Qadir Baloch informed the National Assembly that more then 1,029 educational institutions are non-functional in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan. He was of the view that all this destruction happened because of the militancy in the area.

A BBC report revealed last year that, “during the last five years in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) 485 schools and colleges had been destroyed, which affects a half million school going children and students.”

Constant fighting and militancy in the tribal areas of Pakistan convert the region into a widespread smuggling of drugs and pharmaceuticals since there is no ability for law enforcement to operate. According to the doctors in North Waziristan, it is difficult to control the illegal drugs or pharmaceutical materials. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one doctor noted, anecdotally, that recently there has been a marked increase in people seeking medical attention for psychological trauma visiting him and his pharmacy since the fighting and drone bombings had increased.

On the other hand in both South and North Waziristan, there is no polio vaccination on the ground since Hafiz Gul Bahader in the North and Commander Nazir group in South Waziristan banned polio vaccination in 2011. This declaration regarding no polio vaccination in the area was in response to US drone strikes and will continue until drone attacks stop in the region.

A tribal elder who was scared by the militants and Pakistani Agencies and did not want to expose his name says that the local tribes men are facing big problems and challenges. While terming the current situations as an unannounced third world war, he said that “we the tribal are losing our traditions, values and culture while the whole world is fighting their own interest here”. He explained that “ once the militant capture your home then they would not be ready on any condition to leave this house.”

The elder went on to say, “we are bound in our own areas; sometimes we feel fear because of the drone attack and the same time by the Pakistan army and agencies that they might declare us ‘turncoat’. Also, you cannot neglect the militants as any time they can do anything with you, because there is no single power, everyone is trying to be big beneficiary.”

TTP Punjabi Taliban Commander, Asmattulah Muaweya, who was recently criticized by the then Chief of TTP Hakeemullah Mehsud regarding a peace talk statement, told me in his exclusive interview that peace talks are important for Pakistan and the Taliban as well. He said Pakistan government must be serious and should tell America clearly that they must stop their drone strikes in the tribal areas.

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Tribespeople protest drones and children at risk from drone attacks

In 2009 the Pakistan army lunched a military operation in South Waziristan called operation Rahe Nijat (Path to Salvation) against Pakistan base Militants Tehrik – Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Arabs. According to information that was provided to the National Database & Registration Authority (NADRA) by a local NGO Feda, military operations in South Waziristan caused 69,000 Mehsud tribe families to flee from their native houses.

A local journalist from South Waziristan Agency who requested not to mention his name said that “approximately around two hundred of the Mehsud elders has been secretly killed, as they were raising voice for the people”. He said this was not only happening in South Waziristan but it happens in the entire tribal region of Pakistan. A social worker, who works on Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) stated that after a long military offensive against the militants in South Waziristan, now the government officials were pushing the Mehsud tribesmen to go back into the areas. However the tribals persist that they would not go till that time when all the military are not coming out from the area or the complete elimination of militants.

The writer is Islamabad base freelance tribal journalist. He can be reached at, gohar.mehsud@gmail.com

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Human rights activist in Yemen receives death threat for investigating drone attack

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Reprieve Press release 10th January 2014

Baraa Shiban, an investigator in Yemen for human rights charity Reprieve, received an anonymous death threat yesterday (Thursday) relating to his investigation of a US drone strike which killed 12 wedding guests and injured 14 others in al-Baydah province, on December 12, 2013.

The anonymous caller demanded that Mr. Shiban abandon his investigation of the drone strike and then threatened his life.

The investigation to which the caller referred exposed that the drone strike had hit a wedding procession, rather than Al-Qaeda militants as the US and Yemeni governments had initially claimed. The findings of Reprieve’s investigation, which were broadcast on the US network NBC on Tuesday, have sparked the US administration to launch an internal investigation.

Reprieve has written to governmental officials calling on them to investigate the threat and take any steps required by Yemeni law. Reprieve Legal Director Kat Craig said: “Our primary concern is, of course, for the safety of our colleague. We have asked President Hadi to take a stand to protect Baraa and other human rights advocates who are so vital to Yemen’s democratic transition. But the nature of the threat, and the proximity of it to the high profile coverage of this recent strike procured by Baraa, only makes us more determined to continue our work to expose the unlawfulness of drones in Yemen, how they are killing civilians and terrorising entire communities. We hope that the Yemeni and international community will continue to assist our colleague in his brave work.”

ENDS

Reprieve, drone link  http://www.reprieve.org.uk/investigations/drones/

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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The schoolboy and the cop: Pakistan needs an injection of honesty to address violence

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Schoolboy Aitziz Hasan (age 15) and Karachi cop Chaudhry Aslam Khan

Try to write honestly about violence in Pakistan and the accusations of being some “foreign agent” come flying. This is somewhat hilarious given that two of my family were unlawfully killed at the hands of US, Brit governments and I spent years in litigation (but that’s another story). If I am an agent of anything, I try to be an agent of the truth and expect the flak that comes with it.

My bottom line is that I condemn ALL violence whether state, group, individual.

Another day in Pakistan and more death and destruction. Today there are two drawing much media attention, the first is Aitzaz Hasan, the teenager killed tackling an individual strapped to a suicide vest, the second a high ranking police officer Chaudhry Aslam Khan, known for his tough stance on insurgency.

I am appalled and deeply saddened to hear of the death of a brave young schoolboy who gave the ultimate sacrifice, his life to prevent his classmates from being blown up. This youngster deserves to be showered in awards but no amount of shining plaques will ever diminish the suffering of his family and friends. A personal loss and a loss to Pakistan, the loss of hope that a child can go to school and simply complete his studies in peace.

Full story can be read here http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-25663992

I have got to ask the question though… what drove another person to believe that the only meaning to his/her life was through detonation and the killing of others… another who somewhere along the line lost hope, at least on this earth.

Then there is the killing of “Pakistan’s toughest cop” subjected to repeated attacks who died in Karachi when a vehicle packed with explosives rammed his car. Initially there was a twitter battle regarding who might be responsible, Tehrik-i-Taliban (TTP) or political party Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) who were alleged to have added him to a hit list after multiple operations in Karachi. TTP quickly released a statement however as follows :-

TTP Mohmand Agency claims the responsibility of FIDAI attack on CID S-P Chaudhry Aslam ,who was involved on torturing Mujahidden in prison and killed many of them while torture. This attack was to avenge killing of our friends by him.
We warn all those who torture our friends in jails, If they don’t stop their unlawful activities, we inform them that their future well be worse than Chaudhry. This attack we title with the name of our friends killed in Karachi in prison, Dr. Maqbool, Abdurrahman and all those who have been killed by forces in torture centers.

Tehreek Taliban Pakistan Mohmand Agency.

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Ehsanullah Ehsan (Mohmand Agency, TTP)

Investigative journalist Umar Cheema tweeted that Aslam was “one of those fallen figures whose martyrdom should not be disputed” also saying that “it was an honor to hear the widow of Chaudhry Aslam. She sacrificed her time and prime for letting Chaudhry Aslam to become what he is being mourned for.”

The Independent stated;

Since 2008, Mr Aslam had taken on and taken out countless numbers of criminals, including the 2010 killing Rehman Dakait, a notorious gangster from Baluchistan.

Yet his methods had also sparked controversy and he had been accused on a number of occasions of being involved in extra-judicial killings, or “encounter”. Once he was suspended. A series of investigations had cleared him of wrong-doing but the accusations did not stop. He always denied them.

“I have never staged fake encounters in my career, nor have I been involved in extra-judicial killings, he once told a local paper. “All encounters that I have been involved in have been in self-defence.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/top-pakistan-police-chief-chaudhry-aslam-khan-killed-in-karachi-taliban-attack-9049374.html

Mustafa Qadri (researcher, Amnesty International, Pakistan) had a different take on how Aslam should be remembered responding to me by saying, “likely Aslam did torture, also worked closely with MQM, other political parties and yes even some militant groups…  ‘honest’ cop no, brave definitely.” He went on to say, I fear hagiography (turning someone into a figure beyond reproach) will trump honest reflection on Chaudhry Aslam and more importantly how we define ‘good’ and ‘bad’ violence.”

One of the most disturbing aspects of Pakistan is the imbalance when considering sources of violence. Yes there is great focus on insurgents who more often than not claim their acts of aggression however there is little condemnation in the media regarding state violence, allegations of enforced disappearances, military operations targeting civilians, state supported drone attacks and torture chambers. Pakistan remains in bed with the US supporting its War on Terror but it is the Pakistan people suffering and dying every day.

State agencies must themselves be governed by the law of the country and not made a special case or the moral arguement is completely lost. There is no question that teenager Aitaz Hasan was a hero tacking a bomber but address the state terrorist apparatus too and their role in radicalizing youth or more young kids will die needlessly!

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Ex-military ruler Pervez Musharraf

TTP also made comment on ex- military ruler Pervez Musharraf who now faces allegations of treason but missed attending court due to health problems http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-25663987

There is continued anger over his past support for US drone strikes and fierce military operations. The translation I received read;

Musharraf is now calling for help but no one is ready to help him. There was once a time that he used to frighten his own people by waving his fist that they are unaware of the power of the state but now he is so weak. It was him who was unaware of the power of The ALMIGHTY. He used to address the nation in the voice of God. Hadn’t he thought of the power of GOD when he was frightening the students of Jamia Hafsa from the power of the state. It is such a shame that he has been welcomed by cases and he has nowhere to run. Now he must have acknowledged the power of mullah. It is very likely that he will be saved because no one can dare to challenge the army. Here the constitution is only what the army wants. Who doesn’t know that Musharraf’s arrival to hospital instead of the court was a drama. Now if the commando escapes with the help of establishment, he won’t be able to escape the justice of ALLAH SWT who is the Lord of this universe.

End

This is a time for people to listen to each other and face up to uncomfortable truths. There appears to be a distinct lack of strong, honest, mediators with common sense to initiate dialogue (now needed more than ever)… Perhaps that’s part of the problem… mediation is left to the war mongers, the vengeful agitators! Journalists are killed for reporting honestly trying to better inform the public and the status quo remains intact. Pakistan has become a ginormous charnel house built on the cries of the suffering and the bones of many innocent civilians.

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.


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PTSD: From pain to purpose, US veterans Hart and Ethan speak out

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The music of Hart, “The last day”

I don’t claim to be any expert on rap music but seeing a photo of Snoop Dog in a smart jacket at the White House in the company of Obama was a bit of a let down… As a musician friend from Atlanta put it, “Snoop at the White Hizzle” or rap gone soft? What happened to the edgy social statements we used to hear. Well as it happens, out of the blue a young rapper who calls himself Hart at “Team-ImSoFIRST” sent me a message on Twitter today with video attached saying, “watch the Dopiest Indie Video on Youtube on my life real life veteran, PTSD, “My last day”. My curiosity was sparked.

The video certainly gets the agony of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder across as we watch a former soldier confront his demons. The viewer also learns a few facts about the condition from the 6 minute visual/musical journey into depression, loss and despair.

There are over 2.3 million American Veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan War

At least 20% of them have PTSD and or depression

50% of them don’t seek help because of the stigma that comes with saying,

“I NEED HELP”

So to get the full effect of the video produced by Kriss Liss, here is, “My Last Day”  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zquCWq-UUSA&feature=youtu.be

Biography of Hart from his website

ImSoFIRST (Aka Hart) a Carolina recording artist that’s worked with artists such as Future, Gorilla Zoe, Stuey Rock and DJs like Don Cannon brings his military history, poverty infested, adrenaline rushing flow to the main stream industry. After medically retiring from the military and recovering from a life changing accident he maintains a positive attitude as he sets the bar high for other recording artists in the music career field. Being a multi-talented artist HART shoots, edits and publishes his own videos. His creativity allows him to be more than just one step ahead of the game. He’s determined to change the core of his hometown Shelby, NC so therefore he uses them as his primary source of motivation.

You can also see an interview with Hart on following link http://www.teamimsofirst.com/

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The poetry of Ethan, “Democracy is a bitch”, “Hero”, and “Dinner is served”

Now read the following thought provoking pieces from my friend Ethan McCord, former member of Bravo Company 2-16 who became known to the world as the soldier on the ground in Iraq that rescued children from a van in Baghdad attacked by an Apache helicopter. This was the “Collateral Murder” video made famous by Wikileaks. Ethan was the subject of a short documentary “Incident in Baghdad” directed by James Spione, with myself as Executive Producer, nominated for an Oscar in 2012 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOh_dfQChF0

Democracy is a bitch

Are you enjoying that freedom soldiers supposedly guard?

Well examine that freedom, take a look long and hard.

Exactly what is it, that you risk to lose?

That so many lives both old and young were destroyed, bodies bloody, and bruised.

What did you stand to gain from the death of an Iraqi boy?

Did you feel important to tell your lies, as you buy your own childs toys?

As children in Iraq play with guns from sticks,

or are forced to rebuild their lives at the tender age of six.

Orphaned from our Democracy, that lie you hold so dear.

That ugly bitch Democracy, that all other people have learned to fear.

While you drink your iced tea, and waste the things most wish they had.

A father tastes his child’s blood, because of your bombs, and bullets in a distant land.

I joined to fight for you, I quickly learned you didn’t care.

Fuck your ribbons, and magnets, fuck your superficial veterans affairs.

Its all a show now, maybe it always was.

Twenty three died today all alone because of you, but who cares, no one does…..

Hero

Tonight a veteran chooses, to look at his children no more. Knowing that one day hell have to explain to them what Daddy did in war.

Chooses to leave his wife he’s loved it seems forever, Because he’s hurt her with his hands though he swore to her he’d never.

Chosen to leave behind his pain and anger hes tried to hide since returning, chosen to leave behind that horrible dream that always is reocurring.

He will wear his uniform one last time, medals neatly upon his chest, So you’ll know that killing DOES NOT MAKE A HERO….FUCK YOUR HERO ….HERE I REST>

Dinner is served

Look at this man, what in his eyes do you see?
Is it a callous murderer, or who once was me?
This man they say killed and maimed both old and young
Is this the face of pure evil, with a forked serpentine tongue
Or is it a mirror image, haunting our daily lives,
not forgiving our sins, our own actions in mime
This man was a husband, son, and father like you and me
Till we patted him on the back and shouted ” go die for me”
But when a soldiers death doesn’t come, as quickly as was wished
We are forced to devour the leftovers that we so selfishly dished.

Ethan McCord

Interview with Ethan on Russia Today, “I couldn’t stop crying” reliving collateral murder video http://www.correntewire.com/i_couldnt_stop_crying_ethan_mccord_relives_collateral_murder_video

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Drones: US investigates wedding drone strike in response to Reprieve evidence

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Press release from Reprieve Wednesday Jan 8th 2014

In response to evidence uncovered by human rights charity Reprieve, the US government will investigate a 2013 drone strike on a Yemeni wedding party that killed 12 civilians and injured 14.

The Defense Department’s Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), which carried out the strike on December 12, 2013, claimed that the intended targets were “dangerous al Qaeda militants,” including Shawqui Ali Ahmed al Badani. However, an investigation in the days following the strike led by Reprieve’s investigator in Yemen, Baraa Shiban, found that all those killed and injured in the strike were guests attending a wedding with no known militant connections. The wedding was a local celebration of a marriage connecting families from adjacent villages. Al Badani is from a distant region of the country with no connections to those villages hit in the strike.

An anonymous US official told NBC, in response to footage and testimony collected by Reprieve, that the administration is launching an internal investigation. This is the first time the US government has announced an investigation of a drone strike since President Obama’s pledge in May 2013 to tighten the rules on drone strikes.

Reprieve investigator Baraa Shiban, said: “In bombing a wedding, the US Government has demonstrated that they either don’t know or don’t care who they were targeting. As a result, 12 innocent lives have been lost and many more destroyed. These continuing drone strikes don’t bolster anyone’s security—they only serve to alienate the Yemeni people and undermine the rule of law. We can only hope that the US administration’s internal investigation is robust and that it results in needed policy change and reparation for those affected.”

ENDS

Reprieve drone link here http://www.reprieve.org.uk/investigations/drones/

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Doctors and Drones 2014: Interview with Tomasz Pierscionek on the updated Medact Report

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Dr Tomasz Pierscionek co author of Medact report Drones: The Physical and Psychological implications of a Global Theatre of War.

1) Can you introduce yourself and give the reader a little of your background?

My name is Tomasz Pierscionek. I was born in Melbourne, Australia and moved to the UK aged 12. Presently, I am a doctor specialising in psychiatry (Academic Clinical Fellow in Psychiatry) and work in Newcastle, UK. I have had an interest in politics, current affairs and global health since I was at high school. At present, I am editor of the online current affairs journal the London Progressive Journal (LPJ), which is not affiliated to any political party or lobby group. The LPJ aims to fill the ever increasing void created by the mainstream media by reporting on issues often ignored by mainstream news outlets and providing an alternative and more insightful analysis of global events to that provided by a tame and stale mainstream media.

At university, I became involved with an organisation known as Medsin comprised of medical students working to tackle global and local health inequalities through education, advocacy and community action. Medsin’s motto was ‘think local, act global’. My work in Medsin further increased my awareness of the high levels of deprivation suffered by many across the globe and propelled me to do whatever I could to raise awareness of the suffering of others and work to tackle these inequalities. I later became involved with Medact, an organisation similar to Medsin but predominantly comprised of qualified doctors and other healthcare professionals. So, once I graduated from medical school, in effect I also graduated from Medsin to Medact.

I eventually served on the board of the charity Medact for two years before stepping down in June 2013 (I am still involved in Medact activities as a member of the organisation). One of the initiatives I was involved in and led whilst on the board of Medact was raising awareness of the health effects of armed drones by producing a report (along with fellow Medact board members) to raise awareness of this issue. The report was called Drones: The Physical and Psychological implications of a Global Theatre of War.

2) When was the first time you became aware of drones?

In mid 2011, a few colleagues from Medact and I were working on a paper whose aim was to compare civilian death rates in conflict caused by various weapons (ranging from small arms fire to aerial bombardment). One of the key points of the paper was the finding that the proportion of civilian to combatant deaths was much higher when artillery was used or when bombs were dropped from the sky compared to when small arms were used. The reason for this is that bombardment and shelling tends to occur predominantly in urban areas where there are higher concentrations of civilians. For example, a building where alleged militants are holed up may be in a densely packed urban area. Hence, if a bomb is dropped on the ‘militants’ (and even it actually hits the intended target) there are still likely to be numerous non combatant casualties. In the process of writing this paper, we started to learn about the use of a new weapon of war, namely armed drones. This inspired me start reading and researching about the use of armed drones.

3) What made you decide to become involved in campaigning against the use of armed drones and what is Medact?

After realising that the use of armed drones was a major issue in itself and one which warranted further investigation, I suggest to my fellow Medact board members that we publish a report looking just at the health effects of these weapons. My colleagues agreed and together with fellow board member, Gay Lee, former director of Medact, Marion Birch, and our editor and media liaison, Alison Whyte, we published the above mentioned report in October 2012.

Medact is a charity of health professionals working to remove barriers to healthcare worldwide. It conducts research and analysis, campaigns and lobbies, educates and informs. It is independent of powerful interest groups and sees health through the lens of social justice. Last month, Medact celebrated its 20th anniversary. Though small in size, compared with other NGOs, Medact’s members have valuable skills, knowledge of global health and extreme dedication allowing the organisation to often ‘punch above its weight’ by dialoguing with and influencing decision makers. Medact is also the UK affiliate to IPPNW (International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War) founded in 1980, at the height of the cold war, by two physicians – one Soviet the other American – after they came to the conclusion that with the world divided into two powerful armed blocs, the biggest threat to humanity and healthcare was the possession and proliferation of nuclear weapons. They were determined to rid the world of this threat.

Just five years later, in 1985, IPPNW was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for performing a “considerable service to mankind by spreading authoritative information and by creating an awareness of the catastrophic consequences of atomic warfare”. More than thirty years on, there are IPPNW affiliated groups in most countries and the organisation can boast tens of thousands of doctors and medical students as members. Nowadays, national IPPNW affiliates have branched out to tackle many other threats to global health beyond nuclear proliferation, such as refugee health, environmental destruction and armed conflict.

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Anti-drone activists UK and child survivor giving evidence of a drone strike, Waziristan

4) You have recently produced an updated version of the Medact report Drones: The Physical and Psychological implications of a Global Theatre of War 2013… What did Medact hope to achieve by writing this report?

The original version of the report, published in October 2012, aimed to raise public awareness of the use and proliferation of armed drones. Back in 2012, it was surprising how little the public knew about drones. Since the first missile was launched from an American drone in late 2001 in Afghanistan to kill an alleged al-Qaeda leader, this mode of warfare has become increasingly more prevalent to the extent where nowadays a suspected 76 or more countries possess some form of drone. However, at present most countries only possess small unarmed drones used for surveillance purposes. So far, only the US, UK and Israel possess and use the larger armed drones in combat.

We also aimed to lobby the UK government to promote greater parliamentary debate on the use of armed drones and to release further information about the aftermath of drone strikes in Afghanistan. Out report recommended that the UK government actively engages with civil society groups who are playing a vital role in raising the concerns described in our report and who are lobbying for greater openness and an end to proliferation. We also recommended that the UK government work with the UN and other international bodies to include drones in arms limitation treaties, or to make them the subject of specific legislation to limit and eventually stop their development, use and proliferation.

We concluded by stating that we believed it to be in the public interest, and in the interest of our armed forces, that there be more transparency, parliamentary scrutiny and public debate on how drone strikes are planned, how targets are chosen and who is targeted. We further recommended that the UK government and the MOD provide information on dates and places of previous drone strikes and reasons for launching strikes, whether a drone strike was pre-planned to eliminate a certain target or whether it had been carried out in order to eliminate individuals found to be engaging in ‘suspicious behaviour’, how casualty figures were arrived at and how the distinction between civilians and combatants was made. We also asked whether the UK government has independent command and control over Reaper drones or whether these drones are wholly or partly under the command and control of NATO and whether a drone strike was ever carried out against an individual who is not directly participating in hostilities.

5) How has your report been received?

The first version of the report received good publicity. Both the Guardian and the British Medical Journal reported on the launch of the report. I was interviewed for a podcast by the Lancet medical journal on the findings of the report. The report itself was officially launched at a reception in Portcullis House, House of Commons, chaired by Labour MP John McDonnell. I also subsequently took part in a debate/talk at the Royal Society of Medicine titled Health, conflict and armed unmanned aerial vehicles: The way forward or a step too far? where I spoke alongside both opponents and proponents of drone warfare.

I have given other talks on the development and ethics of drone warfare since then, including a lively talk to 6th form students in Lancaster who were studying humanities related subjects.

We felt that an updated version of the report was required on account of the many global developments in drone proliferation over the course of 2012-2013. The updated version of the report was released to coincide with a conference celebrating Medact’s 20th anniversary and its achievements.

6) Last month a US drone hit a wedding party in Yemen what are your thoughts on this?

Sadly such incidents have become all too common. Wedding parties and tribal gatherings have been mistaken for terrorists meeting and have been attacked. For example, on the 17th March 2011, a US operated drone attacked a jirga (tribal meeting) in North Waziristan killing over 40 people. The meeting was reportedly a gathering of local tribesmen that had been called to sort out a local land dispute – a far cry from any militant activity.

However, there are also occasions where missiles fired from drones kill what are referred to as ‘military aged males’. These are essentially young men who are, for whatever reason, suspected of being militants and killed. On account of drone attacks almost always taking place in remote areas, such as Waziristan on the Pakistan-Afghan border, it is often difficult to gain independent information on whom the victims really were. It is also near impossible to learn of when instances of faulty intelligence have led to the ‘wrong people’ being killed.

What is certain is that drone attacks, whether they be in Pakistan or elsewhere, foster resentment amongst relatives of the dead and have led, on occasions, to the Taliban attacking Pakistani soldiers in retaliation. Many people in Pakistan are angry with the United States for bombing their country. They are equally angry with the Pakistani government for giving the US tacit permission to do so.

Remember, the US is not at war with Pakistan yet is flying drones over the country and killing those living within Pakistan’s borders. The US sees it as acceptable to pursue and kill their enemies in countries with which it is not at war. Other nations are undoubtedly watching this state of affairs play out. Imagine the uproar that would result if say, Cuba were to use armed drones to target Cuban exile terrorist groups residing in Miami, or if Russia were to launch a drone attack on an alleged Chechen militant living in Seattle. Perhaps one day global terrorism will be more widely used as an excuse for other nations to violate sovereign territory to pursue their own enemies.

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Drone protest, Yemen and anti-drone art

7) What contact do you have with medical organizations and hospitals in drone hit areas dealing with drone victims?

I have no personal contact with medical organisations working in drone hit areas. I have met with Shahzad Akbar, a trained barrister who is working as a fellow of the charity Reprieve in Pakistan. Shahzad represents families of drone victims in the North Waziristan areas of Pakistan. When I met with him in London over a year ago, he informed me that Waziristan is an area that is often sealed off by the Pakistani army from the rest of Pakistan, making it very difficult even for healthcare workers from other parts of Pakistan to access to that region. Other counties affected by drone warfare, such as Somalia, Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen and Palestine (Gaza) are also hard to reach areas that lack adequate medical facilities and healthcare workers.

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 Blocking NATO supply line to protest drones and anti-drone rally, Pakistan

8) There is often a major disconnect between international organizations such as the UN and those working with the direct impact of drone strikes on the ground, what can be done to improve this situation?

I think that for starters, more information needs to be gleaned on casualty rates from drone attacks though I appreciate the immense difficulties in doing so. Once relief agencies know exactly how many civilians are being killed and injured in drone strikes, a fuller picture of the problem will be known giving them a better idea of how much aid is required. Getting aid to people in these hard to reach areas will also be a difficulty. I would suggest that lack of trust is also major issue. I suspect that those living in areas affected by drone bombings are likely to distrust ‘Western organisations’ which they may see as being associated with the nations operating drones. So perhaps, local aid agencies on the ground, who the local population are more likely to trust, should be given the support required to spearhead humanitarian efforts. However, I doubt that we will see, for a long time at least, as much money set aside for treating victims of drone attacks as is spent on producing and operating these weapons in the first place.

9) I recently interviewed a key member of the Pakistan Taliban who told me that the polio vaccination progamme won’t go ahead until drones stop… What are medical organizations doing to highlight this issue and support polio workers in Pakistan?

I remember that interview. I think the Taliban said they would not allow a vaccination program to go ahead in areas they control as they claimed that the same people who want to vaccinate their children are also bombing them from above. They also said something like ‘when your house is raided, you fight. Vaccinations and green tea afterwards.’

I’m not sure exactly what medical organisations are doing to highlight this issue. The Taliban are of course cynically using the deaths of Pakistani children for their own propaganda purposes. However, it appears that there is little hope that children in one of the most deprived regions of the planet will be vaccinated against a disease that has been eradicated in most countries. It is also clear that bombing people will breed distrust and will lead to a lose-lose situation for all.

At the end of last year, a glimmer of hope for peace was extinguished when the head of the Taliban in Pakistan, Hakimullah Mehsud, was killed by a US drone attack as peace talks between the militant group and the Pakistani government were begin planned. His death has obviously scuttled the chance of dialogue and will doubtlessly lead to another cycle of violence both within Pakistan and likely beyond too.

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Hakimullah Mehsud then leader of Tehrik -i-Taliban killed in US drone strike

10) One issue raised by doctors in Peshawar is the possibility of locals being affected by fall-out material from drones which may be carcinogenic. How can Medact take this concern forward?

I must admit, this is news to me but I find the claims plausible. There must be some toxic byproducts from exploded Hellfire missiles and laser guided bombs. However worrying the claims may sound, I have to say that sadly I think the people of Waziristan presently have bigger things to worry about. If the US administration is unconcerned at the possibility that, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, approximately between 2500-3600 civilians have died in Pakistan since drone bombing commenced in 2004 (160-200 of these are thought to have been children), they will hardly be concerned about a rise in cancer rates which may result a long time after the drone attacks.

Take, for example, the use of depleted uranium shells in Southern Iraq in 1991, although there are many documented cases of increases in cancer rates in areas where depleted uranium was used, there are still those who dispute such claims 20 years on and the victims in Iraq have received no significant compensation to date. Some years ago, I was involved in writing a research paper looking at breast cancer rates in Iraq in areas where depleted uranium had been used. http://www.med.kufauniv.com/dr/dejaili/New%20Folder%20(3)/rsearch/JCarcinog718-2116869_055248.pdf

It seems that victims only become of concern if the matter is considered politically important. Ie: If we need a reason to attack a particular country then suddenly a lot of attention is focused on the appalling human rights record of the leader. For example, the official line was that Saddam Hussein had to go was he was such an evil man that he even used chemical weapons again the Kurds in Northern Iraq in the late 1980 during the Iran-Iraq war. That is certainly true but, as Noam Chomsky pointed out, what is selectively omitted is that he did so with the permission and support of then US President, George Bush Senior. Margaret Thatcher too, in the 80s, was a friend and supporter of Saddam despite his human rights record being as appalling then as it was in the 90s when the West decided it was in their interests to get rid of him.

11) One of Medact’s recommendations is that the UK government “should publicly recognise the civilian causalities of its armed drone programme, and offer appropriate compensation, including medical, psychological and financial assistance”. What progress has been made on this?

Sadly very little, as far as I am aware. We don’t yet even have accurate information on the numbers of dead and injured from UK drone strikes in Afghanistan, (UK has only used drones in Afghanistan since 2008). One of the first challenges is to tackle secrecy and fight to obtain this information and also information on how ‘targets’ of drone strikes are selected. We know that there have been hundreds of UK drone strikes in Afghanistan since 2008 and last year, the UK doubled its fleet of Reaper drones from 5 to 10 and opened a command centre at RAF Waddington, Lincolnshire. Prior to that, UK drone operators were based at Creech Air Force Base in the Nevada Desert near Las Vegas. Perhaps courageous individuals, following in the footsteps of Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, will come forward to provide the public with the information that governments will not.

Certainly, it would be morally right for those countries responsible to compensate victims of drone strikes and their families. On a wider scale, I believe reparations need to be paid to the people of Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya who were subjected to invasions and bombardment. In the case of Iraq, undoubtedly, the nations responsible committed, according to the Nuremberg Laws, the supreme crime of aggression. Under these laws, as has been said a number of times, Tony Blair, George Bush and the others responsible should face trial in the International Criminal Court. Blair should suffer the most serious punishment: through his collaboration with the forces of imperialism in the invasion of Iraq, he betrayed both the British and the international working classes and the party that he led.

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Anti-drone march London, at the door of no 10 Downing Street, a message for  Prime Minister David Cameron

12) Where do you go next in your fight to highlight the impact of armed drones?
Depending on developments, there may be scope to publish a further updated version of the report in a year or so. In the meantime, time permitting, I shall continue to work with other individuals and organisations who are raising awareness of the proliferation of armed drone and the ethical moral and legal aspects associated with their use.

I will do what I can to work for justice and stand alongside those suffering and fighting against oppression in all its guises. Unfortunately, sometimes the demands of my day job must take precedence.

Full Medact Drone Report can be read and downloaded from following link… http://www.medact.org/news/concern-drones-growing/

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad.  She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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Censored article: Time for a complete withdrawal in Afghanistan, we should never have invaded in the first place

 _46731104_stop_the_war   march-forward-march

Anti-war protestors in the west and below my anti-war article which was banned in Afghanistan for being “too inflammatory”… my answer, “war is inflammatory”!

Ask ten different people on the street “why are we in Afghanistan” and you will likely get 10 different answers. The point is no lives depend on our replies but when you have soldiers and top politicians that can’t give a consistent answer it is deeply disturbing.

If NATO forces are there in retaliation for 9/11 then by invading Afghanistan, they have managed to cull the local population (some of whom had never even heard of 9/11) and sacrifice our own forces. Though it is worth remembering that such is the pride in what has been achieved in Afghanistan that more US soldiers are now dying from suicide than on the battlefield itself.

Well here is the official reason for war in Afghanistan according to the British Ministry of Defence (MOD) website which states it is because Afghanistan is “a source of terrorism” and argues,

“ the Taliban gave safe haven to Al Qaeda, which allowed terrorists to plan and carry out attacks around the world. That is why the United Nations authorised a NATO/ISAF-led military intervention. Getting rid of the Taliban regime and Al Qaeda was only the first part of the job. The second is to make sure they cannot return”

There is monumental hypocrisy here. The attacks on 9/11 should have acted as a wake –up call. Governments ought to have been asking why a group of people hate the US government so much they are willing to take the lives of nearly 3,000 civilians along with their own. The fact is the US has been exploiting and terrorising countries around the globe for decades to serve its own interests. The state defines and prescribes who we must accept as “terrorists” and frankly western foreign policy shows that the US is at war with Islam.

The MOD try to convince us that, “the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) strategy involves protecting the civilian population from insurgents, supporting more effective governance at every level, and building up Afghan National Security Forces as rapidly as possible”

Even President Karzai (plied with vast amounts of US dollars over the years) has lost faith now and was refusing to sign a key security agreement with the United States due to his concern at the number of civilians killed during NATO operations.

Protecting the civilian populations has translated to dreaded night raids and drones strikes. The word Bagram has struck fear in the hearts of many. Innocent civilians have suffered torture, degrading and inhumane treatment at the hands of US soldiers with lenient sentences for those responsible. There are alleged and proven war crimes, the Wardak killings, the massacre of 16 civilians at the hands of Sgt Robert Bales, the “Kill Team” case, execution of unarmed civilians, destruction of the Quran leading to violence, mutilated corpses and the murder of an injured Taliban by British “marine A” unveiled as Alexander Blackman, to name but a few. No doubt there are many incidents still to come to light.

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Marine A, Alexander Blackman convicted of murder and protestors highlighting human rights abuses at Guantanamo and Bagram.

Drone strikes have exterminated people without them ever having gone through fair judicial process to establish innocence or guilt. No one seems to care that the victim is a young shepherd boy or a two year old girl. Have you ever seen the US target any of its own “alleged terrorists” on US soil. You won’t either because it would be totally unacceptable to the American people. 

How would locals act if a family gathering was struck by a missile in Chicago or passengers of a car “taken out” on an LA highway. They would be on the streets demonstrating, championing their “right to bear arms” and probably use them too. At this point it is worth reminding ourselves that you are more likely to be accidently shot by a toddler than killed by a terrorist on US soil… so where is the perspective spending nearly a decade in conflict in Afghanistan.

The following drone report (points below which I support) states;

“These high proportion of civilian casualties in effect ferment a lot of hatred against the US in the affected areas. The affected local populations, traumatized by such attacks, begin to view the Americans as a discriminate and immoral force that is willing to sacrifice the lives of the locals in order to attack a small number of their enemies. This in turn drives a lot of the civilian populace, especially from amongst the young, into the arms of the Mujahideen. Not only that but more importantly, these drone strike work with a double edge because they illustrate that the host government of these areas, often allied with the US, lack full sovereignty and are unable or unwilling to protect their own citizens. Thus the drone strikes unwittingly undermine support for the very same government, whom they intended to shore up support for through these strikes.”

The above was not written by Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch but the Islamic Emirate (Afghan Taliban) report, A Reflection on the American Drone War Strategy. However this is not propaganda, this is fact. Similar findings have already been published by politicians, lawyers, activists, local communities and the UN.

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Anti-drone campaigners in UK and US

MOD argues that “whilst our troops are helping provide security to the Afghan people, we are developing the Afghan Army and Police so they can take the lead in providing their own security.”

The military have done such a great job of winning hearts and minds that those they have trained are executing “green on blue” attacks, thus there is huge distrust between foreign and local forces and I predict major defections as NATO trips withdraw. Those in the business of prosthetics must be doing a roaring trade as they fit the next victim of an “insider” attack or an IED (Improvised Explosive Device) with a false leg.

Some so called feminists would argue that British and US soldiers are “saving Afghanistan’s women from the brutal Taliban” but has anyone noticed the increase in cases of sexual abuse on both sexes within the US armed services? There are also plenty of women need “saving” at home any night of the week when their partner comes home after a mammoth drinking session but you don’t see the military intervening in these cases.

Now there will no doubt be increased violence for some families as angry and depressed “returning soldiers” fight what may be their biggest battle yet, Post Traumatic Stress disorder (PTSD) and take out frustrations on their nearest and dearest in Amarillo or the suburbs of Surbiton.

Then there is the financial cost of occupation, billions spent to keep a country heavily dependent on foreign aid which according to the Independent accounted for about 97 per cent of GDP in 2010. Yet harsh welfare cutbacks are being placed on the poor back home causing an increase in numbers of homeless living on the streets. Many hard working families and retired pensioners find themselves forced into fuel poverty, relying on food banks and in the cases of the US unable to afford medical care. No wonder there are so many protests in Britain and the US.

There is terrible waste in Afghanistan, in December 2013, a story emerged in the Marine Times alleging the following,

“the U.S. paid $5.4 million for two never-used trash incinerators at Forward Operating Base Sharana in eastern Afghanistan, potentially exposing troops to hazardous fumes from open-air burn pits used to dispose of waste instead.”

It is time for a complete withdrawal from Afghanistan. Life is set to become even more difficult for the military now that anti-drone demonstrators in Pakistan have vowed to block the NATO supply line until drones cease. The blockade continues into 2014 (43 days now) and tanker drivers are now having to use the dilapidated, dangerous and longer Salang Tunnel route.

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Anti-drone protestors block NATO supply line from Pakistan to Afghanistan (43 days ongoing)

The west must break its dependence on creating conflict around the world and start taking more interest in citizens on home territory. Like it or not despite MOD pledge to make sure al Qaeda and Taliban won’t return, a deluded David Cameron who believes “mission accomplished” needs to face the fact that they never actually left and Taliban will probably be part of the next government. Was 446 UK service personal killed since 1991 and many more maimed worth it? Afghanistan should now be left to determine its own future, it will need time to sort out the mess created by the west!

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Please note I was asked to write an article on the war in Afghanistan for a new magazine Afghan Zariza in Afghanistan. The person who approached me  said he previously worked for Hindustan Times. I waited for publication and was finally told that the “boss” thought it was “too inflammatory, so it was banned from publication!

Carol Anne Grayson is an independent writer/researcher on global health/human rights and is Executive Producer of the Oscar nominated, Incident in New Baghdad. She is a Registered Mental Nurse with a Masters in Gender Culture and Development. Carol was awarded the ESRC, Michael Young Prize for Research 2009, and the COTT ‘Action = Life’ Human Rights Award’ for “upholding truth and justice”. She is also a survivor of US “collateral damage”.

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