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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, November 01, 2001 |
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International
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Rights Watch decries civilian deaths
QUETTA (PAKISTAN), OCT. 31. Nearly 35 Afghan civilians died when
U.S. bombs and gunfire hit their village, Chowkar-Karez, on the
night of Oct. 22, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.
None of the witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch knew of
Taliban or Al-Qaeda positions in the area of the attack.
Human Rights Watch reiterated its call to the U.S.-led alliance
to ensure that it is taking adequate precaution to avoid civilian
casualties, and called for an immediate investigation into the
bombing raid that hit Chowkar-Karez, located some 40 km north of
the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar.``If there were military
targets in the area, we'd like to know that they were,'' said
Sidney Jones, Asia Director of Human Rights Watch. ``This is the
second instance in less than a week in which we've documented
substantial civilian casualties from U.S. bombing raids. The
Pentagon has got to do more to avoid these deaths.''
Human Rights Watch researchers located six wounded survivors of
the October 22 bombing raid that hit Chowkar-Karez. The six are
currently recovering in Quetta hospitals. Human Rights Watch also
interviewed several additional persons who witnessed the attack
but were not hurt.
Among those wounded by the bombing are Mrs. Sardar Bibi (40), who
lost her husband and six children in the attack; five-year-old
Shabir Ahmed, who received severe shrapnel wounds to his head and
remains unconscious; Shabir Ahmed's seven-year-old brother, who
was also wounded; and three adult sisters.
One family interviewed by Human Rights Watch provided the names
of 18 relatives killed in the incident, and another unrelated
woman said her husband and six children were killed, and that she
had been told that as many as 35 people died in the raids.
All of the witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch said there
were no Taliban or Al-Qaeda positions in the area of the attack,
which is in a remote rural area of Afghanistan. In almost all
other cases of civilian casualties caused by the U.S.-led bombing
campaign investigated by Human Rights Watch, survivors and
witnesses have been forthcoming in identifying Taliban or Al-
Qaeda military positions located nearby which could have been the
target of the attack. It is impossible for Human Rights Watch to
verify independently whether Taliban or Al-Qaeda military targets
existed in the area of Chowkar-Karez village, but the consistent
statements of all witnesses and survivors that there were none is
notable.
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