News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terrorafghanistancolateral-damage — Viewing Item


Proves civilians hit { October 14 2001 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1598000/1598374.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1598000/1598374.stm

Sunday, 14 October, 2001, 17:23 GMT 18:23 UK
Taleban show bomb devastation


Whole families are said to have been lost in the strike

Afghanistan's ruling Taleban have taken a group of international journalists to a village in the east of the country where they say nearly 200 residents were killed by US bombing last week.
A reporter for the BBC said the village, which stank of rotting corpses, had been completely destroyed and that journalists had been shown shrapnel and an unexploded bomb.

We advise Muslims, children and those who reject unjust US policy not to travel by plane

Al-Qaeda spokesman
The organised tour took place hours before the US began an eighth night of air raids on Kabul, with planes appearing in the skies over the city.

The capital and three other cities - Kandahar, Jalalabad and Herat - were all struck on Sunday.

As strikes resumed, the Taleban offered to discuss handing over Osama Bin Laden to a neutral country if the US agreed to halt air strikes.

But Maulvi Abdul Kabir, the Taleban's second in command, repeated the demand that the US should show them evidence of Bin Laden's connection to the attacks.

The US was quick to reject the offer. President Bush said there was nothing to negotiate about.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for Bin Laden's al-Qaeda organisation, which is blamed by the US for the suicide attacks on 11 September, warned US and UK citizens that it will retaliate for the raids.

"We advise Muslims, children and those who reject unjust US policy not to travel by plane... and not to live in high-rise buildings," Sulaiman Abu Ghaith said, in a videotaped statement given to the Arabic TV network al-Jazeera.



The US military has stepped up attacks

UK Prime Minister Tony Blair said the statement was a clear admission of responsibility for the attacks. More than 5,000 people were killed when three hijacked airliners were deliberately crashed in New York and Washington, and another crashed in Pennsylvania.

In other developments:


Police in Pakistan fire shots and teargas to disperse protesters near an air base thought to be in use by US personnel, killing one protester
Air Canada confirms that one of its airliners that was due to fly from Toronto to New York on 11 September was subsequently found to have knives concealed on board
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak approves a decree to send 80 suspected members of an al-Qaeda cell before a military court
Tony Blair - who will meet Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat on Monday - says military action must be balanced with progress in the Middle East negotiations
Crown Prince Muhammad al-Maktoum of Dubai says westerners are safe in the Gulf and life is carrying on as normal
The opposition Northern Alliance in Afghanistan say they will not launch an offensive to capture Kabul before a political agreement is reached on a post-Taleban settlement
Click here for a map of recent air strikes


US military officials have not confirmed the attack on Kouram - called Kadam in some reports - which took place last Wednesday, although they have admitted a stray bomb killed several residents of a suburb of the capital, Kabul, on Friday.

"I'm in no doubt this was an American strike," said Rahim Ullah Yusuf Zai, referring to the Kouram attack.

The reporters were met with furious protests by distraught locals, many of whom said they had lost relatives in the attack.



I lost my four daughters, my son and my wife in this attack

Kouram resident
The bomb was meant to hit a helicopter at Kabul airport, but a wrongly entered digit in its global positioning system meant it missed its target.

Journalists who reached Kouram on Sunday were shown shrapnel and told by villager Gul Mohammed that rescuers were still digging for some 200 people feared killed.

"I lost my four daughters, my son and my wife in this attack," said a grief-stricken villager who was out of his house when the bombs fell on Wednesday night.



Civilian deaths have provoked angry anti-US demonstrations

Our reporter says this is the first time such access has been given to foreign media by the Taleban and indicates the importance they attach to the propaganda war.

The journalists said that, to begin with, angry residents of the village threw stones at them and shouted at them to leave, and only the armed Taleban escort prevented the foreigners from being attacked.

The Taleban leadership has rejected a "last chance" to surrender Bin Laden that was offered by President Bush at a White House news conference on Thursday.

The Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) reported the reclusive Taleban leader Mullah Omar as saying in a message: "Our sin is that we have imposed an Islamic system in our country and have given protection to a homeless Muslim, oppressed, who cannot even find a place in any part of the world to sit for an hour."



28 troops implicated manslaughter in afghanistan
8 afghans killed 12 10 03 [jpg]
Afganistan airstrike kills 76 { April 2006 }
Afghan hospital strike kills 15 { October 31 2001 }
Afghan soliders killed accidently { May 21 2003 }
Aghanistan bomb kills 11 civilians { April 10 2003 }
Airstrike coverup { July 29 2002 }
Airstrike in afghanistan killed civilians and infant { August 11 2005 }
Airstrike kills 17 afghan civilians { July 5 2005 }
Bloody blunder { January 7 2002 }
Bombed wedding { May 18 2002 }
Bombed wedding2 { July 2 2002 }
Bombed wedding3 { July 2 2002 }
Bombing that went wrong { July 2 2002 }
Carpetbomb { November 19 2001 }
Cluster111 [jpg]
Disappeared { August 8 2002 }
Evidence massacre { August 19 2002 }
Flawed air strikes { July 21 2002 }
Food drops similar to cluster bombs
Fooddrop roof
Hiding dead { August 8 2002 }
Inquiry airstrikes { July 9 2002 }
Nine afghan kids dead after air strike
No investigation { August 21 2002 }
Pentagon defends { July 16 2002 }
Proves civilians hit { October 14 2001 }
Reasons why bombs hit civilians
Scores killed afghan wedding
Troops mistakenly kill 4 afghans { May 21 2003 }
Un accused coverup { July 29 2002 }
Unexploded bombs litter village
US airstrike kills seven afghan children { June 18 2007 }
Us bombing kills 11 afghan civilians
Us bombs killed 1500
Warplane kills 11 aghan civilians { July 1 2002 }
Wedding party { July 1 2002 }
Woman children { May 25 2002 }

Files Listed: 38



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple