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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Downwithcapitalism <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 29, 2001 1:10 AM
Subject: [downwithcapitalism] FW: Black Book of Capitalism (con't.)



Associated Press. 28 April 2001. Witnesses Describe 1969 Attack on
Vietnamese Village by Americans. Excerpts.


THANH PHONG, Vietnam  Bui Thi Luom says she was 12 years old when seven
Americans with guns stormed into her Mekong Delta village, rounding up
women and children. She says she watched helplessly as they opened fire,
despite her grandmother's pleadings for mercy.

She was the only survivor in her hut of 16 people - 11 children and five
women, she said.

Luom's account, told for the first time to journalists on Saturday,
follows the public acknowledgment last week by former Sen. Bob Kerrey
that civilians were killed during a commando raid by his U.S. Navy SEAL
team on this coastal village 32 years ago.

... [This confirms the testimony of] ex-SEAL, Gerhard Klann, as saying
the civilians were herded into a group and massacred at Thanh Phon.

[Robert] Kerrey, who later served as Nebraska governor and senator, and
ran for president in 1992, received a Bronze Star medal for the Feb. 25,
1969 raid.

... Although Kerrey insists that his written after-action report
mentioned civilian deaths, SEAL message exchanges later that day - and
his Bronze Star citation - refer only to 21 Viet Cong killed. Radio logs
two days later said 24 died, 13 civilians and 11 VC.

Luom, now 44, told reporters there were no Viet Cong in Thanh Phong, and
only the Americans fired weapons. "They only killed civilians, women and
children. No VC," she said. Altogether, 20 people were killed, she said.

... Luom lives with her husband and five children in a nearby fishing
village.

... Thanh Phong is a tiny cluster of thatched-roof huts on the coast 100
miles southeast of Ho Chi Minh City. Lush groves of coconut and banana
trees line the red-dirt road that connects it to Ben Tre province.

In 1969, it was even poorer, Luom said. There were no men - many had
been killed in bombing raids and others had joined the Viet Cong, she
said. Viet Cong sympathies were strong, other residents say. One
resident recalled that the first sea shipment of arms from Communist
North Vietnam to the south arrived in Thanh Phong in 1964.

[A] second witness, Lanh, 62, said she hid in a banana grove as the
intruders killed an elderly couple and their three grandchildren. The
adults, Bui Van Vat, 65, and Luu Thi Canh, 62, were decapitated, she
claimed.

"They killed her first. I saw the soldiers cutting off her head. Then he
started screaming and they killed him," Lanh said. "He was wearing a
scarf, and you could still see the skin hanging on his neck."

She said she ran to her house and stuffed her children's mouths with
cloth to keep them quiet. After the incident, she said she found a pile
of bodies, including eight of her relatives. The next morning, she and
other survivors gathered the bodies, wrapped them in straw mats and
buried them in a common grave. "We didn't even have coffins for them,"
she said.

... Luom said the victims in the hut where she lived included her
pregnant aunt and grandmother. Luom was the oldest of 11 children and
the youngest was 3 years old, she said.

"That night I was sleeping inside the shelter. My grandmother woke me
up, calling everybody in the shelter to come outside," Luom said. "I
counted them - seven men with guns."

The men rounded up the women and children and seated them in a circle
near the shelter's entrance, Luom said.

"One woman started coughing and the American soldier put a gun to her
throat. My grandmother told her not to cough or the soldier would kill
her."

Luom said they pulled a young girl to her feet, and the girl screamed.
Other villagers told her later the girl had been disemboweled, but Luom
said she did not see this.

"My grandmother turned to help her. I saw her kneel in front of the
Americans, pleading for mercy. After that, the soldiers began to shoot,"
Luom said.

The Americans stood about three feet away, she said, and as gunfire
erupted, she fled into the dugout shelter. Before leaving, she said,
they threw an explosive into the shelter.

"I just heard an explosion. I'm not sure if it was a grenade or gunfire.
It hit my knee," she said, pulling up a pant leg to show a scar on her
left knee. "I don't know if they knew I had escaped. I think they tried
to kill anybody left in the shelter."

"Of course they had to know" it was only women and children, Luom said
bitterly. "They should have been punished. At the time I was too small,
but if I could get revenge, I would. If I could have killed them, I
would."



















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