From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, November 03, 2001 2:54 AM
Subject: [C-I] Merciless US bombing obliterates village: 60 killed


On 2 Nov 01, at 21:56, David Quarter wrote:

 Merciless US bombing obliterates village: 60 killed
 
 CHOKAR KARAIZ Nov 1: Rubble and fresh graves marked
 with the flags of martyrs are all that remains of this
 tiny Afghan village after US bombing killed at least
 60 people, survivors said Thursday.
 
 Locals said about 20 villagers survived attacks on
 October 19 and 20, when wave after wave of US jets
 pounded the community with heavy bombs and cannon
 fire, destroying everything in sight.
 
 Foreign reporters brought here by the Taliban militia
 saw the devastation first-hand: every house had been
 flattened and huge craters could be seen in the
 surrounding fields.
 
 "Around midnight the bombing started. It lasted for
 two hours and then the next night it began again and
 lasted all night and the rest of the following day,"
 said 36-year-old farmer Mehmood.
 
 "When it started everyone just fled their homes and
 ran in every direction. We didn't know where to go."
 
 He said he knew 19 people who had died in the attacks,
 including members of his extended family.
 
 The village, 60 kilometres north of Kandahar, was a
 scene of utter ruin. Long cracks had opened up in the
 ground where the bombs struck. Trees were broken and
 splintered, cars burned and torn. Even cooking pots
 were riddled with bullets holes.
 
 Huge chunks of shrapnel lay everywhere. One bore the
 words "Guided Bomb" while another was marked with "For
 use of MK82". "Many bodies were blown apart and all we
 could do was collect their limbs and put them together
 in the same grave," said 65-year-old Mungal as he
 showed a freshly-dug graveyard.
 
 "I brought some of the remains here in a tractor," he
 said, pointing to a line of 18 new graves, some of
 which had been marked with small coloured flags on
 long, thin poles, signifying martyrdom.
 
 Mungal, who said he lost most of his friends and
 family in the attack, claimed that the remains of 30
 people were buried in the graves.
 
 Although he could not understand why the United States
 had attacked an innocent farming village, he refused
 to curse the Americans. "I'm not aware of our crime
 and why we were bombed. There were no Taliban here,"
 he said. 
 
 "If the aircraft did not know who we were they should
 have checked before they bombed and killed innocent
 civilians. "I don't know about politics. But I'm
 angry, and I leave it up to God."
 
 The village was littered with the debris of village
 life, including children's clothes, women's sandals,
 and the rotting carcasses of dead sheep.
 
 Villagers said another three or four people were
 killed when bombs struck a small community of nomads
 who had pitched their tents nearby.
 
 The US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Tuesday
 that based on interviews with survivors in hospital in
 Quetta in neighbouring Pakistan, up to 35 civilians
 were killed in the attack here, which it said took
 place on October 22.
 
 "None of the witnesses interviewed by Human Rights
 Watch knew of Taliban or al-Qaeda positions in the
 area of the attack," the group said in a statement,
 which urged the Pentagon to "do more to avoid these
 deaths." 
 
 "If there were military targets in the area, we'd like
 to know what they were," Sidney Jones, HRW's director
 for Asia, said. 
 
 A makeshift Taliban base, surrounded by anti-aircraft
 guns, was seen on the road to the village some 15
kilometres outside Kandahar. Two vehicles, their radio
antennae removed, were parked in a ditch.
 
 There has been no formal comment from the Pentagon on
 the attack here, but US officials have dismissed
 Taliban's claims that more than 1,500 Afghan civilians
 have died in the bombing.
 
 The Taliban earlier took foreign journalists to see
 another village which they claimed had been destroyed
 in a US attack on October 8, a day after the
 airstrikes began in retaliation for the Islamic
 militia's alliance with alleged terrorist Osama bin
 Laden. 
 
 Witnesses said that Kadam village, 40 kilometres west
 of the eastern town of Jalalabad, appeared to have
 been destroyed but could not confirm residents' claims
 that up to 160 people had been killed.-AFP
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