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From: Barry Stoller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [R-G] Report: CIA started Kunduz massacre


Times of India. 2 December 2001. US 'hero' may have triggered Mazar
revolt.

LONDON -- The United Nations has joined human rights groups in demanding
an urgent inquiry into the carnage at the Qala-i-Jhangi fort near the
northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif, even as new information is
emerging about how it started and the two Pakistani Taliban reported to
be the last men alive in the fort, until the violence finally subsided
on Wednesday.

Even as the CIA saluted its slain colleague, the first American fatality
in Afghanistan, "American hero" Johnny �Mike' Spann, who died in the
prison revolt, British journalists in Mazar-i-Sharif have begun
reporting that Spann was less an innocent victim than the one who
allegedly provoked the riot.

On Wednesday night, the BBC's authoritative domestic television
programme Newsnight interviewed Oliver August, correspondent for The
Times, London, in Mazar-i-Sharif, who said that Spann and his CIA
colleague, Dave, were thought to have set off the violence by
aggressively interrogating foreign Taliban prisoners and asking, "Why
did you come to Afghanistan?"

August said their questions were answered by one prisoner jumping
forward and announcing, "We're here to kill you."

The Guardian's Mazar-i-Sharif correspondent said the CIA "operatives had
apparently failed on entering the fort to observe the first rule of
espionage: keep a low profile."

[N.B.] The Times's August said Spann subsequently pulled his gun and his
CIA colleague shot three prisoners dead in cold blood before losing
control over the situation.

Spann was then "kicked, beaten and bitten to death," the journalists
said, in an account of the ferocity of the violence that lasted four
days, leaving more than 500 people dead and the fort littered with
"bodies, shrapnel and shell casings."

With allegations of "war crimes" against the US and UK coming in thick
and fast for ignoring the Geneva Convention on the treatment of
prisoners of war, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Commisioner, Mary Robinson, has echoed Kate Allen, director of the
London-based Amnesty International in calling for an urgent inquiry.

Amnesty has said it is willing to send an observer to Afghanistan to
monitor an inquiry.

Amnesty International has highlighted public concern by demanding an
investigation "into the proportionality of the response by the Northern
Alliance, US and UK forces."

In a statement released here, it said the enquiry "should make urgent
recommendations to ensure that other instances of surrender and holding
of prisoners do not lead to similar disorders and loss of life."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews



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