http://dawn.com/2012/05/01/aid-workers-killing/


Aid worker’s killing
THOUGH religious militants are capable of carrying out all sorts of atrocities, 
when victims are beheaded even the most jaded observer is left shaken. That was 
the gruesome fate which met British aid worker Khalil Dale, whose slaughtered 
body was discovered in a Quetta orchard on Sunday. Mr Dale, a convert to Islam 
who worked for the International Committee of the Red Cross, had been kidnapped 
by the Taliban in January from the Balochistan capital. Reports indicate the 
senior aid worker was killed because a hefty ransom demand was not met. The 
ICRC has a well-earned, global reputation for neutrality and has — since the 
mid-19th century — maintained a presence in some of the world’s most difficult 
conflict zones.


For example, the Switzerland-based humanitarian outfit was active in 
Afghanistan during the days of the anti-Soviet resistance, during the civil war 
in the 1990s as well as when the Taliban ruled Kabul. It remains involved as 
the insurgency continues. But it seems that for militants, the line between aid 
workers and other non-combatants and ‘enemy’ troops and intelligence operatives 
has become increasingly blurred, with all westerners and those who work with 
them seen as fair game.

While the savagery of the militants can never be justified, some western 
intelligence agencies have complicated matters by reportedly planting 
operatives within the ranks of humanitarian organisations. This highly 
irresponsible policy has jeopardised the activities of genuine aid workers and 
put lives at risk. In Pakistan, we have seen that the Americans’ use of the 
polio programme to track down Osama bin Laden damaged the anti-polio effort in 
Fata and other affected regions. It appears that some in the western 
intelligence community are only concerned with achieving their targets, 
unperturbed about the consequences of their actions and methods. The 
governments concerned need to review these policies so that the reputation of 
international aid agencies and humanitarian outfits is not sullied. By 
‘embedding’ operatives to meet perceived goals and gain access to ‘enemy’ 
territory, western intelligence agencies are compromising aid organisations’ 
reputation of neutrality and preventing these outfits from carrying out 
valuable humanitarian work in the world’s trouble spots.


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