Truth about drone attacks- Whoever supports these attacks should be ashamed of themselves

Islam4u

Citizen
For the past three years, Noor Behram has hurried to the site of drone strikes in his native Waziristan. His purpose: to photograph and document the impact of missiles controlled by a joystick thousands of miles away, on US air force bases in Nevada and elsewhere. The drones are America's only weapon for hunting al-Qaida and the Taliban in what is supposed to be the most dangerous place in the world.
Sometimes arriving on the scene just minutes after the explosion, he first has to put his camera aside and start digging through the debris to see if there are any survivors. It's dangerous, unpleasant work. The drones frequently hit the same place again, a few minutes after the first strike, so looking for the injured is risky. There are other dangers too: militants and locals are suspicious of anyone with a camera. After all, it is a local network of spies working for the CIA that are directing the drone strikes.
But Noor Behram says his painstaking work has uncovered an important and unreported truth about the US drone campaign in Pakistan's tribal region: that far more civilians are being injured or dying than the Americans and Pakistanis admit. The world's media quickly reports on how many militants were killed in each strike. But reporters don't go to the spot, relying on unnamed Pakistani intelligence officials. Noor Behram believes you have to go to the spot to figure out whether those killed were really extremists or ordinary people living in Waziristan. And he's in no doubt.
"For every 10 to 15 people killed, maybe they get one militant," he said. "I don't go to count how many Taliban are killed. I go to count how many children, women, innocent people, are killed."
The drone strikes are a secret programme run by the CIA to assassinate al-Qaida and Taliban extremists using remote, wild Waziristan as a refuge. The CIA does not comment on drones, but privately claims civilian casualties are rare.
The Guardian was unable to independently verify the photographs. Noor Behram's account of taking the pictures appeared detailed and consistent however. Other anecdotal evidence from Waziristan is conflicting: some insist the drones are accurate, while others strongly disagree.
According to Noor Behram, the strikes not only kill the innocent but injure untold numbers and radicalise the population. "There are just pieces of flesh lying around after a strike. You can't find bodies. So the locals pick up the flesh and curse America. They say that America is killing us inside our own country, inside our own homes, and only because we are Muslims.
"The youth in the area surrounding a strike gets crazed. Hatred builds up inside those who have seen a drone attack. The Americans think it is working, but the damage they're doing is far greater."
Even when the drones hit the right compound, the force of the blast is such that neighbours' houses, often made of baked mud, are also demolished, crushing those inside, said Noor Behram. One of the photographs shows a tangle of debris he said were the remains of five houses blitzed together.
The photographs make for difficult viewing and leave no doubt about the destructive power of the Hellfire missiles unleashed: a boy with the top of his head missing, a severed hand, flattened houses, the parents of children killed in a strike. The chassis is all that remains of a car in one photo, another shows the funeral of a seven-year-old child. There are pictures, too, of the cheap rubber flip-flops worn by children and adults, which often survive: signs that life once existed there. A 10-year-old boy's body, prepared for burial, shows lipstick on him and flowers in his hair a mother's last loving touch.
There are photos of burned and battered Qur'ans but no pictures of women: the conservative culture in Waziristan will not allow Noor Behram to photograph the women, even dead and dismembered. So he makes do with documenting shredded pieces of women's clothing.
The jagged terrain, the often isolated location of strikes, curfews and the presence of Taliban, all mean that it is a major challenge to get to the site of a drone strike. Noor Behram has managed to reach 60, in both North and South Waziristan, in which he estimates more than 600 people were killed. An exhibition of his work, at London's Beaconsfield galleryopening on Tuesday, features pictures from 27 different drone strikes. Clive Stafford Smith, head of Reprieve, the campaigning group, has launched a lawsuit along with a Pakistani lawyer, Shahzad Akbar, seeking to bring to justice those responsible for civilian deaths from drones. "I think these pictures are deeply important evidence," said Stafford Smith. "They put a human face [on the drone strike campaign] that is in marked contrast to what the US is suggesting its operators in Nevada and elsewhere are doing. "They show the reality of ordinary people being killed and losing their homes, not senior al-Qaida members."
The programme of drone strikes was ramped up under the Obama administration. Last year saw the greatest number of attacks, 118, while there have been 45 so far in 2011, according to a tally kept by the New America Foundation, a thinktank based in Washington.Gaming in Waziristan, an exhibition including images of the aftermath of drone strikes in North Waziristan, opens at Beaconsfield, 22 Newport Street, London SE11 6AY [email protected]
[h=2]One victim's story[/h]Sadaullah, a 15-year-old, lost one eye and both legs in a drone strike on 7 September 2009, during the month of Ramadan, near Mir Ali town in North Waziristan. Three family members died, including an uncle who used a wheelchair. It was reported at the time that three Taliban commanders rather than his three relatives were killed in the strike.
"It struck after Iftar," says the shy Sadaullah, referring to the breaking of the fast in the evening during Ramadan.
It had been a happy day for Sadaullah, who was looking forward to the evening when a feast was going to be served at his house, as his grandfather and uncles were visiting to break their fast.
After saying his prayer, Sadaullah, was entering the room where the other guests had already taken their place for the evening feast when the missile hit. Something heavy fell on his legs, requiring them both to be later amputated.
He also lost his uncle Mautullah Jan, who was in a wheelchair for the past decade, and two his cousins, Kadaanullah Jan and Sabir-ud-Din.
Now Sadaullah does not go to school and gets only a religious education in a madrasa Islamic seminary in his village. Sadaullah sees no hope for the future but says that the madrasa "is good for me, as it keeps me busy".
Sadaullah is one of the victims on whose behalf British human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith is to launch a lawsuit against the CIA's former legal chief, John Rizzo, who approved dozens of drone strikes on Pakistan's tribal region.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/17/us-drone-strikes-pakistan-waziristan
 

hans

Banned
Your Post highlights the killing fields of Waziristan. Then if we move down south we have the killing feilds of Karachi. Then there are unaccounted thousand plus killings of Bolichastan. If we were to balance our Muslim act, then there comes the killings of Non-Muslims all over Pakistan.

Crying our Heart over killings of Perticular set of people subjected to Drone Killings is wrong. If one needs to voice there concern they should be no parallel between any killings due south or Up North. Killings done in the name of so called Islam or by Kafir of another state the crime weight remain the same.

We should be concerned with loss of life, independent of who He or she is. If one needs to make Pakistan storng and united.. we need to unite the colours of Pakistan... not subjecting one over the other.
 

siddique

MPA (400+ posts)
Your Post highlights the killing fields of Waziristan. Then if we move down south we have the killing feilds of Karachi. Then there are unaccounted thousand plus killings of Bolichastan. If we were to balance our Muslim act, then there comes the killings of Non-Muslims all over Pakistan.

Crying our Heart over killings of Perticular set of people subjected to Drone Killings is wrong. If one needs to voice there concern they should be no parallel between any killings due south or Up North. Killings done in the name of so called Islam or by Kafir of another state the crime weight remain the same.

We should be concerned with loss of life, independent of who He or she is. If one needs to make Pakistan storng and united.. we need to unite the colours of Pakistan... not subjecting one over the other.

dont talk nonsense could u pls give us the facts and figure,how many no muslims got killed in pakistan or elsewhare,comparred to the pakistan peoples
got killed,u wont be able to provide any,cause there is none,
so stop spreading this bs!!!!!
 

Islam4u

Citizen
Your Post highlights the killing fields of Waziristan. Then if we move down south we have the killing feilds of Karachi. Then there are unaccounted thousand plus killings of Bolichastan. If we were to balance our Muslim act, then there comes the killings of Non-Muslims all over Pakistan.

Crying our Heart over killings of Perticular set of people subjected to Drone Killings is wrong. If one needs to voice there concern they should be no parallel between any killings due south or Up North. Killings done in the name of so called Islam or by Kafir of another state the crime weight remain the same.

We should be concerned with loss of life, independent of who He or she is. If one needs to make Pakistan storng and united.. we need to unite the colours of Pakistan... not subjecting one over the other.

I understand what you are saying but I havent got the facts for the killings in Karachi, Balochistan etc non muslim or whoever. Many people on this forum and elsewhere believe that the drone strikes only kill militants. Facts are contrary to that. It had to be highlighted here so people wake up to this atrocity. You are more than welcome to start a new thread or even on this thread raise awareness to atrocities elsewhere.
 

yasir1981

Councller (250+ posts)
DRone attacks r absolutely valid otherwise these militants would have eaten us.......Drone attacks r done in abundance in North and south waziristan and that place is where masterminds of all militants r lying......Even people other than militants r those who provide every type of support to these terrorists to attacks like Mehran base, GHQ,,,,,,,,,,Why people who say DRones r bad not make these militants understand that stop this terrorism and killing innicent people of pakistan......Americans r using DRone a special technology to kill these militants,,,,If USA had to kill randomly they could have used any ordinary aircraft and collateral damage would be more....So these militants's families should abandon them and ask them to stop terrorism...As long as there r militants DRone should continue......DRones r also being done in Yemen.......So people who care too much about these terrorists and their supporters should tell these militants to put down their weapons...If they can't do that ask the innocent people to leave waziristan and settle somewhere else in pak...why they keep living in that area where r terrorists
 

Scorpion

Banned
Your Post highlights the killing fields of Waziristan. Then if we move down south we have the killing feilds of Karachi. Then there are unaccounted thousand plus killings of Bolichastan. If we were to balance our Muslim act, then there comes the killings of Non-Muslims all over Pakistan.

Crying our Heart over killings of Perticular set of people subjected to Drone Killings is wrong. If one needs to voice there concern they should be no parallel between any killings due south or Up North. Killings done in the name of so called Islam or by Kafir of another state the crime weight remain the same.

We should be concerned with loss of life, independent of who He or she is. If one needs to make Pakistan storng and united.. we need to unite the colours of Pakistan... not subjecting one over the other.

Dear you are absolutely right that We should be concerned with loss of life, independent of who He or she is. . . . . But the problem is that the NGOs are already raising there voices for the bloodshed in Baluchistan and Karachi and at least inspite of the delayed justice there cases has became the part of the court proceedings . . . . Left are these tribals facing barbarism in the shape of Drone Attacks and Military Operation and the problem is that they cannot challenge it any where . . . . NGOs not willing to take there cases because of their beards and the Burqa . . . . Court not willing to take cases as tribal areas are out of their jurisdiction . . . . They cant get their case decided by the FCR as the military operation has destroyed the foundation of this law even . . . . And about the Government/Army, they are busy collecting the dollars after putting these tribals for sale to Washington . . . . . .
 

Scorpion

Banned
Dear,

All those who support these Drone attacks/Military Operations are Munafiqs . . . . . And a Munafiq never feel ashamed of his Munafiqat . . . . .

 

hans

Banned
dont talk nonsense could u pls give us the facts and figure,how many no muslims got killed in pakistan or elsewhare,comparred to the pakistan peoples
got killed,u wont be able to provide any,cause there is none,
so stop spreading this bs!!!!!

BS? Brother we in Pakistan have Both Muslim and Non Muslim population. Then we have segment of Pakistani Muslims killing Segment of Pakistani muslims. And you say I am forging BS at this point? You must be living in lala land, but I am sure I am seeing first hand Muslim killing muslims all over Pakistan. Killing subject depends on which kind of color Glasses you have on your eyes.

Be kind in selecting your words, I know the amount of stress local Pakistani are going through these days, but complementing on type of killing over another is not in good taste.

We have to clear or purge all type of Political, ethnic and Religious dominance. Or else we are in for a long bloody Civil war. Till the time each and every community is given freedom of expression what ever the cause be, there be no end to blood shed. Hate is like corrosive acid, it eats into every thing positive society can offer .... We still have time. Give Hindus there rights, Christine there freedom, Shia there freedom to practice, Non Punjabi's there civil and democratic rights. Make sure representation of all segment of society is protected. Maker sure Justice is blind and not biased by one ideology.

the first step in the right direction can be ... practicing self respect for others. One of the building blocks. Remove all institution that fan Draconian laws. Even if its forced by Saudi based/financed Mullahs.. who subjected even peace loving / neutral Muslims as kafir.