Ivo Skoric on Fri, 9 Nov 2001 02:39:01 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] Re: Fleeing Afghans gunned down |
I wonder whether Taliban include Afghans, that they kill themselves, in the lists of civilian casualties that they attribute to the American bombing. I mean, could anybody ever prove them wrong if they do so? This would make Americans look really bad, while at the same time reduce the numbers of those Afghans who would dare to oppose Taliban. ivo Makes me think there mihgt someday (unfortunately) be a ICT for central Asia. http://www.smh.com.au/news/0111/08/world/world1.html from the Sydney Mornging Herald - WORLD Fleeing Afghans gunned down By Gay Alcorn in Washington and Martin Perry of AFP The Taliban are slaughtering Afghans who try to flee the country, gunning them down in cold blood, refugees who have made it to Pakistan say. Of a dozen Afghans interviewed, all had tales of random killings, human rights abuses and persecution. Some told of mass murders. Ovr Mohd, 65, fled to the hills from Bamiyan to avoid the Taliban. When he returned he found his three sons shot dead. Mr Mohd said they were targeted because they were ethnic Hazaras, whose sympathies lie with the Northern Alliance. "When we decided to leave Afghanistan we saw the Taliban attacking people who were fleeing. People were gathering on the road to leave and they were shot. We have seen this," he said. advertisement advertisement "I saw 50 people in front of me who were killed. They were women, children and men," Mr Mohd added, claiming the killings happened a month ago. About 100,000 Afghans are believed to have crossed the border illegally since the US began pounding Afghanistan. They have no identity papers and officially do not exist in Pakistan. They refuse to move into refugee camps for fear of deportation. Consequently they receive no help from aid groups. Saeed Zaman, 35, said he witnessed similar killings in Kabul. "There is a chowk [roundabout] where the people go when they want to leave," he said. "The Taliban are attacking them there. I saw dozens killed [on Friday]. The people were pleading to leave but the Taliban shot them. They left the bodies where they fell. The animals were eating them." Faced with criticism from the Arab world and signs of unease in Europe, President George Bush on Tuesday began a 10-day public offensive to bolster support for his war in Afghanistan. He presented a list of charges against the "mad global ambitions" of the al-Qaeda terrorist network and the Taliban, and signalled that the US was already looking beyond the military action to other nations that support terrorists. Previewing his speech to the United Nations General Assembly on Saturday, Mr Bush said it was "time for action". Countries that had expressed support for the war on terrorism would be held accountable, he said. "I will put every nation on notice that these duties [to oppose terrorism] involve more than sympathy or words. No nation can be neutral in this conflict, because no civilised nation can be secure in a world threatened by terror." For the first time, Mr Bush accused Osama bin Laden of seeking chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, although the Administration has no evidence that he has them. He said: "If he doesn't have them, we will work hard to make sure he doesn't [get them]. Given the means, our enemies would be a threat to every nation and, eventually, to civilisation itself." Mr Bush plans a whirlwind of meetings to maintain momentum in the war. On Tuesday he met the Algerian President, Abdelaziz Boutelflika, and French President, Jacques Chirac. He was to hold talks with the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, yesterday, and Pakistan's President, Pervez Musharraf, in New York at the weekend. Meanwhile, waves of US aircraft roared through the night over Kabul, bombing front-line positions of the Taliban, but the Taliban say their fighting ability has not been dented. As the US bombardment continued, the Northern Alliance said it had moved troops closer to the strategic provincial capital of Mazar-e-Sharif, in a sign of a possible offensive. The opposition also says forces loyal to the ethnic Uzbek warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum have moved towards Shurgar, a town 60 kilometres from Mazar-e-Sharif. The anti-Taliban forces say they have also gained ground in Balkh province bordering Uzbekistan. They claim that 400 Taliban have defected to their forces. - James Newton __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Find a job, post your resume. http://careers.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold