US
may be guilty of war crimes over drone use – Amnesty Intl
US
officials responsible for carrying out drone strikes may have to
stand trial for war crimes, says a report by Amnesty International,
which lists civilian casualties in the attacks in Pakistan. Human
Rights Watch has issued similar report on Yemen.
RT.
23
October, 2013
The
Amnesty International report is based on the investigation of the
nine out of 45 drone strikes reported between January 2012 and August
2013 in North Waziristan, the area where the US drone campaign is
most intensive. The research is centered on one particular case –
that of 68-year-old Mamana Bibi, who was killed by a US drone last
October while she was picking vegetables with her grandchildren.
The
report, titled, “Will I be next?” cites the woman’s
eight-year-old granddaughter, Nabeela, who was near when the attack
occurred, but miraculously survived.
"First
it whistled then I heard a "dhummm," Nabeela says. “The
first hit us and the second my cousin.”
The
report also recounts an incident from July 2012, when 18 laborers,
including a 14-year-old, were killed in the village of Zowi Sidgi.
The men gathered after work in a tent to have a rest when the first
missile hit. The second struck those who tried to help the injured.
“Amnesty
International is seriously concerned that these and other strikes
have resulted in unlawful killings that may constitute extrajudicial
executions or war crimes,” the report reads.
Amnesty’s
main point is the need for transparency and accountability, something
the US has so far been reluctant to offer.
“The
US must explain why these people have been killed - people who are
clearly civilians. It must provide justice to these people,
compensation and it must investigate those responsible for those
killings,” Mustafa Qadri, the Amnesty researcher who wrote the
report, says.
The
report also questions the effectiveness of drone attacks in Pakistan
as a means of combatting terrorists. Researchers believe such strikes
may eventually lead to strengthening the terrorist cell as they
“foster animosity that increases recruitment into the very groups
the USA seeks to eliminate”.
“The
ultimate tragedy is that the drone aircraft the US deploys over
Pakistan now instill the same kind of fear in the people of the
Tribal Areas that was once associated only with al-Qaeda and the
Taliban,” the report reads.
The
US government is aware of the Amnesty International report on drone
strikes, according to the group’s head of the South-Asia program,
Polly Truscott.
“We
contacted the US government in advance of our report being published
and the CIA referred us to the White House and the White House
referred us to US President Barack Obama’s speech of May 2013 which
made promises of transparency. We’ve seen little change to date,”
Truscott told RT.
In
his speech on US drone policy in May, President Barack Obama sought
to reassure his audience that the strikes did not target individuals
and were only taken “against terrorists who pose a continuing and
imminent threat to the American people.”
But
Amnesty International is questioning whether there was any
“legitimate target” in the area.
“That
US government interpretation appeared to allow the killing of an
individual in the absence of any intelligence about a specific
planned attack, or the individual’s personal involvement in
planning or carrying out a specific attack. It stretched the concept
of imminence well beyond its ordinary meaning and established
interpretations under the existing international law on the right of
states to self-defense.”
On
the same day as Amnesty International’s report on Pakistan, Human
Rights Watch released its own research on drone strikes in Yemen. The
report, titled “Between a Drone and Al-Qaeda” also lists civilian
casualties in recent drone strikes, two of which, according to the
report, were carried out “in clear violation of the laws of war.”
The
reports by both human rights watchdogs come as the US is facing
growing international pressure over its drone program.
A
Pakistani youth from outlawed Islamic hard line group Jamaat ud Dawa
(JD) holds a banner of a US drone during a protest in Lahore against
drone attacks in Pakistani tribal areas in Lahore on July 5, 2013.
(AFP Photo/Arif Ali)
Nawaz
Sharif, the Pakistani prime minister, is currently in Washington,
where he is expected to talk about the drone attacks with Obama. And
on Friday, the UN General Assembly will debate the use of unmanned
aerial vehicles.
In
a separate report, a UN investigation revealed some 33 drone strikes
around the world - not just in Pakistan - that violated international
humanitarian law and resulted in hundreds of civilian casualties.
That report is also calling for more transparency and accountability
from the United States.
That
is only achievable if an international probe into America's drone
activities is launched, according to Phyllis Bennis from the
Institute for Policy Studies. The U.S. won't shoot itself in the
foot with an investigation she believes.
“The
US has a consistent position in refusing to allow its highest
officials, whether political or military, to be held accountable for
the consequences of wars that are themselves fundamentally violations
of international law. International law in the United States
unfortunately is too often only applied to other countries and not to
ourselves… And what we’ve seen is that the US government is not
prepared to investigate itself. So the question of international
investigations – whether it’s in the context of the international
criminal code to which of course the US is not a member or whether
it’s in the context of the Amnesty International, the United
Nations, other agencies – all of these need to be explored and
used,” Bennis told RT.
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