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Drone strike wipes out man’s family, faith

Durrak

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s unpopular government was making some progress winning hearts and minds in North Waziristan, a stronghold of its tenacious militant enemies – from al Qaeda to the Taliban.

It upgraded a school and built a new road, lifting the spirits of people like shepherd Resham Khan, a victim of decades of neglect of the forbidding mountain region in the northwest.

Then, last June, 15 members of his extended family were blown to pieces during a funeral procession in his village.

Khan, who was nearby and heard the explosion, alleges the mourners were targeted by pilotless US drone aircraft missiles.

He stares into the distance blankly when asked to describe that day. His brother, Mulaqat, has to recount the tragedy because he is still too traumatized, to speak at length.

He sits by Khan’s side in a psychiatric section of an Islamabad hospital where he is being treated with antidepressant and anti-psychotic medicines.

Pakistan needs to win support in key battlegrounds like North Waziristan along the Afghan border, a global hub for militants determined to destabilize the government and help defeat US-led Nato forces in Afghanistan.

But the strikes undermine public support.

“If you expect them to love the government, you would be foolish to think so,” said Khan’s psychiatrist, Rizwan Taj, who says his patient has made great progress since he was brought to the hospital on a stretcher, in a stupor, four weeks ago.

His grief reflects the price ordinary Pakistanis are paying for the relentless US drone campaign on the Afghan border, which has been stepped up under the Obama administration as it prepares to draw down troops in the 10-year war in Afghanistan.

The air raids also go to the heart of the resentment that Pakistanis feel against the United States, seeing them as an assault on the nation’s sovereignty.

Drone strikes have been a major source of friction between the United States and Pakistan. Tensions between the allies have heightened further over the case of Raymond Davis, a US consular employee who shot dead two Pakistanis last month in the eastern city of Lahore in what he said was an attempted robbery.

The United States says Davis should be released from jail because he has diplomatic immunity. Pakistan says the courts should decide his fate, and many see it as another case of the Americans refusing to subject themselves to Pakistan laws.

The United States still doesn’t acknowledge the drone campaign, so American officials decline to confirm specific incidents, underscoring the sensitivities on ties with Pakistan, a nuclear-armed South Asian country.

But they do say the attacks are highly effective.

Drone strikes have killed high-value al Qaeda and Taliban figures. But these victories for Washington and Islamabad often cause devastation for locals like Khan.

AND END TO PRAYERS

Shortly after the strike, the 52-year-old father of six sunk into a deep depression and lost alarming amounts of weight. Then he started imagining things.

He told relatives that they should not eat or drink anything because the world’s food and water supplies would soon run out. His brother decided to admit him to hospital when Resham, a pious Muslim, did the unthinkable.

“On the 20th of September he stopped praying. He used to pray five times a day. But after that he totally stopped,” said Mulaqat, looking sadly at his brother, who was sporting a henna beard and wearing old plastic sandals.

“I asked him to offer prayers and he said ‘I can’t. I don’t have the energy’.”

The New American Foundation, which tracks drone strikes, estimates they have killed a total of 2,189 people from 2004 through January of this year. Of those, 1,754 were militants.

Only 16 per cent of residents of the tribal areas think the strikes accurately target militants, 48 per cent believe they largely kill civilians and another 33 per cent feel they kill both, said a study by the think tank.

People in Khan’s village staged dozens of protests urging the government to halt the drone strikes and provide compensation for deaths and property damage, said the brother. The government promised to do so, but “we don’t believe their promises,” he said.

Khan was so emotionally paralyzed by the drone incident that he stopped taking caring of his elderly mother. She contracted cholera, probably because of poor sanitation, and died. His children also suffered.

They could not understand his odd behavior, and were told to stay away from him because he had caught a contagious disease.

This kind of collateral damage makes it easier for the Taliban to persuade people to take their side in the conflict, which has drained state coffers.

After the Reuters interview with his brother, Khan mustered up the courage to speak briefly about the drone strike.

“Stop the drone attacks. We need money. No one is helping us,” he said.

A let-up in the strikes, launched by remote-control from Central Intelligence Agency headquarters in Langley, Virginia, is highly unlikely.

Osama bin Laden, his deputy Ayman al Zawahri and others on Washington’s hit list are believed to be in the northwest, as are Afghan Taliban militants who cross the border to attack Western troops in Afghanistan.
 
Dang, poor guy :(

Feel so sorry for all the good people who die in this bloody war...

Please forgive us
 
One of several such cases ... media needs to highlight such plight of the locals. All we hear in the news are number of casualties of a drone strike, but the ground reality may be different. Anybody watched the documentary movie "Restrepo". They also show few civilian casualties in the Afghanistan war after the air strikes.

RESTREPO A Film by Sebastian Junger & Tim Hetherington
 
Dang, poor guy :(

Feel so sorry for all the good people who die in this bloody war...

Please forgive us

no we wont forgive you, talibans are doing well in killing americans, these american terrorists dont deserve life...
 
Dang, poor guy :(

Feel so sorry for all the good people who die in this bloody war...

Please forgive us


wars -- fake or real -- always have casualties. I commend the author of this article who discusses the often not-discussed.

this man, and people like him need to be compensated for their losses (material and life)

the govt. allows these strikes; therefore they are also answerable
 
The General has some explaining to do.

So does Pres. Zardari, though the latter is a known traitor. Gen. Kayani must understand this will go on his permanet record in history along with his other accomplishments. Frustration is growing in Pakistan. Gen. Kayani*
 
A foreign power, whose IA is operating attack drones for the past few years in cooperation with Pakistan's Government and complicity of Army has been launching strikes into the NW areas of Pakistan all in the name of the engineered "WoT", at the expense of innocent Pakistani lives. When they operate drone strikes sometimes they don't even think or feel the need to inform their Pakistani counterparts.

The authorization of US drone strikes in Pakistan is unacceptable under any circumstance!

If drone strikes are required it is the duty upon the Pakistan army to solely conduct, as they are in charge of the security and protection of the people and in their hands lies the peoples trust.

Does the peoples trust mean anything?

Yes it is true in war innocent civilians die. I'm afraid this excuse is being used to justify why a foreign power is allowed to conduct drone strikes for several years in Pakistan. As if this reason alone should help us become at ease with the drone strikes. I say be resistant. If drones strikes are to kill people let them be done by Pakistan Army, the nation can forgive it's Army in what it has to do in the line of fire and protection but hard to forgive it for not defending them from enemies both foreign and domestic.
 
American Army has ended up killing more civilians than terrorists, where are Obama and Zardari, they need to stop the drone attacks alltogether.
 
It's all happening because army has given them approval so dont blame us they will only do what suits them blame the army for being the tratiors here just making dollars out of the misery of our poor fellow pakistanis it's a business for the army a very big source of income and it's pockets are full with dollars but wait till pakistanis realize all this will stop soon so wake up my fellow brothers and don't support the looking of a Muslim on anyone behalf
 
It's all happening because army has given them approval so dont blame us they will only do what suits them blame the army for being the tratiors here just making dollars out of the misery of our poor fellow pakistanis it's a business for the army a very big source of income and it's pockets are full with dollars but wait till pakistanis realize all this will stop soon so wake up my fellow brothers and don't support the looking of a Muslim on anyone behalf


It was Musharraf and then Zardari who allowed U.S. to attack Pakistan, and gave orders to Pakistan army.
 

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