Eye of the drone
 
>From statements made in February by the families of 
victims and survivors of a March 17, 2011, drone attack in the village 
of Datta Khel in the Pakistani region of North Waziristan. The 
statements were collected by the British human rights group Reprieve and were 
included in their lawsuit challenging the legal right of the 
British government to aid the United States in its drone campaign. More 
than half of all deaths from U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan have 
occurred in North Waziristan. Translated from the Pashto.
I am approximately forty-six years old, though I do not know the exact date of 
my birth. I am a malice of my tribe, meaning that I am a man of responsibility 
among my people. One of my brother’s sons, Din Mohammed, whom I was very fond 
of, was 
killed by a drone missile on March 17, 2011. He was one of about forty 
people who died in this strike. Din Mohammed was twenty-five years old 
when he died. These men were gathered together for a jirga, a 
gathering of tribal elders to solve disputes. This particular jirga was 
to solve a disagreement over chromite, a mineral mined in Waziristan. My nephew 
was attending the jirga because he was involved in the transport and sale of 
this mineral. My brother, Din Mohammed’s father, arrived at the scene of the 
strike shortly following the attack. He saw death all 
around him, and then he found his own son. My brother had to bring his 
son back home in pieces. That was all that remained of Din Mohammed.
________________________________
 
I saw my father about three hours before the drone strike 
killed him. News of the strike didn’t reach me until later, and I 
arrived at the location in the evening. When I got off the bus near the 
bazaar, I immediately saw flames in and around the station. The fires 
burned for two days straight. I went to where the jirga had been held. 
There were still people lying around injured. The tribal elders who had 
been killed could not be identified because there were body parts strewn about. 
The smell was awful. I just collected the pieces of flesh that I believed 
belonged to my father and placed them in a small coffin.
The sudden loss of so many elders and leaders in my 
community has had a tremendous impact. Everyone is now afraid to gather 
together to hold jirgas and solve our problems. Even if we want to come 
together to protest the illegal drone strikes, we fear that meeting to 
discuss how to peacefully protest will put us at risk of being killed by drones.
________________________________
 
The first time I saw a drone in the sky was about eight 
years ago, when I was thirteen. I have counted six or seven drone 
strikes in my village since the beginning of 2012. There were sixty or 
seventy primary schools in and around my village, but only a few remain 
today. Few children attend school because they fear for their lives 
walking to and from their homes. I am mostly illiterate. I stopped going to 
school because we were all very afraid that we would be killed. I am twenty-one 
years old. My time has passed. I cannot learn how to read or write so that I 
can better my life. But I very much wish my children to grow up without these 
killer drones hovering above, so that they may 
get the education and life I was denied.
________________________________
 
The men who died in this strike were our leaders; the ones 
we turned to for all forms of support. We always knew that drone strikes were 
wrong, that they encroached on Pakistan’s sovereign territory. We 
knew that innocent civilians had been killed. However, we did not 
realize how callous and cruel it could be. The community is now plagued 
with fear. The tribal elders are afraid to gather together in jirgas, as had 
been our custom for more than a century. The mothers and wives 
plead with the men not to congregate together. They do not want to lose 
any more of their husbands, sons, brothers, and nephews. People in the 
same family now sleep apart because they do not want their togetherness 
to be viewed suspiciously through the eye of the drone. They do not want to 
become the next target.

http://www.harpers.org/archive/2012/06/0083923


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