-Caveat Lector-

Afghan villagers say air strikes killed scores of civilians

By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press

JALALABAD, Afghanistan (December 1, 2001 8:28 p.m. EST) - Coalition air
strikes in eastern Afghanistan struck three villages and killed scores of
civilians, witnesses and anti-Taliban commanders said Saturday. The U.S.
military said it had no evidence that any of its air strikes hit civilians.

Witnesses and survivors at a nearby hospital said between 100 and 200
villagers were killed Saturday when warplanes dropped more than 25 bombs
in four passes over the village of Kama Ado, 30 miles south of Jalalabad.

Witnesses and provincial officials also reported bombing in the nearby
village of Agom, saying at least five people had died there. And Hazrat Ali,
the security chief for Nangarhar province where the bombing occurred, said
at least 50 people were killed Friday night when bombs fell on Khan-e-
Muirajuddin, another village 15 miles southwest of Jalalabad.

Another provincial official, defense chief Mohammed Zeman, said local anti-
Taliban authorities had complained to the Americans that they were bombing
in the wrong place.

Marine Corps Maj. Brad Lowell, a spokesman from U.S. Central Command
headquarters in Tampa, Fla., said Saturday that the military has no evidence
any of its air strikes in the area hit civilians. Lowell said officials reviewed gun
camera and surveillance footage going back to Thursday and found nothing
resembling what the Afghans described.

"All of our rounds are accounted for, and the images show the caves and
tunnel systems and the rounds hitting those targets," Lowell said.

Referring to an initial report of one village bombed, Lowell had earlier said: "It
just did not happen."

Lalgul, a 33-year-old farmer who claimed he witnessed the attack on Kama
Ado from a neighboring village and helped rescue four survivors, said all 30
mud brick and wooden homes in the mountain village were flattened. Other
witnesses gave the same account. Like many Afghans, Lalgul uses one
name.

Lalgul said that on his way to the hospital, he passed through Agom, he was
told five people died and more than 25 were injured. Others from the area
gave higher estimates. Zeman and Ali said bombs did fall on Agom, but they
could not confirm the death toll.

Ali said the death toll in the Khan-e-Muirajuddin bombing could rise.

"Fifty people were confirmed dead, it's possible that 100 or 200 were killed,"
he said. "We are very sad about the bombing of civilians, but it is the fault of
our own people, because they are giving false reports that there are al-Qaida
camps there." Ali refused to elaborate.

Pentagon officials have said they are bombing in the mountains south of
Jalalabad because they believe more than 600 non-Afghan Taliban fighters
and members of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network are hiding in
mountain caves.

Kama Ado is located in the foothills of the White Mountains, where the
hideouts are reportedly located. The area is nominally under the control of the
anti-Taliban Eastern Shura, led by former guerrillas in the war against Soviet
occupiers in the 1980s.

Zeman said he fully supports U.S. air strikes in the mountains, but that U.S.
planes were hitting the wrong places.

"We talked to the authorities in the United States ... and we told them, 'Your
bombing is not to the mark. There are civilians there. Stop bombing that
area,'" Zeman said.

Lalgul brought one of the survivors to Jalalabad Public Health Hospital. The
10-year-old boy, Iqhaluddin, suffered lung damage and broken ribs. Doctors
said he was expected to recover fully.

"After the bombs stopped falling, we heard the voices of children and people
and we were very frightened. We didn't know what to do at first, then we
decided to save them," Lalgul said. "Out of a family of 40, only this boy and
his grandmother survived."


"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator."
 -GW Bush during a photo-op with Congressional leaders on 12/18/2000.
As broadcast on CNN and available in transcript on their website
http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0012/18/nd.01.html

Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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