US behind Yemen air strikes, killed civilians besides terrorists: Amnesty International
By ANIMonday, June 7, 2010
LONDON - Amnesty International has slammed US for indiscriminately bombing AL-Qaeda hideouts in Yemen with little regard for collateral civilian casualties. The Human Rights watchdog further claims that it has evidence to back the same.
There are conflicting accounts of the December 17 attack in the al-Majalah area of the southern Yemeni province of Abyan. Yemeni security officials originally said 34 Al Qaida militants were killed, although a Yemeni parliamentary committee later said 41 civilians were killed in the attack as well.
The US has not officially confirmed a role in the air strikes, although US officials have previously acknowledged American involvement in the bombing.
Amnesty said it has five photographs apparently taken after the attack that indicate the use of cruise missiles and cluster munitions.
“The fact that so many of the victims were actually women and children indicates that the attack was in fact grossly irresponsible, particularly given the likely use of cluster munitions,” The Daily Express quoted Philip Luther, deputy director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme, as saying.
Amnesty said the photos show the payload and body segments of a US-manufactured BGM-109D Tomahawk cruise missile. It said such missiles, which can be launched from a warship or a submarine, are designed to carry a payload of cluster munitions that scatter over a vast area, and are only used by US forces, thepaper said.
“Based on the evidence provided by these photographs, the US government must disclose what role it played in the al-Majalah attack, and all governments involved must show what steps they took to prevent unnecessary deaths and injuries,” Luther said. (ANI)