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3,500 Civilians Killed in Afghanistan by US Bombs
Study finds that international news media have
reported plenty about innocent civilian deaths, but American news
media have been comparatively silent
from press release
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3,500 Civilians Killed in Afghanistan by US Bombs
Study finds that international news media have
reported plenty about innocent civilian deaths, but American news
media have been comparatively silent
from press release
More than 3,500 civilians have been killed in Afghanistan by US
bombs, according to a study released December 10 by Marc W. Herold,
Professor of Economics, International Relations, and Women’s Studies
at the University of New Hampshire. Professor Herold announced his
findings in a discussion with award-winning journalist Amy Goodman on
the radio show Democracy Now! in Exile.
(www.democracynow.org).
Professor Herold has been gathering data on civilian casualties since
October 7 by culling information from news agencies, major newspapers,
and first-hand accounts. “I decided to do the study because I
suspected that the modern weaponry was not what it was advertised to
be. I was concerned that there would be significant civilian
casualties caused by the bombing, and I was able to find some mention
of casualties in the foreign press but almost nothing in the US
press,” said Herold.
Herold’s data is available at
pubpages.unh.edu/~mwherold/ (in MS
Excel spread sheet format) or at
www.democracynow.org/thndtrmb.docin MS Word format).
For each day since October 7, when the US bombing of Afghanistan
began, he lists the number of casualties, location, type of weapon
used, and source(s) of information. Following are several examples
from his daily calculations:
• On October 11, two US jets bombed the mountain village of Karam,
comprised of 60 mud houses, during dinner and evening prayer time,
killing 100-160 people. Sources: DAWN, (English language
Pakistani daily newspaper), The Guardian of London, The
Independent, International Herald Tribune, The Scotsman, The
Observer, and BBC News.
• On October 13, in the early morning, an F-18 dropped 2,000-pound
JDAM bombs on the Qila Meer Abas neighborhood, two kilometers south of
the Kabul airport, killing four people. Sources: Afghan Islamic
Press, Los Angeles Times, Frontier Post, Pakistan Observer, the
Guardian of London, and the BBC News.
• On October 31, in a pre-dawn raid, an F-18 dropped a 2,000-pound
JDAM bomb on a Red Crescent clinic, killing 15—25 people. Sources:
DAWN, The Times of London, The Independent, The Guardian, Reuters,
Associated Press, and Agence France Presse.
Professor Herold has sought whenever possible to cross-corroborate
accounts of civilian casualties. He relied upon British, Canadian, and
Australian newspapers; Indian newspapers, especially The Times of
India; three Pakistani daily newspapers; the Singapore
News; Afghan Islamic Press; Agence France Press;
Pakistan News Service; Reuters; BBC News Online;
Al Jazeera; and a variety of other reputable sources, including
the United Nations and other relief agencies.
The Pentagon has repeatedly denied reports of civilian casualties in
Afghanistan, and most US media outlets have qualified their reports of
casualties with the statement “could not be independently confirmed.”
But Professor Herold has been able to confirm the number of casualties
and has found that the number is climbing toward 4,000. “People have
to know that there is a human cost to war, and that this is a war with
thousands of casualties,” said Herold. “These were poor people to
begin with, and, on top of that, they had absolutely nothing to do
with the events of September 11.”
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