Pakistan tells UN: Four-hundred civilians killed by drone strikes
19 Oct DW.de
Pakistan has confirmed that of some 2,200 people killed by drone
strikes in the past decade, at least 400 were civilians and an
additional 200 victims were deemed “probable non-combatants,” a UN human
rights investigator said on Friday.
Ben Emmerson, UN special rapporteur on human rights and
counterterrorism, also urged the United States to release its own data
on the number of civilian casualties caused by its drone strikes.
Emmerson said Pakistan's Foreign Ministry told him it had recorded at
least 330 drone strikes in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas,
Pakistan's largely lawless region bordering Afghanistan, since
2004.Clearing out militant border sanctuaries is seen by Washington as
crucial to bringing stability to Afghanistan, particularly as the US-led
combat mission ends in 2014. Most, but not all, attacks with unmanned
aerial vehicles have been by the United States. Britain and Israel have
also used them.
In an interim report to UN General Assembly released on Friday,
Emmerson said Pakistani government records showed that drone strikes had
killed at least 2,200 people and seriously wounded at least 600 since
2004. He said Pakistan had confirmed that “at least 400 civilians had
been killed as a result of remotely piloted aircraft strikes and a
further 200 individuals were regarded as probable
non-combatants.Officials indicated that, owing to underreporting and
obstacles to effective investigation, those figures were likely to be an
underestimate” of civilian deaths, Emmerson said.
Emmerson, who visited Pakistan in March, noted that principal media
monitoring organizations had recorded a “marked drop” in reported
civilians casualties from drone strikes in the tribal areas during 2012
and the first half of 2013.The tribal areas have never been fully
integrated into Pakistan's administrative, economic or judicial system.
They are dominated by ethnic Pashtun tribes, some of which have
sheltered and supported militants over decades of conflict in
Afghanistan.
“The involvement of CIA in lethal counter-terrorism operations in
Pakistan and Yemen has created an almost insurmountable obstacle to
transparency,” Emmerson said.One consequence is that the United States
has to date failed to reveal its own data on the level of civilian
casualties inflicted through the use of remotely piloted aircraft in
classified operations conducted in Pakistan and elsewhere.”During his
Senate confirmation process in February, CIA director John Brennan said
the closely guarded number of civilian casualties from drone strikes
should be made public.
The US government, without releasing numbers, has sought to portray
civilian deaths from these strikes as minimal. Senator Dianne Feinstein,
a California Democrat who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said
at the time that she had been trying to speak publicly about the “very
low number of civilian casualties” and to verify that number each year
has “typically been in the single digits.” However, she said she was
told she could not divulge the actual numbers because they were
classified.
In May, US President Barack Obama signed a document that he said
codified guidelines for the use of force against terrorists. He said
before drone strikes were taken, there must be near-certainty that no
civilians would be killed or wounded.Emmerson urged the United States to
declassify to the maximum extent possible information “relevant to its
lethal extraterritorial counter-terrorism operations; and to release its
own data on the level of civilian casualties inflicted through the use
of remotely piloted aircraft, together with information on the
evaluation methodology used.”
He reported that in Afghanistan, the UN mission said while casualties
were likely underestimated, it had assessed that in recent years drones
strikes appeared to have inflicted lower levels of civilian casualties
than other air strikes.
Emmerson said “the United States appears to have succeeded in
avoiding the infliction of large-scale loss of civilian life in Yemen”
when carrying out drone strikes. “Nonetheless, there have been a number
of incidents in which civilians have reportedly been killed or injured,”
he said.“The most serious single incident to date was a remotely piloted
aircraft attack on 2 September 2012 in which 12 civilians were
reportedly killed in the vicinity of Rada'a,” Emmerson said.
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