By PopularResistance.org
Above: Nabila Rehman, left, 9, watches as her brother
Zubair reads a statement about the day their grandmother
was killed by a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan, at a
hearing in Washington, Tuesday.Jason
Reed/Reuters
|
Alan
Grayson (D-FL) organized an historic hearing on US drone
strikes. It was the first time that drone strike victims told
their stories to U.S. elected officials at a hearing. The Rehman
family traveled halfway around the world from Pakistan to tell
the story of their families loss; the killing of the families
grandmother. Only five members of Congress bothered to show up.
What does this show about the United States political
leadership? It is shameful. Below are three articles
describing the scene and the families ordeal.
We need to help them change the hearts and minds
of Americans especially our elected leadership. Please share
this with the White House (http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/write-or-call)
and your representatives in Congress.
Drone victims give US lawmakers first-hand account of attack
By Naureen
Khan
Nabila, a
shy girl with startling hazel eyes and red streaks in her dark
hair, along with her father Rafiq and 13-year-old brother Zubair
have told the story of the day when a drone fell from the sky in
their village in North Waziristan so many times that by Tuesday
morning the tale was rote — even if this particular retelling
was before U.S. lawmakers, at a briefing which was the first
opportunity for members of Congress to hear directly from
Pakistani victims of American drones.
It was
Oct. 24, 2012, the day before the Islamic holy day of
Eid-al-Adha in North Waziristan. Zubair, Nabila, their little
sister, five-year-old Asma and some of their cousins were all in
the fields beside their house as their grandmother, 67-year-old
Momina Bibi, showed them how to tell when the okra was ripe for
picking.
Zubair
knew the drones were circling overhead; he has known their
distinctive buzzing since he was even younger — a methodical zung,
zung, zung, he says.
“It’s
something that even a 2-year-old would know,” he said in Pashto,
speaking to Al Jazeera through a translator. “We hear the noise
24 hours a day.”
Before the
missile hit, he remembers hearing two clicks, like a trigger
being pulled. Suddenly, day seemed to turn to night as they were
enveloped in darkness and heat. Their grandmother, Momina Bibi,
was thrown 20 feet away and killed instantly.
Zubair,
Nabila and the other children wounded in the attack were taken
to a hospital. Zubair had shrapnel lodged in his leg — an injury
that would take expensive laser surgeries to heal — while Nabila
looked down to see her hand bleeding.
“I tried
to bandage my hand but the blood wouldn’t stop,” she said. “The
blood kept coming.”
Momina
Bibi’s wounds were so severe that neighbors would not allow her
sons to see the body, said Rafiq, a primary schoolteacher in
Pakistan who was in town buying school supplies and sweets when
the attack happened.
In the
days and weeks after, Rafiq said the newspapers reported that
militants had been killed in the strike. As far as he knows, his
mother was the sole fatality. He has never received an answer
from the Pakistani or U.S. governments about why she was
targeted or whether the strike was a mistake.
The
Rehmans traveled halfway across the world, from their remote
village of Tappi, to tell their story and to urge lawmakers to
put an end to the covert CIA program of “targeted killings” in
Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere. They also participated in an Amnesty
International report about casualties of drones and a
documentary by filmmaker Robert Greenwald, called Unmanned. According
to the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism, 376
total strikes have taken place in Pakistan, killing up to 926
civilians and as many as 200 children.
Since they
arrived in Washington last weekend — their first time outside of
Pakistan — the Rehmans have patiently sat for hours of
interviews with dozens of media outlets in a dogged effort to
change hearts and minds, with only a few breaks to go see the
sights in the U.S. capital.
The Obama
administration, for its part, until recently did not even
acknowledge the existence of the program. Now, officials say
drone warfare is a precise and effective means to neutralize
enemies in remote regions of the world where capturing
terrorists is difficult and that civilian casualties are
minimal.
That
rationale holds little solace for Rafiq and his family.
Opponents
of the United States have pointed out, beyond the legal and
moral implications, that the U.S. policy engenders hatred of
America and breeds extremism.
But even
after what his family has been through, Rafiq Rehman said he
does not resent the United States. In fact, even after
witnessing his first Halloween weekend in the States, he does
not believe all that much separates him from Americans.
“It’s very
peaceful here. For the most part, there’s a lot of freedom and
people get along with each other. They’re nice, they respect
each other, and I appreciate that,” Rafiq told Al Jazeera.
“We’re all
human beings,” he said. “I knew that Americans would have a
heart, that they would be sympathetic to me. That’s why I came
here — I thought if they heard my story, they would want to
listen to me and influence their politicians.”
Rafiq,
like so many fathers, wants his children to have peaceful lives
and the best education possible. He hopes Zubair grows up to be
a doctor and that Nabila is a lawyer.
“(The
drone attack) created a disruption in our lives,” he said. “Our
children live in fear. They don’t want to go to school. They
don’t want to play outside.”
Ultimately, only five members of Congress arrived at the
briefing to hear their testimony Tuesday morning: Rep. Alan
Grayson of Florida, who organized the briefing, along with Reps.
Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., Rush Holt, D-N.J., John Conyers, D-Mich.,
and Rick Nolan, D-Minn.
What
compelling interest did the U.S. government have in murdering a
grandmother of nine and a midwife who helped deliver babies in
the village, Rehman asked them. How can he reassure his children
that the drones will not come back?
“I no
longer love blue skies,” Zubair said. “In fact, I now prefer
gray skies. The drones do not fly when the skies are gray.”
Grayson
said the briefing, held a full decade after the first drone
strikes in Yemen by the Bush administration, was a promising
start and dismissed the seemingly low attendance, noting that
five members showed “a fair amount of interest.” Grayson
doubted, however, that a full committee hearing with members of
Congress would be called anytime soon.
“The
appropriate committees generally are staffed by people, if I may
say this, who are friends of the military industrial complex,
not even enemies, or even skeptics of it,” he said.
Still,
Zubair Rehman remained hopeful.
“I hope I
can return home with a message,” he said. “I hope I can tell my
community that Americans listened.”
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