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No US troops to be punished over deadly Kabul drone strike

A woman walks past the house of Aimal Ahmadi, whose daughter Mailka and his elder brother Zimarai Ahmadi were among 10 relatives killed by a wrongly directed US drone strike on August 29, in Kabul on Tuesday. - AFP
A woman walks past the house of Aimal Ahmadi, whose daughter Mailka and his elder brother Zimarai Ahmadi were among 10 relatives killed by a wrongly directed US drone strike on August 29, in Kabul on Tuesday. - AFP
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WASHINGTON: The Pentagon said on Monday that no US troops or officials would face disciplinary action for a drone strike in Kabul in August that killed 10 Afghan civilians, including seven children.


Spokesman John Kirby said Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin had received a high-level review of the strike that made no recommendation of accountability.


"There was not a strong enough case to be made for personal accountability," Kirby said.


Aimal Ahmadi, 32, who lost his three-year-old daughter, his brother and six nephews and nieces in the strike, expressed anger at the decision on Tuesday.


"God will take revenge," Ahmadi said, adding "what if the US had lost a child? What would the reaction have been?"


The Taliban urged Washington to reverse the decision, with a spokesman saying the US should punish the culprits and compensate the victims".


The August 29 drone strike took place in the final days of the US-led evacuation of Kabul after the Taliban seized control of the country.


US officials said they had intelligence of a possible IS attack on the evacuation operations at Kabul airport, and launched a missile from a drone at a target that was thought to be a car laden with munitions.


In fact, they struck a family that included an Afghan man who worked for a US aid group and seven children.


In early November, an initial report carried out by the US Air Force inspector general, Lieutenant General Sami Said, called the strike tragic, but "an honest mistake."


The review by Central Command head General Kenneth McKenzie Jr and Special Operations Command chief General Richard Clarke made use of Said's report and detailed recommendations on procedures for future drone strikes.


But it made no call for anyone to be punished for the mistake.


"What we saw here was a breakdown in process, in execution and procedural events, not the result of negligence, not the result of misconduct, not the result of poor leadership," said Kirby.


If Austin "believed... that accountability was warranted, he would certainly support those kinds of efforts," Kirby added.


The strike killed Zemari Ahmadi, an employee of US-based Nutrition and Education International, and nine members of his family.


Last month, NEI founder and president Steve Kwon called the Pentagon's investigation into the incident "deeply disappointing and inadequate."


The Pentagon promised to pay compensation and also to help relocate family members and Afghans working for NEI overseas, but that remains stuck on determining just who qualifies, according to officials.


Kirby said they are still discussing arrangements with Kwon.


"We are working very hard with him and his organization to effect the relocation of the family members," Kirby said. - AFP


INSET


Taliban rule marked by killings: UN


GENEVA: More than 100 former Afghan national security forces and others have been killed since the Taliban takeover in August, most at the hands of the hardline group which is recruiting boy soldiers and quashing women's rights, the UN said on Tuesday.


Nada al Nashif, UN Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, said that in addition, at least 50 suspected members of a local affiliate of IS known as ISIS-Khorasan - an ideological foe of the Taliban - died by hanging and beheading.


In a speech to the Human Rights Council, she described Taliban rule as being marked by extrajudicial killings across the country and restrictions on women's and girls' basic rights.


Families face "severe poverty and hunger" this winter amid reports of child labour, early marriages and "even the sale of children", Al Nashif said.


At least 72 of the more than 100 alleged killings have been attributed to the Taliban, she said, adding: "In several cases, the bodies were publicly displayed. This has exacerbated fear among this sizeable category of the population." - Reuters


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