Home Latest News Activists Slam U.S. ‘Punishment’ for Afghan Hospital Attack

Activists Slam U.S. ‘Punishment’ for Afghan Hospital Attack

by AFP
Najim Rahim—AFP

The remains of the Afghan hospital targeted by U.S. forces. Najim Rahim—AFP

Rights groups say failure to press criminal charges is an insult to the victims of the airstrike.

Rights campaigners on Friday slammed U.S. “punishments” handed to officers involved in a catastrophic bombing raid on an Afghan hospital, saying the failure to criminally investigate them is an injustice and insult to the victims.

The bombing last October of the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) hospital in Kunduz, which came as NATO-backed Afghan forces clashed with the Taliban for control of the city, left 42 people dead, triggering a storm of global criticism.

U.S. officials on Thursday said those involved in the strike have been disciplined, with some suspended from duty and others facing “administrative” action such as “negative counseling” or being told not to do something again. “For good reason, the victims’ family members will see this as both an injustice and an insult: the U.S. military investigated itself and decided no crimes had been committed,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement. “The failure to criminally investigate senior officials liable for the attack is not only an affront to the lives lost at the MSF hospital, but a blow against the rule of law in Afghanistan and elsewhere.”

MSF, which has called repeatedly for an independent international inquiry, said it would seek more details from the U.S. government on the “punishments” before commenting. The medical charity has previously branded the strike as a “war crime,” saying the raid by an AC-130 gunship left patients burning in their beds with some victims decapitated and suffering traumatic amputations.

“The [U.S.] punishment is a joke,” said Saeed Haqyar, a Kunduz resident who lost his uncle in the bombing. “This barbaric, inhuman crime has pushed bereaved family members to the point of insanity. The perpetrators deserve to be hanged.”

The air strike forced the closure of the trauma center in Kunduz—a lifeline in the war-battered region—as hospitals are increasingly targeted amid a worsening conflict.

“In the last year, attacks against health facilities… have gone up by 50 percent,” ICRC president Peter Maurer said in Kabul, warning that the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan is in a “downward spiral.”

“Every bombed out hospital and every doctor or nurse who is forced to flee, means thousands of people cannot get immediate medical treatment when necessary,” he added.

General John Campbell, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan at the time, admitted the Kunduz strike was “caused primarily by human error,” prompting a strong rebuke from the charity, which slammed American forces for “gross negligence.”

President Barack Obama has apologized for the raid and the Pentagon has said it will pay compensation to the families of those killed. The Pentagon is due next week to publish a version of its report on the bombing, which will be redacted to remove classified material.

The strike came after a resurgent Taliban briefly captured the northern provincial capital in their biggest military victory since they were toppled in 2001. Observers have said the bombing raid, which lasted nearly an hour, had left open the unsettling question of whether those involved had ripped up their own rulebook in a chaotic effort to take out the Taliban.

MSF has called for the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission—an independent body created under international law but which has never been used—to probe the incident. However, it would need permission from the United States and Afghanistan to proceed, and neither country has so far agreed.

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1 comment

baldurdasche March 19, 2016 - 8:13 pm

‘Gross incompetence’ perhaps, but with the best intentions to bring peace and freedom to Afghanistan. And to protect Afghanis from the other Afghanis who would do them harm trying to ‘hurt’ America.

Incompetence can be rectified and America has every intention of doing things better if not ‘righter’, next time.

These punishments stand as a stark reminder to the soldiers of freedom that a career can be tarnished, or dented, unless they ‘smarten up’ and shoot straighter.

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