01-10-2010, 11:40 PM
Pakistan army says 'extra-judicial killing' video faked
Video here http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-11455858
Orla Guerin's report contains disturbing images
The Pakistani military says it is investigating a video purporting to show a firing squad of uniformed soldiers shooting dead young men who were blindfolded and bound.
Its authenticity cannot be verified. It is unclear when or where it was filmed.
Human rights groups say they have previously documented extra-judicial killings by Pakistani troops but cannot vouch for the video.
Pakistani military officials have dismissed it as fabricated.
Continue reading the main story
"No Pakistani Army soldier or officer has been involved in activity of this sort," army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas told the BBC.
US voices concern The individual who sent it to the BBC said many people in the Swat valley had the clip on their phones.
However journalists in Swat have told the BBC that the first they heard of the video was when it was reported in the New York Times two days ago.
It shows men in military clothing pushing a group of young men one by one through a forest.
Continue reading the main storyEnd Quote Maj Gen Athar Abbas Pakistani military spokesman
Eventually, six men - all in traditional civilian clothing - are lined up, blindfolded and with their hands tied behind their backs.
At least seven of the men in military clothing then form a line and raise their weapons. After what sounds like a sustained burst of gunfire, the men in civilian clothing then crumple to the forest floor.
In 2009, the Pakistani military mounted an offensive to drive Taliban militants out of the Swat valley.
Human rights organisations have accused them of carrying out extra-judicial killings during this time.
"We have previously documented executions in Swat that are similar to what is depicted in this video," Ali Dayan Hasan, representative of Human Rights Watch in Pakistan told the BBC.
"Human Rights Watch cannot say anything about the authenticity of the video."
The US State Department says it has raised the issue with the Pakistani government.
PJ Crowley said the US took allegations of human rights violations"very seriously"[:hahaha: This? From the drone army?], and that the issue of extrajudicial killings had been a part of an "ongoing conversation" with Pakistan.
'Zero tolerance' Pakistan has promised to take action if the video - which has also been circulating on YouTube - is authenticated.
"The army has a policy of zero tolerance on issues like this," Maj Gen Abbas said. "At this stage I can't comment about what action might be taken" if the video is real, he added.
Another military spokesman, Brigadier Syed Azmat Ali, said the video "could have been staged in five minutes".
Army uniforms are widely available in local markets, he said.
But Human Rights Watch has called for a full investigation.
"We have had such formulaic responses," Mr Hasan said. "But to date, there has been no action to hold military personnel accountable for well-documented abuses in counter-terrorism operations."
Video here http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-11455858
Orla Guerin's report contains disturbing images
The Pakistani military says it is investigating a video purporting to show a firing squad of uniformed soldiers shooting dead young men who were blindfolded and bound.
Its authenticity cannot be verified. It is unclear when or where it was filmed.
Human rights groups say they have previously documented extra-judicial killings by Pakistani troops but cannot vouch for the video.
Pakistani military officials have dismissed it as fabricated.
Continue reading the main story
"No Pakistani Army soldier or officer has been involved in activity of this sort," army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas told the BBC.
US voices concern The individual who sent it to the BBC said many people in the Swat valley had the clip on their phones.
However journalists in Swat have told the BBC that the first they heard of the video was when it was reported in the New York Times two days ago.
It shows men in military clothing pushing a group of young men one by one through a forest.
Continue reading the main storyEnd Quote Maj Gen Athar Abbas Pakistani military spokesman
Eventually, six men - all in traditional civilian clothing - are lined up, blindfolded and with their hands tied behind their backs.
At least seven of the men in military clothing then form a line and raise their weapons. After what sounds like a sustained burst of gunfire, the men in civilian clothing then crumple to the forest floor.
In 2009, the Pakistani military mounted an offensive to drive Taliban militants out of the Swat valley.
Human rights organisations have accused them of carrying out extra-judicial killings during this time.
"We have previously documented executions in Swat that are similar to what is depicted in this video," Ali Dayan Hasan, representative of Human Rights Watch in Pakistan told the BBC.
"Human Rights Watch cannot say anything about the authenticity of the video."
The US State Department says it has raised the issue with the Pakistani government.
PJ Crowley said the US took allegations of human rights violations"very seriously"[:hahaha: This? From the drone army?], and that the issue of extrajudicial killings had been a part of an "ongoing conversation" with Pakistan.
'Zero tolerance' Pakistan has promised to take action if the video - which has also been circulating on YouTube - is authenticated.
"The army has a policy of zero tolerance on issues like this," Maj Gen Abbas said. "At this stage I can't comment about what action might be taken" if the video is real, he added.
Another military spokesman, Brigadier Syed Azmat Ali, said the video "could have been staged in five minutes".
Army uniforms are widely available in local markets, he said.
But Human Rights Watch has called for a full investigation.
"We have had such formulaic responses," Mr Hasan said. "But to date, there has been no action to hold military personnel accountable for well-documented abuses in counter-terrorism operations."
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx
"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.