Canadian troops kill Afghan children


This video says about itself:

Thousands took to the streets in Toronto [Canada] March 17, 2007 to protest 4 years of war on Iraq in which 3230 American soldiers and more than 500,000 Iraqis have died. They also demanded “No War on Iran“.

From the Canadian Press:

2 children killed by Canadian troops in Afghanistan

July 28, 2008 at 10:31 AM EDT

KANDAHAR, AfghanistanCanadian troops have killed a two-year-old boy and his four-year-old sister by opening fire on a car they feared was about to attack their convoy in Afghanistan, the Canadian Forces announced Monday.

Facing a split-second decision about what to do when a car failed to heed repeated warnings to pull over, a gunner in a light armoured vehicle pulled the trigger on a 25-millimetre cannon.

Its giant round tore through the little girl’s skull and left a gaping wound in her younger brother’s chest, witnesses said.

The children’s mother later frantically paced the hallways at the local hospital, shrieking and cursing foreign soldiers between sobs.

Ruzi Mohammed, 31, was injured when a Canadian military vehicle shot at his rented car on July 27, 2008. The same shot killed Mr. Mohammed’s son and daughter.

One police officer at the Kandahar city hospital said he saw the mother scream: “My innocent children have been killed by foreigners — for no reason!”

The father, believed to have been driving the vehicle, was being treated for lacerations but left the hospital without permission to attend his children’s funeral.

Another hospital visitor said that if he were the children’s father, he would personally strap on a suicide vest and exact vengeance on Canadian troops.

Shopkeeper Din Mohammad said foreign soldiers had better stop accidentally killing civilians or they will suffer the same bitter fate as the defeated Soviets.

“They must stop this,” said Mr. Mohammed, who was visiting his son at Mirwais hospital when he saw the children’s lifeless bodies carried in.

“Otherwise the day will come when everybody will stand up against the foreigners in a holy war — a jihad.”

“It’s happened once before (with the Soviets). If things continue like this, history will repeat itself.”

An investigation into Sunday’s incident will be conducted by Afghan police and coalition forces.

A Canadian statement said the round was discharged when the car had come within 10 metres of the convoy.

“It is with profound sadness that we announce that two Afghan children … were killed in this incident,” said the statement. …

A third occupant of the vehicle was wounded, and the fourth and fifth occupants were not injured.

Afghan and United Nations officials have pleaded with international troops to avoid causing civilian casualties, which threaten to undermine support for the government and foreign forces.

The organization Human Rights Watch says at least 300 Afghan civilians were mistakenly killed by the coalition last year, and thousands are believed to have died since 2001.

Taxi drivers in Kandahar city can be seen waving down their colleagues and shouting at them to avoid certain streets where foreign troops have been spotted.

Cars generally screech to a halt and pull off the road to let military convoys pass.

Earlier this month, U.S. forces wiped out an entire wedding party in eastern Afghanistan, killing 47 civilians in an aerial bombing, the Afghan government has said.

Canada has no aircraft in Afghanistan capable of such attacks from the sky. But Canada has been involved in other civilian killings before.

In one incident, a 90-year-old man who was a respected political scientist and mentor to President Hamid Karzai was shot when he approached troops on a motorbike.

In another, a young man riding on a motorbike was shot through the chest and the bullet struck the head and killed his little brother riding behind him.

West fights a losing battle on Afghanistan: here.

Military charges against Canadian Forces members have risen dramatically in the years since Canada sent troops to Afghanistan: here.

18 thoughts on “Canadian troops kill Afghan children

  1. Kill Canadians, grieving Afghan father says

    Aug 01, 2008 06:45 AM

    THE CANADIAN PRESS

    The CBC is reporting that the father of two children shot to death by Canadian troops in Afghanistan says he would “kill the Canadians” if he gets the chance.

    Rozi Mohammed, who lives in the town of Chalaghor, southwest of Kandahar City, made the comments Thursday while being interviewed about Sunday’s incident.

    His daughter Mulkia, 5, and son Thor Jan, 2, died when Canadian troops opened fire on a car they feared was about to attack their convoy.

    The military said the taxi did not slow down and ignored repeated signals to keep a safe distance away.

    But Mohammed says the car they were riding in pulled out after the second car of the Canadian convoy had passed and the third vehicle then opened fire.

    He says the Canadian government should “avoid shooting innocent people.”

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  2. I am a Canadian who is ashamed that our soldiers are in Afghanistan. In fact I hate the USA for what they have done to this planet. So many lies, so much propaganda. All I can tell you …is in my humble opinion the only good Canadian soldier in Afghanistan is a dead one!

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  3. Hi disgraced Canadian, according to polls, most Canadians oppose partixipation in the Afghan war. The problem, however, is the minority Conservartive government. I would not say “the only good Canadian soldier in Afghanistan is a dead one”, as it would be much better to get those soldiers out alive; with, of course, trians for individuals who committed crimes.

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  4. “All I can tell you …is in my humble opinion the only good Canadian soldier in Afghanistan is a dead one!” – You are a pathetic excuse for a Canadian if that is your mentality. Wishing death upon those who are wearing the flag and serving the country and liberties you live in…God you make me sick.

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  5. Hi Pathetic, I have already explained in comment #3 my disagreement with the sentence in comment #2 which you hate so much. However, I think you should not repeat hollow extreme Right government propaganda, of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan supposedly “serving the country and liberties”. How exactly does anyone “serve the country and liberties” by killing people, including children, in a far away country which the soldiers don’t understand? In a war which most Canadians oppose? Militarism and neo colonialism have never served liberties. At the moment, Canadian armed fortces merely serve George W. Bush and his clique.

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  6. To the ‘disgraced Canadian’ … good choice of name. You are in fact a disgrace to Canada. Isn’t it great that I am serving this wonderful country of ours and protecting YOUR freedom. So that you can live in a country that allows you to have a computer and internet access. Plus the freedom to post your uninformed B.S. and not fear for your safety simply because you voiced your opinion. A right that people like you seem to take for granted. But don’t realize that you wouldn’t have those rights or freedoms…..if us soldiers that you want dead weren’t out there fighting for YOU!!!!!! It’s okay…no thanks needed, we get all the thanks we need from TRUE Canadians!!!! Thanks for the support ‘Pathetic’

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  7. To #6; see comment #2. See also #5, which refutes worn out pro war clichés. How does killing people who have not done anything to Canadians, thousands of miles away, in Afghanistan, contribute in any way to the freedom of anyone in Canada!?

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  8. KALLI ANDERSON

    Globe and Mail Update

    March 10, 2009 at 1:26 AM EDT

    The war in Afghanistan has always been a contentious issue in Quebec. So last week, following Stephen Harper’s admission during an interview on CNN that “frankly, we are not ever going to defeat the insurgency,” Quebec’s opinion pages were promptly atwitter.

    Some pundits welcomed the Prime Minister’s candour. Le Journal de Montreal’s Benoit Aubin assessed that Mr. Harper “had done something that politicians usually have trouble doing when they talk about problems: he told it like it is.” Le Devoir editorialist Bernard Descoteaux called the comments “a return to reason,” while contending that “coming from the leader of a country that has, to date, lost 107 soldiers in its efforts to bring down the insurgency, this is a serious admission.” Pierre Foglia of La Presse, who considers himself among “the many” Quebeckers who have been against the war in Afghanistan since 2001, congratulated Mr. Harper for “recognizing” that “we won’t win this kind of war.”

    Mr. Harper’s comments left other Quebec journalists pondering the future of the mission. In an editorial in Le Droit – a Gatineau paper that has published editorials in support of the war in the past – Pierre Jury questioned the value of remaining in Afghanistan until 2011 “now that Mr. Harper no longer believes victory is possible.” He suggested that Mr. Harper’s comments effectively “call into question the entire military component of our presence [in Afghanistan].”

    Le Soleil’s Raymond Giroux admitted that Mr. Harper, who had once “wanted to follow his friend Bush into war in Iraq and who used to hurl insanities against anyone who dared to propose a dialogue with the Taliban,” had markedly changed his tune. He was reluctant, however, to conclude that the PM’s words comments signaled an end in sight for the mission. Mr. Harper, he wrote, is still leaving Canadians in the dark about how he might reply to a request from the U.S. to extend Canada’s engagement beyond 2011.

    For some, the most significant aspect of Mr. Harper’s comments was where he made them. Le Devoir’s Manon Corneiller wrote that “the real problem with this interview given to CNN is that it offered Americans an evaluation that the Prime Minister had not yet deigned to share with Canadians.”

    Similarly, Le Soleil editorialist Brigitte Breton took issue with Mr. Harper’s decision to “deliver this message on an American network” before making it clear to Canadians “where he is going and what role he intends Canada to play in Afghanistan.” It was, she complained, “as if Canadians are expected to continue to sacrifice lives and squander billions of dollars regardless of the results.”

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  9. A sad commentary
    The Ottawa Citizen

    Published: Tuesday, March 24, 2009

    Few countries honour their war casualties with more respect than the United States. No doubt most Americans share Canada’s sadness at the mounting Canadian death toll in Afghanistan.

    Again the sad vigil of a repatriation ceremony takes place this week at CFB Trenton. Canadian troops were sent to Afghanistan, initially, in response to the terrorist threat emanating from that country following the 9/11 attack on the U.S.

    It was with profound disappointment — and outrage — that Canadians learned that U.S. commentators have ridiculed Canada’s sacrifice. Panellists on the Fox News program Red Eye with Greg Gutfeld cited comments from Gen. Andrew Leslie, the Canadian Forces Chief of Land Staff, who said our forces would need a one-year break from operations after the mission concludes there in 2011. Canadian soldiers have been defending the area around Kandahar, the toughest area of fighting, since 2006.

    From the comfort of their studio, the Fox commentators (one of whom didn’t even know Canadian troops were in Afghanistan) offered nothing but sneers. They suggested Canadian troops needed time off for “manicures and pedicures.” Gutfeld joked that “the Canadian military wants to take a breather to do some yoga, paint landscapes, run on the beach in gorgeous white capri pants.”

    Other statements included: “Isn’t it time to invade this ridiculous country?” and “This is not a smart culture.” They suggested that Canada is “where you go if you don’t want to fight.” Then they broke out a series of clichés about Mounties and the like.

    Canadians should grant our southern neighbours the benefit of the doubt and assume that this spectacle was a reflection only on certain Fox News personalities and not on the U.S. as a whole. After all, such indecency, in a time of shared sacrifice, is decidedly un-American.

    © The Ottawa Citizen 2009

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