CraP-a-worldly-Word !
Links Between Climate Change and Increased Social Unrest Unacknowledged
The thundercloud-like effect of smoke from a wild fire. (Photo: Greg Seitz / Flickr) ==>>
In many respects, 2011 has been marked as much by the mayhem of nature as it has by the upheavals of men. Although challenges to political authority have captured the imaginations of millions and produced exciting tremors of revolution across the continents, Mother Nature's increasingly ferocious response to the heavy environmental footprint of industrial production will likely be judged the most profound source of social change around the world in the years to come….
In many respects, 2011 has been marked as much by the mayhem of nature as it has by the upheavals of men. Although challenges to political authority have captured the imaginations of millions and produced exciting tremors of revolution across the continents, Mother Nature's increasingly ferocious response to the heavy environmental footprint of industrial production will likely be judged the most profound source of social change around the world in the years to come….
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Crap-o-Drone-Kill-Zones!
Covert Drone War
http://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/category/projects/drones/
Grim milestone as 300th CIA drone strike hits Pakistan
October 14th, 2011 | by Chris Woods | Published in All Stories, Covert Drone War
the head of a local religious school
The United States ‘covert’ drone war in Pakistan reached a new milestone today with the 300th attack on alleged militants in the country’s tribal areas, according to research by the Bureau.
Just before dawn on Saturday, CIA drones struck a housing compound in Angor Adda, South Waziristan. Up to six alleged militants died in the attack with at least three injured. The casualties were linked to local militant commander Maulvi Nazir. He is viewed as hostile by the US because of militant attacks inside Afghanistan, despite his having a long-standing peace deal with Pakistan.
The CIA attack is the fourth in Waziristan in 48 hours. On Friday more than 2,000 mourners attended the funeral of Maulana Iftiqar, the head of a local religious school – and reported jihadist – killed in a strike the day before. A local politician told the assembled mourners that ‘America should realise that these attacks are causing hate against it, and see these thousands of people who are here to attend funeral of a martyr.’
CIA drone strikes on Pakistan are occurring at a frequency of one every four days
Three hundred strikesThe Bureau has now identified 300 drone strikes since June 17 2004. Of these, 248 have occurred during President Obama’s three years in office, rising to a frequency of one strike every four days.
According to a detailed analysis of the attacks, at least 2,318 people have been killed in the CIA campaign, the majority of them alleged militants.
Related article: Call for all casualties of conflict to be properly recorded
But among them at least 386 civilians – and as many as 775 – have reportedly died, the Bureau’s investigations show, including more than 170 children. And more than 1,100 people have been reported injured.
In Numbers: CIA drone strikes in Pakistan
Total reported killed : 2,318 – 2,912
Civilians reported killed : 386 – 775
Children reported killed : 173
Total reported injured : 1,141- 1,225
Total strikes : 300
Obama strikes : 248
Denial
The CIA itself recently admitted to killing 2,050 people with its drones – all but 50 of them combatants – after the Bureau published its database in August. Despite substantial evidence published by the Bureau of civilian deaths caused by its strikes, the US continues to claim that it has killed no ‘non-combatants’ in Pakistan since May 2010.
Related article: Over 160 children reported among drone deaths
The Bureau’s data is drawn from reputable sources such as AP, Reuters, the New York Times and credible Pakistani media. It is also cross-referenced where possible against leaked US intelligence documents and diplomatic cables; the writings of academics, politicians and former intelligence officials; pending legal cases; and some commissioned field work in Waziristan. The full methodology can be found here.
Iain Overton, the Bureau’s managing editor said: ‘With 300 strikes now recorded in Pakistan, the CIA’s drone strikes mark a major front in the US war in the region. Yet officially the US will not even acknowledge this programme. The need for scrutiny has never been higher.’
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