‘Afghan MSF survivors’ call for US troops trial

(FILES) This file photograph taken on November 10, 2015, shows Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)staff as they walk in the damaged Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) hospital in northern Kunduz.  Survivors of a US air strike on a hospital in Afghanistan have called on April 30, 2016, for those responsible to go on trial and dismissed an American military investigation that said the bombardment did not amount to a war crime. The attack on the hospital run by medical charity Doctors Without Borders in the city of Kunduz last October left 42 people dead and sparked global outrage, forcing President Barack Obama to make a rare apology.  / AFP PHOTO / NAJIM RAHIM

 

Kunduz / AFP

Survivors of a US air strike on a hospital in Afghanistan have called for those responsible to go on trial and dismissed an American military investigation that said the bombardment did not amount to a war crime.
The attack on the hospital run by medical charity Doctors Without Borders in the city of Kunduz last October left 42 people dead and sparked global outrage, forcing President Barack Obama to make a rare apology.
The Pentagon published a report of its investigation into the air strike saying the troops involved in the raid would not face war crimes charges.
“They should be publicly put on trial,” Hamdullah, a 27-year-old who lost his uncle in the attack and worked in the laundry at the hospital, said.
“This was a deliberate bombardment by the American forces, and we are not satisfied that they have said this was not a war crime. This is unacceptable for us,” Hamdullah, who goes by one name, said.
The bombing last October came as US special forces were deployed to Kunduz alongside Afghan forces in order to recapture the northern city from the Taliban, who had overrun it in one of their dramatic successes of the war.
Despite no fire coming from the hospital, an AC-130 gunship turned its enormous firepower on the target, pummelling it repeatedly over an extended period.
Doctors Without Borders branded the strike a war crime, saying the raid left patients burning in their beds with some victims decapitated and others requiring amputations.
Witnesses told MSF that the main central block of the security facility housing the intensive care unit was targeted precisely, with nearby buildings unscathed, an many patients burned to death in their beds.
General Joseph Votel, the head of US Central Command, said an investigation had found those involved made a series of mistakes and hit the clinic in error, while arguing that the troops were under battle stress.

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