[lbo-talk] War crime video circulating by email

Grant Lee grantlee at iinet.net.au
Thu Mar 11 00:24:28 PST 2004


[My apologies if this has already been mentioned. No English-language follow-ups as yet it seems. The Apache clip (link below) came to me as an email attachment, and I made the mistake of watching it while digesting my dinner. One of the crew clearly says: "he's wounded; go forward and hit him again."]

"Iraq video clip killings trigger TV investigation"

Posted: 26 February 2004 By: Jemima Kiss

German broadcaster NDR will air a TV documentary this Thursday that investigates two video clips of US military action in Iraq that have been widely circulated on the web.

Both clips show US soldiers shooting apparently unarmed and injured Iraqis. According to military and legal experts interviewed by the Panorama programme, they show US troops breaking international law by shooting unarmed people.

As reported by this site on 14 January, a video of footage from a US Apache helicopter had been widely circulated on the web following its broadcast on ABC News. Aerial footage shows Iraqis apparently abandoning something - which soldiers assumed to be a weapon - and running for cover.

Soldiers receive instructions to 'shoot it' and kill all three men, including one wounded person already lying on the ground.

A second incident was recorded in April 2003 by a CNN crew and broadcast in October that year. Soldiers are seen shooting unarmed and seriously injured Iraqis during a search of an industrial area. Immediately after the shooting, one soldier describes the situation as 'awesome' and says he 'wants to do it all over again'.

During the Panorama documentary, US Viet Nam veteran General Robert G Gard, describes both events as 'inexcusable murders'. Professor Stefan Oeter, an expert in international law, confirms that the shooting of a wounded person is a war crime.

Panorama producer Volker Steinhoff began investigating the two stories after an email tip from a colleague.

"Without the internet, I might not have done the story since watching the video is the central argument for the story."

Mr Steinhoff told dotJournalism he was surprised that neither story had been pursued by the mainstream media.

"It's my impression that CNN and ABC deliberately hid the story - ABC never mentioned the crucial point. The US mainstream media have been extremely unco-operative.

"This issue of shooting wounded people - a possible war crime - hasn't had enough public attention either in Germany or the US."

The programme will be broadcast on German channel ARD at 20.15, central European time, on 26 February.

The full transcript of the Panorama documentary will be available online from noon on 27 February and the two video files will be on the ARD site for Friday only, subject to final permission from CNN.

The US Ministry of Defence has refused to comment on the Panorama investigation.

http://www.journalism.co.uk/news/story823.shtml

Related stories: http://www.journalism.co.uk/news/story795.shtml

Panorama documentary: http://www.ndrtv.de/panorama/archiv/2004/0226/soldaten.htmlhttp://www.ndrtv.de/panorama/archiv/2004/0226/soldaten.html

Translation tool: http://babel.altavista.com

CNN video downloads: http://homepage.mac.com/webmasterkai/kaicurry/gwbush/iraqiwar.wmv http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article5365.htm

ABC Apache video downloads: http://cop-players.com/cop-media/apache.mpeg http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/US/apache_video_040109.html

See also: http://www.panorama.de http://www.ard.de

[There are more videos, from Iraq and Afghanistan, at http://www.thenausea.com/usa-iraq.html. "The Nausea" is right....]



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