Musafar, Sir,
The account below gives a total of 8 or so killed in two separate drone strikes. Can you provide a link to the story about 25 civilians, 14 from the same family?
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER No.1
ABU HAMZA RABIA
by B.Raman
The first reference to Abu Hamza Rabia was made by the Pakistani authorities on August 17, 2004, after they had announced rewards totalling US $ one million for anyone helping in the capture or killing of six terrorists. The top two positions in the list were occupied by Abu Faraj al-Libbi and Amjad Hussain Farooqui, each of whom carried a reward offer of US $ 340,000.
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4. While no reward was offered for information leading to the capture or killing of Abu Hamza Rabia, an official of the Pakistani Government said: "Faraj heads the international operational wing of al-Qaeda, with the help of an Egyptian accomplice, Abu Hamza Rabia."
5. A CIA Drone aircraft had attacked a house in North Waziristan on November 5, 2005, after receiving information that Abu Hamza Rabia was staying there with his wife and children.
While his wife and children were reportedly killed in the attack, Rabia managed to escape with a broken leg. Since then he had been fleeing from village to village in order to escape another attack by the CIA's Drone.
6. On the night of December 1, 2005, an unmanned Drone of the CIA fired a missile at a house at village Haisori, about 30 Kms from the Afghanistan border in the North Waziristan area after receiving information that Abu Hamza Rabia was spending the night there.
Intercepted messages exchanged by the terrorists after the strike allegedly indicated that five persons died in the Drone attack. One of them was referred to as Nawab. According to the Pakistani authorities, Nawab was one of the aliases of Abu Hamza Rabia. Musharraf, who was then on a visit to Kuwait, told pressmen on December 3,2005, that he was 200 per cent certain that Rabia was one of the five killed. Subsequently, he said that he was 500 per cent certain about the identity. US Drones had operated in the area even in the past. In May, 2005, a Drone missile attack was reported to have killed Al Qaeda bomb-maker Haitham al-Yemeni in North Waziristan.
7.
Of the five claimed to have been killed on December 1,2005, the dead bodies of only two have been found---both children related to the owner of the house which was attacked by the Drone. The bereaved father has strongly denied that Rabia or any other foreigner was staying in his house as alleged by the Pakistani authorities.He claimed that there were no other casualties. The Reuters news agency has quoted Haji Mohammad Siddiq, the owner of the house attacked by the Drone, as saying that his 17-year-old son and an eight-year-old nephew were killed in a missile attack, but denied that there were any militants present. “I don’t know anything about them – there were no foreigners in my house,” Siddiq said. “I have nothing to do with foreigners or Al Qaeda. We were sleeping when I heard two explosions in my guest room. When I went there I saw that my son, Abdul Wasit, and my eight-year-old nephew, Noor Aziz, were dead.”
8.
The Pakistani authorities have not admitted the role of the CIA's Drone aircraft in the operation. They have projected the death of Rabia as due to an accidental explosion in the house, where, according to them, explosives were being stored. While junior US officials based in Afghanistan have been concurring with the Pakistani claim that Rabia was believed to have been killed and projecting him as the head of the international operational wing of Al Qaeda since the capture of Abu Faraj in May, 2005,
senior US officials in Washington DC have been more guarded in their comments in view of the fact that no dead body has been found.
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11. While the Pakistani officials, including Sheikh Rashid Ahmed, the Pakistani Minister for Information, are now saying that Rabia was also involved in the two attempts of December, 2003, to kill Musharraf, they had not mentioned this in the past. No explanation has been forthcoming from US officials as to why no reward had been offered for his capture or killing either by the FBI or the Pakistani intelligence if he was really that important in the Al Qaeda hierarchy as now made out to be. According to some reports, while the FBI did not believe that Abu Faraj and Rabia were that highly placed in Al Qaeda as made out to be and hence had not offered any reward for the capture or killing of Rabia, the CIA rated both of them as among the top planners of Al Qaeda.
12. The Al-Arabiya Television said late on December 3, 2005, that it had been contacted by a person, claiming to be from Al Qaeda, who denied that Rabia was dead. “An official from the Al Qaeda group has denied, in a telephone conversation with the Al-Arabiya channel, that Hamza Rabia has been killed,” a presenter on the Arab satellite channel told viewers.
The caller said that five people were killed in the explosion, but that they were two local men, two Tajiks and an Arab named Suleiman al-Moghrabi.
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER No.1