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"All Things Considered"
National Public Radio
Washington, D.C.
Dear "All Things  Considered"
I was pleasantly surprised to hear your coverage this evening (January 
25) in 
which you reported on the death of 154 Afghan civilians in five 
incidents of 
bombing by the U.S. air force. 
As you conceded, if 154 were killed in 5 days of bombing out of the 
total of 
99 days of bombing, the final death toll of civilians must be in the 
thousands.
My sources in Pakistan say that the total of Afghan civilians killed in 
the 
bombing is near 60,000. Of these only 4076 have been documented (by an 
American) but the rest can only be estimated because they remain buried 
in 
hundreds of mud hut villages which were obliterated in the bombing.
You had the moral courage to point out that 65 of those Afghan civilans 
were 
killed in the bombing of an Afghan mosque during prayer time near the 
town of 
Khost. I couldn't quite catch it, but was that an excuse from your side 
or 
from the Pentagon that three Al-Qaida members were among those who were 
praying in the mosque?
I wonder if the Pentagon realizes what kind of precedent it has set by 
bombing the mosque. If an enemy is praying among a community, are you 
saying 
it is okay to wipe out the whole community?
Will any member of the U.S. air force be penalized for killing all 
those 
civilians? Can Rumsfeld or Stufflebeem or Myers be brought to trial for 
directing those attacks? Surely, the conscience of America must answer 
if its 
outcry about terrorism is to be taken seriously by the Muslim world.
Remember, there were no Afghans among the hijackers.
Sincerely
Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
Phone: 410-638-5965
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2002-01-26 Sat 15:01ct