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View Full Version : UK aid worker may have been killed by rescuers' grenade



Apparition
11th October 2010, 08:13 AM
British aid worker Linda Norgrove may have been accidentally killed by US forces during a rescue mission in Afghanistan, David Cameron has said.

International forces there originally said the 36-year-old died on Friday when one of her captors detonated a suicide vest.

But the prime minister said new details had come to light suggesting her death may have resulted from a US grenade.

He said he had spoken to her family about the "deeply distressing" news.

Mr Cameron said he was told of the new developments in a phone call from Gen David Petraeus, the top allied commander in Afghanistan, on Monday morning.

He said the general had told him US forces were deeply dismayed at the outcome and said it was "deeply regrettable" that information published on Saturday about Ms Norgrove was highly likely to have been incorrect.

The BBC's diplomatic correspondent Nicholas Witchell in Kabul said British officials there were "dumbfounded".

He added: "It raises questions about the manner of the assault; it raises questions about the way in which the American media operation has disseminated this suggestion that she died at the hands of her captors quite unequivocally for 48 hours."

"It appears there has been a review of the surveillance footage that the Americans have, together with discussions with members of the rescue team, that they cannot 'conclusively determine' - that's their phrase - how Linda Norgrove did in fact meet her death."

BBC diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall added the latest developments would raise questions over UK and US relations and the possibility there was an attempt to cover up the circumstances of Ms Norgrove's death.
'Chaotic circumstances'

But Foreign Office Minister Jeremy Browne said there had been no attempt to cover up the truth about the rescue operation.

He said: "That was us acting at all stages on the best information that we had supplied to us. But we will have an investigation and we will try and establish as far as is possible, in what sound like completely chaotic circumstances, precisely what happened."

At the Downing Street press conference, Mr Cameron defended the rescue mission, saying it had his full support as Ms Norgrove had been in "grave danger".

He said: "The decision to launch this rescue operation was not an easy one. But I am clear that Linda's life was in grave danger from the moment she was taken.

"Those on the ground and in London feared that she was going to be passed up the terrorist chain which would increase further the already high risk that she would be killed."

A senior US source in Kabul has told the BBC that Ms Norgrove's abductors were believed to be members of the Taliban and linked to the Quetta Shura - the Taliban leadership council believed to be based in Pakistan.

Mr Cameron said 12 meetings of the government emergencies committee, Cobra, had taken place before Foreign Secretary William Hague and the US agreed the rescue attempt should go ahead. His decision was then approved by the prime minister.

It had been thought that Ms Norgrove had been killed by her abductors just as US forces reached the compound in which she was being held in Afghanistan.

But at the start of the press conference, Mr Cameron said it had since emerged that she may have died as a result of a US grenade being detonated during the rescue.

It is usual practice for US Special Forces to take fragmentation grenades on hostage rescue operations, the senior US source added.

Mr Cameron said it had not yet been confirmed that was the case but a full US/UK investigation - which will last several days - was being launched. It is expected to be led by a senior US officer and the results are expected to be made public.

"We must get to the bottom of what happened and make sure first of all that the family get this information and they know exactly how their wonderful daughter died.," he said.

'More time'

Speaking from the Isle of Lewis, Mr Norgrove said: "We are not saying anything to the press at the moment. We might issue a statement in another day or two, we're not certain, but now we are not saying anything."

Mr Cameron added that Ms Norgrove, who was seized in the province of Kunar on 26 September, was being held in remote and high mountains, making the rescue operation very difficult.

Three local staff were also kidnapped alongside Ms Norgrove when the two cars they were travelling in were ambushed. The staff were released unharmed last week.

The Briton, who was employed by US aid group DAI, is believed to have been taken by her captors from village to village as British, Afghan and other intelligence agencies searched the remote area.

Tribal elders negotiating her release told the BBC they had asked Nato not to intervene, to insure they had more time to secure a release.

Col Richard Kemp, a former commander of British troops in Afghanistan, said the team who tried to rescue Ms Norgrove faced "immense dangers" and he was not surprised they had been armed with fragmentation grenades.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-11514210


I wouldn't be surprised if this is later proven to be accurate.

People who are exposed to prolonged periods of violence tend to lose their sense of morality, reasonability, and the capability to differentiate between allies and enemies.

How depressing for anyone with a heart.

Glass
11th October 2010, 08:13 PM
When I read articles like the original announcement of her death I just came to that conclusion. It's just obvious to me. When somethings are said I can just see right through it. I often wonder why other people can't and I don't know why they can't. Of course I'm not alone. I know that because there are plenty of people fighting to expose the truth of things like this. Legal fraud, government fraud, fraud fraud fraud fraud fraud every body loves fraud.

People are waking up now. Everyone is talking about all sort of fraud. It's so bloody obvious now you can't not notice it, and once you do, you start to see it everywhere. That's the disheartening thing. It's everywhere.