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6 Americans Killed In Afghanistan, Part Of Medical Team

KATHY GANNON   08/ 7/10 10:36 PM ET   AP

Americans Killed Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan — They hiked for more than 10 hours over rugged mountains – unarmed and without security – to bring medical care to isolated Afghan villagers until their humanitarian mission took a tragic turn.

Ten members of the Christian medical team – six Americans, two Afghans, one German and a Briton – were gunned down in a gruesome slaughter that the Taliban said they carried out, alleging the volunteers were spying and trying to convert Muslims to Christianity. The gunmen spared an Afghan driver, who recited verses from the Islamic holy book Quran as he begged for his life.

Team members – doctors, nurses and logistics personnel – were attacked as they were returning to Kabul after their two-week mission in the remote Parun valley of Nuristan province about 160 miles (260 kilometers) north of Kabul. They had decided to veer northward into Badakhshan province because they thought that would be the safest route back to Kabul, said Dirk Frans, director of the International Assistance Mission, which organized the team.

The bullet-riddled bodies – including three women – were found Friday near three four-wheeled drive vehicles in a wooded area just off the main road that snakes through a narrow valley in the Kuran Wa Munjan district of Badakhshan, provincial police chief Gen. Agha Noor Kemtuz told The Associated Press.

One of the dead Americans had spent about 30 years in Afghanistan, rearing three daughters and surviving both the Soviet invasion and bloody civil war of the 1990s that destroyed much of Kabul.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid told the AP that they killed the foreigners because they were "spying for the Americans" and "preaching Christianity." In a Pashto language statement acquired by the AP, the Taliban also said the team was carrying Dari language bibles and "spying gadgets."

Frans said the International Assistance Mission, or IAM, one of the longest serving non-governmental organizations operating in Afghanistan, is registered as a nonprofit Christian organization but does not proselytize.

Frans said the team had driven to Nuristan, left their vehicles and hiked for nearly a half day with pack horses over mountainous terrain to reach the Parun valley where they traveled from village to village on foot offering medical care for about two weeks.

"This tragedy negatively impacts our ability to continue serving the Afghan people as IAM has been doing since 1966," the charity said in a statement. "We hope it will not stop our work that benefits over a quarter of a million Afghans each year."

Among the dead was team leader Tom Little, an optometrist from Delmar, New York, who has been working in Afghanistan for about 30 years and spoke fluent Dari, one of the two main Afghan languages, Frans said. Little, along with employees from other Christian organizations, were expelled by the Taliban government in August 2001 after the arrest of eight Christian aid workers – two Americans and six Germans – for allegedly trying to convert Afghans to Christianity.

He returned to Afghanistan after the Taliban government was toppled in November 2001 by U.S.-backed forces. Known in Kabul as "Mr. Tom," Little supervised a network of IAM eye hospitals and clinics around the country largely funded through private donations.

"He was a remarkable man, and very committed to helping the people of Afghanistan," said David Evans of the Loudonville Community Church, New York, who accompanied Little on a 5,231-mile road (8,419-kilometer) trip to deliver the medical team's Land Rover vehicles from England to Kabul in 2004.

"They raised their three girls there. He was part and parcel of that culture," Evans said.

Little had been making such trips to Afghan villages for decades, offering vision care and surgical services in regions where medical services of any type are scarce.

The work has long been fraught with risk, but Evans said Little was a natural for the job. He spoke the language, knew the local customs, and had the patience and diplomatic skills to handle sticky situations.

Another relief organization, Bridge Afghanistan, said on its website that the group included one of its members, Dr. Karen Woo, who gave up a job in a private clinic in London to do humanitarian work in Afghanistan. A message posted last March on the Bridge Afghanistan website said she was "flat broke and living in a war zone but enjoying helping people in great need."

In a fundraising blog posted last month, Woo said the mission to Nuristan would require hiking with pack horses through mountains rising to 16,000 feet (5,000 meters) to reach the Parun valley, a harsh, isolated area about 9,500 feet (3,000 meters) above sea level where an estimated 50,000 people eke out a primitive existence as shepherds and subsistence farmers.

"The expedition will require a lot of physical and mental resolve and will not be without risk but ultimately, I believe that the provision of medical treatment is of fundamental importance and that the effort is worth it in order to assist those that need it most," she wrote.

"The area ... we will reach is one of great harshness but of great beauty also. I hope that we will be able to provide medical care for a large number of people."

Names of the other foreigners were not released until the bodies could be brought to Kabul for identification, Frans said.

Frans told the AP that he was skeptical the Taliban were responsible. He said the team had studied security conditions carefully before continuing with the mission.

"We are a humanitarian organization. We had no security people. We had no armed guards. We had no weapons," he said.

Authorities in Nuristan heard that foreigners were in the area and sent police to investigate, according to Nuristan Gov. Jamaluddin Bader. The police provided security for the final three or four days of the mission and escorted them across the boundary into Badakhshan, he said. The escorts left after the team told them that they felt safe in Badakhshan, he added.

Frans said he last talked to Little, over a scratchy satellite phone connection, on Wednesday evening. On Friday, the Afghan driver who survived the attack called to report the killings. A fourth Afghan member of the team was not killed because he took a different route home because he had family in Jalalabad, Frans said.

The surviving driver, Saifullah, told authorities that team members stopped for lunch Thursday afternoon in the Sharron valley and were accosted by gunmen when they returned to their vehicles, according to Kemtuz, the Badakhshan police chief. The volunteers were forced to sit on the ground. The gunmen looted the vehicles, then fatally shot them, Kemtuz said.

The Afghan driver who survived "told me he was shouting and reciting the holy Quran and saying 'I am Muslim. Don't kill me,'" Kemtuz said. The gunmen let the driver go free the next day. A shepherd witnessed the carnage and reported the killings to the local district chief, who then brought the bodies to his home, Kemtuz said.

Aid workers have been often targeted by insurgents.

In 2007, 23 South Korean aid workers from a church group were taken hostage in southern Afghanistan. Two were killed and the rest were later released. In August 2008, four International Rescue Committee workers, including three women, were gunned down in Logar province in eastern Afghanistan.

In October 2008, Gayle Williams, who had dual British and South African citizenship, was killed by two gunmen on a motorcycle as she walked to work in the capital of Kabul. In late 2009, a French aid worker was kidnapped at gunpoint in the Afghan capital. Dany Egreteau, a 32-year-old worker for Solidarite Laique, or Secular Solidarity, who was seen in an emotional hostage video, was later released after a month in captivity.

___

Associated Press writers Amir Shah, Deb Riechmann and Robert H. Reid in Kabul contributed to this report.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — They hiked for more than 10 hours over rugged mountains – unarmed and without security – to bring medical care to isolated Afghan villagers until their humanitar...
KABUL, Afghanistan — They hiked for more than 10 hours over rugged mountains – unarmed and without security – to bring medical care to isolated Afghan villagers until their humanitar...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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FZliveson 02:32 PM on 08/07/2010
Yes this is tragic; no doubt about it.
AND, I have family in an other country who have gone to Pakistan for years to "help them do artwork" and "learn to grow crops" and "dig water wells."
BUT during those quiet little moments between the surface tasks, their intent was to infect these Muslim people with the word of another religion. They knew they were in danger at all times and they played  Read More...
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bascombe
Send the kids off to die, bleed their country dry.
12:16 PM on 08/09/2010
i had two posts deleted. there will be no answer as to why. they both meet whatever is supposed to be the criteria for passable posts. I can only assume that someone thinks they have some vested interest in suppressing some posts for reasons other than terms of use.

I did not flame anyone.
I used no four letter word.
I used no epithet, racial, cultural or otherwise.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
08:44 PM on 08/08/2010
No one should die for for religion.
10:11 PM on 08/08/2010
No one did.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
10:29 AM on 08/09/2010
Perhaps you either didn't read the story or understand it.

"Ten members of the Christian medical team – six Americans, two Afghans, one German and a Briton – were gunned down in a gruesome slaughter that the Taliban said they carried out, alleging the volunteers were spying and trying to convert Muslims to Christianity. The gunmen spared an Afghan driver, who recited verses from the Islamic holy book Quran as he begged for his life".

"were gunned down in a gruesome slaughter that the Taliban said they carried out, alleging the volunteers were spying and trying to convert Muslims to Christianity"

"trying to convert Muslims to Christianity"

What were you saying?
08:40 PM on 08/08/2010
They were preaching more than they were trating patients . I think if they stick to their profession they might be alive now .
08:49 PM on 08/08/2010
I haven't seen anything that said they were Christians, much less a preaching to treating ratio statistic. Assuming your assertion isn't hyperbole or hot air, please reference your source.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
08:55 PM on 08/08/2010
Ten members of the Christian medical team – six Americans, two Afghans, one German and a Briton – were gunned down in a gruesome slaughter that the Taliban said they carried out, alleging the volunteers were spying and trying to convert Muslims to Christianity.
08:56 PM on 08/08/2010
Read the whole article . I mean every word .
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lemealone
It will take more than condiments to foil my brill
10:45 PM on 08/08/2010
glad you can enjoy their deaths.
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bascombe
Send the kids off to die, bleed their country dry.
07:48 AM on 08/09/2010
how was that implied by that post?
08:19 PM on 08/08/2010
The real tragedy is the stupidity of whichever country gave permission for a humanitarian group affiliated with a "Christian Mission" to operate in a war zone where primarily Christian invaders are pitted against primarily Muslim defenders. Even if these people were in actual fact neutral and not trying to "Christianize" their patrons, they were, in the eyes of the Muslims, representatives of the "Christian" army which is occupying their country.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
08:24 PM on 08/08/2010
thank you for that...
08:32 PM on 08/08/2010
You are vile in your support of murder simply because these people were Christian.
08:36 PM on 08/08/2010
You, my friend, needs to learn how to read.
08:06 PM on 08/08/2010
The best of humanity do this kind of work. Unfortunately, Afghanistan is controlled by some of the world's worst people. The new cover of Time magazine says it all. That makes the killed aid workers the bravest of an elite group. The people who criticize them are self centered and weak. There is a lot of that here at Huffpo.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GuyCybershy
07:13 PM on 08/08/2010
"No matter our intention, the violence of our militarism in foreign lands causes those residents to seek revenge if innocents are killed. One does not have to be a Muslim to react this way - just human." Ron Paul

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27Um6R5V-78&feature=player_embedded
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
skibum49
05:51 PM on 08/08/2010
Ok Im going to say this once again because it needs to be made clear. I am not going to speak for the entire group. I was a personal friend of Karen Woo one of the people killed.
I know from personal experience that Dr. Woo was not some crazy bible thumper. She was a dedicated Doctor whose only purpose was to try and help people who needed assistance in places where that kind of thing is in very short supply.. She was a person who saw real suffering and put her life on the line to try and bring some measure of relief. The world is most definitely a poorer place with her passing and she will be greatly missed by me and the many people she helped. Karen was also a very pragmatic person (as pragmatic as any person who gives up a lucrative practice and goes to Afganistan can be). She clearly understood the risks and also the rules of the game (the limitations on religious expression and the "place" of women in that society). I would be very surprised if she would have participated in any venture that put the group at even more risk than they obviously were under already.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
06:51 PM on 08/08/2010
Great post. I'm sorry for your loss.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
08:12 PM on 08/08/2010
No one should die for for religion.
09:46 PM on 08/08/2010
Got it. Please get a new sentence.
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Cannonball Taffy O Jones
Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!
05:34 PM on 08/08/2010
One thing that is guaranteed is that the ten members of the International Assistance Mission murdered by the Taliban each did infinitely more good for the people of that wretched country than their cowardly killers ever have done or will do.

Since its founding in 1966 the IAM has helped over seven million Afghan with medical, educational and social programs, assistance motivated by religious faith and compassion and not by a desire to spread the founder’s Christian beliefs.

The IAM’s proud record contrasts sharply with that of the inadequates of the Taliban who can only offer the Afghans bigotry, ignorance, violence and death.

The courage of those murdered is exemplary and outstanding inspired as it was by a desire to help those who desperately needed it in one of the most dangerous places on the Earth.

Most of us do not get involved, do not sacrifice anything and do put ourselves in harms way for the sake of others. These people did and they paid with their lives for it. The dead of the IAM are, in a world which overuses the word, true heroes.
08:07 PM on 08/08/2010
Well said.
04:23 PM on 08/08/2010
its a tragedy, maybe we Americans should stop caring about the world
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
05:29 PM on 08/08/2010
I would never say stop caring... rather "mind our own affairs" The gods know we do have a full plate here at home!
08:11 PM on 08/08/2010
How do you care, and mind your own affairs at the same time? Should we wait for an invitation from the Taliban cavemen before helping the innocent Afghanis? Yours is a convenient, lazy and self centered point of view.
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Js420
Another beautiful sunny day!
04:06 PM on 08/08/2010
You cant go to other countries to spread your religion in the name of humanitarian help. Im sorry for the loss but you should've seen this coming. Too bad the mainstream media is just referring to them as doctors only.
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Asmodean1
Truth is only true if based on facts.
05:32 PM on 08/08/2010
I completely agree... pray to the sun that poster Winthorpe doesn't read your post. I said something very close to this and he is STILL attacking me. LMAO

fanned for a intelligent post.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
06:50 PM on 08/08/2010
Why don't you read skibum49's post above, and maybe you'll develop a little compassion and understanding.
02:25 PM on 08/08/2010
You know, I'm a liberal, but I have to get this off my chest:

I am just plain fed up here at HP. I'm tired of reading hateful, spiteful comments about the deaths of both Afghans and people like these who offered medical care. I'm tired of reading accusations of conspiracy and the whining responses of 'well AMERICA killed innocents there!' as responses.

Take a look at yourself, my fellow liberals: some of you (in fact MOST of you posting angry, frustrated, spiteful, hateful comments here) are acting no different than the right wingers you despise. You think you have all the answers and 'the Truth'. How is that different from Bush, Pat Robertson, or Fox News?

I'm about done here. I simply cannot keep coming here to read all the disgusting posts anymore, whether it's anti-military, anti-homosexual, anti-Obama, whatever. I'm tired of the fight and I'm simply not doing it anymore. Some of you are simply not worth arguing with.
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booki
02:32 PM on 08/08/2010
this place has become very hateful ..i agree.
well, thank you for your service.............and for caring enough.......to speak your nice mind!
we can't argue w/ hate.
peace.......
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LFox6
Always remember you are unique, like everyone else
02:43 PM on 08/08/2010
Don't go, Southside! I'm on the 'other side', and I can tell you, the same vitriolic comments are all over the internet and blogosphere. It's very sad, really, that people can't discuss issues and news events without all the hate and bigotry, of all kinds. It seems nowadays, if someone else disagrees with you, it's ok to call names and think up the most ridiculous assertions - this applies to progressives AND conservatives. Thank you for being honest - and stick around, even I have to admit, the smartest conversations (although quite liberally [haha!] sprinkled with the ridiculous and the hateful) are to be found here on HP!
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booki
02:57 PM on 08/08/2010
don't worry ..he is not going to go anywhere........
this is just a sad happeneing.
shh a secret; ( he loves to argue, and he is very smart too!)

(and he is a good guy and , is still serving our country)
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booki
02:17 PM on 08/08/2010
we need to get out of afghanistan.
these people were doing humanitarian work......
they were also un armed..
this is a travesty.... .
02:43 PM on 08/08/2010
Well said.
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Js420
Another beautiful sunny day!
04:09 PM on 08/08/2010
they were also spreading their religion, which is why they get killed
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booki
04:18 PM on 08/08/2010
and you know that how?
and of what religion were the 10 people who were executed?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Harker
06:18 PM on 08/08/2010
well in the liberal ideal world spreading religion equals death so i guess you see nothing wrong with that.
01:22 PM on 08/08/2010
Hmmm. A group of Christian missionaries hiking into the mountains of Afghanistan controlled by the Taliban. Why didn't I think of that? Kinda like those guys hiking into Iran from Iraq. Or the reporters hiking into North Korean from China. What could go wrong?
02:09 PM on 08/08/2010
Just because you would be to afraid to do it does not mean you have to criticize people who go and help their fellow humans.
02:33 PM on 08/08/2010
Yes, he does. He clearly has personal issues and a hateful, whiny, angry attitude towards someone he thinks disrespected him. He had a bad experience in the military and spends his days posting on HP about how terrible everyone in the world is.
02:21 PM on 08/08/2010
You sound as conspiratorial as Pat Robertson claiming homosexuals are out to 'destroy the church'. You're no different than he is: you have no evidence but you want to believe these people were nefarious.

You bluster on all day about how 'Americans are so evil and imperial and ignorant' but you celebrate the deaths of people who legitimately wanted to offer medical care to Afghans in need. You're sick.
12:30 PM on 08/08/2010
Good for this post to mention all the nationalities of those so tragically killed. This was headline news in the UK lastnight - and I watched it on about 3 different news stations - and not One mentioned anything (nationality or anything) about the others lost except Dr Karen Woo the British doctor. All the others (the American, germans) were just listed as "foreigners", nor was it mentioned how many Afghan team members lost their lives. I thought it was pretty poor of the news here (UK) to not mention it, 1) because, regardles of nationality, they were All doing something needed and risking thier lives to do so 2) by not mentioning anything to the British audience except the one British woman undermined the role they all played as a Team and the fact that any lives lost was equally important and finally 3) living in such a global world, most people don't only know people from their own country and would be just as concerned for others.
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11:14 AM on 08/08/2010
well how many innocent people have we k*lled over there?
11:31 AM on 08/08/2010
Does that matter? This was an NGO who have the sole purpose of helping patients in part of the world with no doctors. The Taliban are afraid of education and thus cannot provide medical care.
12:38 PM on 08/08/2010
Absolutely agree - well said.

Re: Sparky 73 - In any case the "innocent people" that you talk of would & do welcome the help of charities such as these, esp going to rural areas. The Taliban are not considered welcome in Afghanistan and are solely interested in undermining their own country and people (re eduction, governance, women/girls, healthcare etc etc.) - they have been busily dismanteling the structure of afghanistan society WELL before the American moved in post-911. That said, in this particular instance, the UK news is also saying it likely wasn't the Taliban but rouge bandits.
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04:34 PM on 08/08/2010
so what. The United States has declared war (unjustly) on the Taliban and now we must reap what we sow. I feel bad for the doctor but he is just a collateral damage to the Taliban....