The US military is investigating a shooting incident in which four contractors from the renamed firm formerly called Blackwater are accused of killing an Afghan man after a traffic accident, a spokesman said yesterday.
The military said it had asked the firm to keep the four men in Afghanistan until its investigation was complete. The firm said it was cooperating with the investigation and had fired the four men for failing to follow regulations.
A lawyer for the four men said they were being held against their will by the firm in Kabul.
The North Carolina firm, which once had a lucrative contract to defend US diplomats in Iraq, has changed its name to Xe Services and lost its Iraq contract this year.
It gained notoriety in Iraq after its staff killed 17 civilians in Baghdad during a traffic incident in 2007. One Blackwater guard has pleaded guilty to manslaughter and other charges over that incident and five others are awaiting trial.
“At this time, we can confirm an incident involving some of our off-duty contractors for Paravant in Afghanistan,” Anne Tyrell, spokeswoman for the firm, said in an e-mail. She identified Paravant as a subsidiary of Xe, the renamed firm.
“Paravant terminated the contracts with the four individuals involved in the incident for failure to comply with the terms of their contract, which require, among other things, compliance with all laws, regulations, and company policies,” she said.
US military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Christian Kubik said the four men were employed to train Afghan troops.
After being involved in a car crash in Kabul on May 5, they fired on an oncoming car that they saw as a threat, wounding three Afghans, one of whom died two days later, Kubik said.
“The contracting company is cooperating with us. We have asked them to keep the individuals in-country until the investigation is complete,” Kubik said.
“When you’re talking about the death of an Afghan, that’s very important to us. We want to get it right,” he said.
A US lawyer, Daniel Callahan, who said he was representing the four men — Chris Drotleff, Steve McClain, Justic Cannon and Armando Hamid — said they were being held “captive” by the company at a “safe house” in a mosque in Kabul.
Xe spokeswoman Tyrell denied the men were being held, but said the company had told them they could not leave the country without the approval of the US Department of Defense and the firm was trying to clarify whether they had permission to leave.
An Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman said he was looking into reports of the incident.
Four people jailed in the landmark Hong Kong national security trial of "47 democrats" accused of conspiracy to commit subversion were freed today after more than four years behind bars, the second group to be released in a month. Among those freed was long-time political and LGBTQ activist Jimmy Sham (岑子杰), who also led one of Hong Kong’s largest pro-democracy groups, the Civil Human Rights Front, which disbanded in 2021. "Let me spend some time with my family," Sham said after arriving at his home in the Kowloon district of Jordan. "I don’t know how to plan ahead because, to me, it feels
Poland is set to hold a presidential runoff election today between two candidates offering starkly different visions for the country’s future. The winner would succeed Polish President Andrzej Duda, a conservative who is finishing his second and final term. The outcome would determine whether Poland embraces a nationalist populist trajectory or pivots more fully toward liberal, pro-European policies. An exit poll by Ipsos would be released when polls close today at 9pm local time, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points. Final results are expected tomorrow. Whoever wins can be expected to either help or hinder the
North Korea has detained another official over last week’s failed launch of a warship, which damaged the naval destroyer, state media reported yesterday. Pyongyang announced “a serious accident” at Wednesday last week’s launch ceremony, which crushed sections of the bottom of the new destroyer. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un called the mishap a “criminal act caused by absolute carelessness.” Ri Hyong-son, vice department director of the Munitions Industry Department of the Party Central Committee, was summoned and detained on Sunday, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported. He was “greatly responsible for the occurrence of the serious accident,” it said. Ri is the fourth person
SKEPTICAL: Given the challenges, which include waste disposal and potential domestic opposition, experts warn that the 2032 nuclear timeline is overambitious Indonesia is hoping going nuclear can help it meet soaring energy demand while taming emissions, but faces serious challenges to its goal of a first small modular reactor by 2032. Its first experiment with nuclear energy dates to February 1965, when then-Indonesian president Sukarno inaugurated a test reactor. Sixty years later, Southeast Asia’s largest economy has three research reactors, but no nuclear power plants for electricity. Abundant reserves of polluting coal have so far met the enormous archipelago’s energy needs, but “nuclear will be necessary to constrain the rise of and eventually reduce emissions,” said Philip Andrews-Speed, a senior research fellow at the