An Afghan man who lost five relatives in a US air strike is taking legal action to force the UK to reveal its role in supplying information for a US military “kill list,” his lawyers said on Friday.
Habib Rahman, who lost two brothers, two uncles and his father-in-law in the attack on Sept. 2, 2010, has begun proceedings against Britain’s Ministry of Defense (MoD) and Serious Organized Crime Agency (SOCA).
Rahman is demanding to know the extent of the UK’s involvement in what his lawyers say is a list of people designated as targets by military forces in Afghanistan, including whether it is legal.
“Our client’s case suggests that the establishment and maintenance of the ‘killing list’ is not in line with the UK’s duties under international humanitarian law,” said Rosa Curling, a solicitor with Leigh Day and Co.
“It is important that the MoD and SOCA provide us with the reassurances sought, to make sure that others do not suffer the tragic loss of life as experienced by Mr Rahman,” Curling said.
The Guardian newspaper said the “kill list” was first mentioned in a report to the US Senate’s committee on foreign relations in 2009. It said a task force targeting drug traffickers, insurgents and corrupt officials was being set up at Kandahar air field in southern Afghanistan, linking the US and British military, the US Drug Enforcement Agency, SOCA and other law enforcement agencies.
Rahman says the attack happened while his relatives were helping his cousin Abdul Wahab Khorasani, a former parliamentary candidate, as he campaigned in the Takhar Province. A total of 10 civilians were killed and several more injured.
His lawyers said the International Security Assistance Force described the attack at the time as “a precision air strike” which killed or injured up to 12 insurgents including a Taliban commander. They say there is evidence it was an incidence of mistaken targeting.
The MoD said it could not discuss the case in detail for operational security reasons.
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