Death by Drone: The ghost and the machine
Fazillah, age 25, lives in Maidan Shar, the central city of Afghanistans Wardak province. She married about six years ago, and gave birth to a son, Aymal, who just turned five without a father. Fazillah tells her son, Aymal, that his father was killed by an American bomber plane, remote-controlled by computer.
That July, in 2007, Aymals father was sitting in a garden with four other men. A weaponised drone, what we used to call an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle or UAV, was flying, unseen, overhead, and fired missiles into the garden, killing all five men.
Now Fazillah and Aymal share a small dwelling with the deceased mans mother. According to the tradition, a husbands relatives are responsible to look after a widow with no breadwinner remaining in her immediate family. She and her son have no regular source of bread or income, but Fazillah says that her small family is better off than it might have been: one of the men killed alongside her husband left behind a wife and child but no other living relatives that could provide them with any source of support, at all.
Aymals grandmother becomes agitated and distraught speaking about her sons death, and that of his four friends. All of us ask, Why? she says, raising her voice. They kill people with computers and they cant tell us why. When we ask why this happened, they say they had doubts, they had suspicions. But they didnt take time to ask Who is this person? or Who was that person? There is no proof, no accountability. Now, there is no reliable person in the home to bring us bread. I am old, and I do not have a peaceful life.
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