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http://sympaticomsn.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060503/afghan_prisoners_060511
Cdn soldiers capture suspected Taliban fighters
CTV.ca News
A company of Canadian soldiers acting on coalition intelligence captured 10 suspected Taliban fighters in a volatile area north of Kandahar.
This is the largest capture of detainees by Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan, reported CTV's Janis Mackey Frayer in Kandahar Thursday.
The troops, members of the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, have been part of bigger operations that have netted more prisoners. But this is the first such capture for an all-Canadian unit.
The prisoners were apprehended in a compound and all are suspected to be related to a known group in the area.
Soldiers found large sums of money and equipment for "military operations" including batteries, wires and communications devices used to make improvised explosive devices (IEDs), according a military spokesman.
The nationalities of the detainees are unknown.
Meanwhile, military lawyers in Ottawa debated for hours whether photographs of the operation and detainees should be allowed to be published.
A news photographer from Agence France Presse (AFP) was embedded with the unit during the operation. The concern, said a Canadian Forces spokesman, is the violation of the Geneva Conventions Article 13, which states:
"Prisoners of war must at all time be protected, particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and public curiosity."
Officials claim they were not trying to suppress the photos, but simply giving the photographer and his agency advice that publication would violate the Geneva Convention. That was the decision of two military lawyers, although the Canadian military will not pursue prosecution or otherwise if the photos are published.
"Our concern is to make sure we respect the Geneva Convention, and this is why we voiced our concern to this photographer," Canadian Forces spokesman Maj. Marc Theriault told reporters.
"We are not banning, we are not seizing anything . . . Not at all. We voiced our concerns."
The photos show detainees with plastic ties around their wrists and blindfolds. The photographer says they were treated well, there was no evidence of mistreatment, they were given water and were neither manhandled nor shoved around.
Theriault said the soldiers followed "to the letter" the rules pertaining to the capture of detainees.
"So from that perspective, it is not a matter of trying to hide pictures of detainees because it would be compromising for us. Not at all. It is a matter that detainees are allowed to a certain level of protection -- and we're trying hard to implement the Geneva convention to provide them this protection."
With a report from CTV's Janis Mackey Frayer in Kandahar, Afghanistan
http://sympatico.msn.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2006/05/11/taliban05112006.html
Canadian troops capture Taliban suspects
Last Updated Thu, 11 May 2006 19:25:44 EDT
CBC News
Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan have captured 10 suspected Taliban fighters.
GUMBAD, AFGHANISTAN: A suspected Taliban prisoner is searched, handcuffed and processed by members of the 1st Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, after a raid on a compound in northern Kandahar. (JOHN D MCHUGH/AFP/Getty Images)
INDEPTH: Afghanistan
The capture came as Canadian troops were escorting a convoy to Gumbad, north of Kandahar, where Canada maintains a forward operating base.
The soldiers noticed two groups apparently conducting a reconnaissance of the area.
PHOTO GALLERY: Afghan Detainees
CBC correspondent Peter Armstrong reported from Kandahar that Canadian units had been scouring the hills trying to flush out Taliban fighters.
The Canadians were given a tip that a group was hiding in a compound, "so troops moved in and essentially, without firing a shot," captured the men, Armstrong reported.
Members of 1st Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry carried out the raid. Ten suspects were subsequently handed over to the Afghan National Police.
"We've taken some bad guys off the street," Maj. Marc Theriault told a news briefing in Kandahar.
A photographer with Agence France-Presse was embedded with the unit and captured images of Canadian troops processing the detainees and taking them into custody.
At first, the Canadian military asked the photographer not to publish the images. Military officials said their lawyers reviewed the photos and thought they might be in violation of the Geneva Conventions, which says that a picture holding up a prisoner to ridicule may not be released.
Article 13 of the convention states: "Prisoners of war must at all time be protected, particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and public curiosity."
However, the military later said it was up to the various news agencies to decide whether they wanted to publish the images.
Cdn soldiers capture suspected Taliban fighters
CTV.ca News
A company of Canadian soldiers acting on coalition intelligence captured 10 suspected Taliban fighters in a volatile area north of Kandahar.
This is the largest capture of detainees by Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan, reported CTV's Janis Mackey Frayer in Kandahar Thursday.
The troops, members of the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, have been part of bigger operations that have netted more prisoners. But this is the first such capture for an all-Canadian unit.
The prisoners were apprehended in a compound and all are suspected to be related to a known group in the area.
Soldiers found large sums of money and equipment for "military operations" including batteries, wires and communications devices used to make improvised explosive devices (IEDs), according a military spokesman.
The nationalities of the detainees are unknown.
Meanwhile, military lawyers in Ottawa debated for hours whether photographs of the operation and detainees should be allowed to be published.
A news photographer from Agence France Presse (AFP) was embedded with the unit during the operation. The concern, said a Canadian Forces spokesman, is the violation of the Geneva Conventions Article 13, which states:
"Prisoners of war must at all time be protected, particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and public curiosity."
Officials claim they were not trying to suppress the photos, but simply giving the photographer and his agency advice that publication would violate the Geneva Convention. That was the decision of two military lawyers, although the Canadian military will not pursue prosecution or otherwise if the photos are published.
"Our concern is to make sure we respect the Geneva Convention, and this is why we voiced our concern to this photographer," Canadian Forces spokesman Maj. Marc Theriault told reporters.
"We are not banning, we are not seizing anything . . . Not at all. We voiced our concerns."
The photos show detainees with plastic ties around their wrists and blindfolds. The photographer says they were treated well, there was no evidence of mistreatment, they were given water and were neither manhandled nor shoved around.
Theriault said the soldiers followed "to the letter" the rules pertaining to the capture of detainees.
"So from that perspective, it is not a matter of trying to hide pictures of detainees because it would be compromising for us. Not at all. It is a matter that detainees are allowed to a certain level of protection -- and we're trying hard to implement the Geneva convention to provide them this protection."
With a report from CTV's Janis Mackey Frayer in Kandahar, Afghanistan
http://sympatico.msn.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2006/05/11/taliban05112006.html
Canadian troops capture Taliban suspects
Last Updated Thu, 11 May 2006 19:25:44 EDT
CBC News
Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan have captured 10 suspected Taliban fighters.
GUMBAD, AFGHANISTAN: A suspected Taliban prisoner is searched, handcuffed and processed by members of the 1st Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, after a raid on a compound in northern Kandahar. (JOHN D MCHUGH/AFP/Getty Images)
INDEPTH: Afghanistan
The capture came as Canadian troops were escorting a convoy to Gumbad, north of Kandahar, where Canada maintains a forward operating base.
The soldiers noticed two groups apparently conducting a reconnaissance of the area.
PHOTO GALLERY: Afghan Detainees
CBC correspondent Peter Armstrong reported from Kandahar that Canadian units had been scouring the hills trying to flush out Taliban fighters.
The Canadians were given a tip that a group was hiding in a compound, "so troops moved in and essentially, without firing a shot," captured the men, Armstrong reported.
Members of 1st Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry carried out the raid. Ten suspects were subsequently handed over to the Afghan National Police.
"We've taken some bad guys off the street," Maj. Marc Theriault told a news briefing in Kandahar.
A photographer with Agence France-Presse was embedded with the unit and captured images of Canadian troops processing the detainees and taking them into custody.
At first, the Canadian military asked the photographer not to publish the images. Military officials said their lawyers reviewed the photos and thought they might be in violation of the Geneva Conventions, which says that a picture holding up a prisoner to ridicule may not be released.
Article 13 of the convention states: "Prisoners of war must at all time be protected, particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and public curiosity."
However, the military later said it was up to the various news agencies to decide whether they wanted to publish the images.