Sarah Ford | November 7, 2013
Girl Traveled Over 7,000 Miles to Tell Her Story, Only 5 Members of Congress Showed Up
It was just after midnight on the East Coast when the first news story came out. I鈥檇 been sitting on another edge of another bed in another bland hotel room for a few hours by then, typing up notes from our tour stop in Madison and planning the next day鈥檚 action in Minneapolis. At least that鈥檚 what I鈥檇 meant to do.听Really, I was waiting for this very moment. The new Amnesty International report on had finally been released.
My Twitter feed was soon full of chatter about drones, and about the civilian deaths outlined in the report. I clicked over to the Amnesty website to open the report, and saw the face ofNabeela Bibi, the eight-year-old girl who had watched her 68-year-old grandmother, Mamana, blown to pieces while she was picking vegetables in the family fields. My cell phone buzzed and I looked down at a text message from my friend, a fellow activist who has been working on this issue for years.
鈥淭he report broke my heart,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t reaffirmed my belief in truth-seeking.鈥
For weeks now, we鈥檝e been on the road, building the movement that will bring justice for the family of Mamana Bibi, and make sure Nabeela does not continue to live in fear that she will be next. After 5 stops, dozens of new people have joined Amnesty International, affirming their commitment to standing with individuals and communities at risk of human rights abuses, and my belief in truth-seeking has been reaffirmed, too. Hundreds have participated in the tour, and thousands have been reached. It has been incredible to watch people learn about the secrecy and devastation of the U.S. government鈥檚 drone program, and make the choice to stand up and fight back.
Today, this fight takes on even more meaning. Now we know Mamana Bibi鈥檚 story, and the stories of other civilians who have been killed or injured by U.S. drones in Pakistan. We need to know why she was killed, and we need to know that nothing like this will ever happen again. We鈥檝e been calling for transparency so far. Right now, we must raise our voices even louder, so that both President Obama and Congress hear us, and they tell us why a 68-year-old woman was killed in front of her grandchildren.
This week, Nabeela Bibi traveled with her family to Washington, D.C. to testify before听Congress about what happened to her grandmother, and about the reality of life under drones. Months ago, she told Amnesty researchers,听鈥滻 wasn鈥檛 scared of drones before, but now when they fly overhead I wonder, will I be next?鈥澨
Before Congress, she told the story again of being blown off her feet, of picking up the pieces of her grandmother. She traveled over 7,000 miles. Five members of Congress showed up.
We need to hold Congress accountable for what is happening on its watch and make sure Nabeela鈥檚 voice is heard.
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