Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
December 30, 2009 – Five U.S. CIA employees and 2 Xe PMCs were killed and another six wounded in a suicide bomb attack on a military base in Khost province. The Afghan PMC chief of security for the base and a Jordanian military officer from the Jordanian spy agency Dairat al-Mukhabarat al-Ammah were also killed in the attack.
This is a partial list of Afghan security forces killed in the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021).. Besides serving as an indicator of some of the numbers of policemen, soldiers and private military contractors (PMCs) deaths during specific time periods, this article allows readers to investigate the circumstances of those deaths by reading the citation articles.
Sixteenth Air Force (16 AF)'s original ancestor was the Joint United States Military Group, Air Administration (Spain), which was established on 20 May 1954. It was attached to the Joint U.S. Military Group, which oversaw implementation of the 1953 Spanish-American Defense Cooperation Agreement.
Chechen military commander, responsible for the Kizlyar hostage taking raid: His family and others claim that he was murdered by the authorities in prison. Fesshaye Yohannes: 2002-2007 Eritrea: Unknown Journalist John Geoghan: 2003-08-23 United States: Murdered by fellow inmate Joseph Druce: Catholic priest and child molester Hassan Evan Naseem ...
Abdul Raziq Achakzai was born in 1979 in the town of Spin Boldak, Kandahar Province, where he was raised. [10] He was a member of the Adozai sub-tribe of Achakzai.He and his family migrated to Pakistan after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 1994.
This graphic allows you to browse by state to see how our 2015-16 numbers compare with the DOJ's tallies from previous years. Our figures undercount the total number of deaths, as many states do not collect jail death data, some law enforcement agencies did not respond to our requests, and deaths in smaller jails are not routinely made public ...
Provincial commander: A commander prior to the U.S. invasion, he was captured after the defeat of the Taliban and was interred in Guantanamo. He managed to convince authorities he was instead a civilian detained in error, and was released in 2003. He returned to fighting and was killed in 2004. [55] Dawran Safi: Field commander
The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that 17,358 individuals in custody died during the period from 2007 to 2010. [15] Other publications focus on the rate per 100,000. US jails report deaths that total a mortality rate of 128, and prisons at 264 per 100,000. [16]