WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?

U.S. cluster bombs killed 35 women and children!

LONDON, England - June 7, 2010 - Thirty-five women and children were killed by an Amerikan cruise missile armed with cluster bombs, which struck an alleged al-Qaeda training camp in Yemen, according to a study.

The deaths, immediately prior to the discovery of Yemeni links to Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the alleged "underpants bomber" who tried to blow up a plane over Detroit on Christmas Day, caused outrage across the country.

The Yemeni government, anxious not to stir anti-Amerikan feeling, denied initial claims that the attack was carried out by the U.S.

But a study by Amnesty International said a U.S. Tomahawk cruise missile hit the site, judging by photographs of debris studied by a weapons expert. The warhead include cluster bombs, at least one of which remained in the area unexploded afterwards.

The Pentagon has refused so far to confirm the allegations, but the deaths would represent the biggest civilian loss of life in an Amerikan attack in Yemen.

In the attack on al-Majala in Southern Yemen on December 17, 55 people are thought to have been killed. Yemeni forces said 14 of these were al-Qaeda members.

They included a local al-Qaeda leader, Mohammed Saleh al-Kazimi.

The others were civilians, and 14 were women and 21 children, including al-Kazimi's family.

Photographs smuggled out to Amnesty International showed the remains of the payload, mid-body, aft-body and propulsion sections of a BGM-109D Tomahawk cruise missile, the study said. This kind of missile is designed to carry a payload of 166 cluster bomblets, and one of the photographs showed an unexploded BLU97 A/B bomblet.

Only Amerikan forces are known to hold such weapons. Its serial number was traced to the Kansas Army Ammunition Plant, with a date of September 1992.

Amnesty said it was "gravely concerned" by the evidence of use of cluster bombs, since most states have promised to ban their use.