CIA using spies under cover of "Save the Children" in Pakistan and Afghanistan

CIA using spies under cover of

ISLAMABAD - The attack on Save the Children organisation in Afghanistan by the Afghan Taliban comes amid reports that the organisation is being used by CIA for its spying network in Pakistan and Afghanistan.The CIA is endangering aid workers by using spies who pose as health officials, according to the head of Save the Children in Pakistan who is trapped in the country amid allegations the group was gathering intelligence on Osama bin Laden, it was reported earlier when Osama Bin Laden was tracked reportedly in Pakistan by the same organisation spies working under cover, Foreign media has reported.

The charity says its lifesaving work has been ever disrupted ever since a local doctor falsely claimed to be working on its behalf when he was in fact running a fake vaccination programme to obtain DNA evidence as American spies closed in on bin Laden’s lair last year.

Shipments of medicine have spent months bound up in red tape at airports – depriving an estimated 35,000 children of medical care - and foreign staff have been denied visas.

David Wright, the charity’s country representative, has not left Pakistan since his visa expired in October for fear that his return to the country would be barred.

He said intelligence agencies had breached international humanitarian law and risked the safety of aid groups around the world.

"The blame lies squarely with the CIA which use humanitarian work for intelligence gathering or worse," he said.

"If it continues then we won't be able to do our jobs at all in 10 years time." ADVERTISEMENT

The charity says its lifesaving work has been ever disrupted since a local doctor falsely claimed to be working on its behalf when he was in fact running a fake vaccination programme to obtain DNA evidence as American spies closed in on bin Laden's lair last year.

Shipments of medicine have spent months bound up in red tape at airports – depriving an estimated 35,000 children of medical care - and foreign staff have been denied visas.

Shakeel Afridi, 48, was arrested three weeks after the raid to kill bin Laden in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad and has not been seen since.

He has been lauded as a hero in the US after running a fake hepatitis B immunisation campaign for the CIA.

Intelligence agents believed they had traced bin Laden to a three-storey villa but wanted conclusive proof that they had their man.

Using the cover of his health programme, Dr Afridi was tasked with collecting blood samples from children in the compound to secure DNA evidence that they were related to the world's most wanted man.

Nurses who worked with Dr Afridi said they never managed to gain access to the compound.

However, aid workers and security officials say Dr Afridi claimed to have been working for Save The Children when he was detained on suspicion of working for a foreign intelligence agency.

Since then some senior Save the Children staff have been blocked from leaving the country. Some workers have been given one-month visas but have to return to their home country to have it renewed every four weeks.

"Instead of spending money on children, we have to spend it on airfares," said Mr Wright.

Although Dr Afridi had received training from Save the Children – along with 50,000 other health workers - and applied for a job with the group in 2009, he had no further connection, said Mr Wright.