WORLD / Middle East
30 Afghans killed, wounded in airstrikes
(AP)
Updated: 2007-06-30 20:21
An Afghan boy cries after his two uncles were killed as his father is
detained during a U.S.-led coalition and Afghan troop raid in Khogyani
district of Nangarhar province, east of Kabul, Afghanistan on Friday,
June 29, 2007. [AP]
KABUL, Afghanistan - US-led coalition airstrikes in southern Afghanistan
left at least 30 people, including women and children, killed or wounded,
an official said Saturday.
Taliban fighters tried to ambush a joint US-Afghan military convoy in
Helmand province's Gereshk district late Friday before fleeing into a
nearby village for cover, said Mohammad Hussein, the provincial police
chief.
Airstrikes targeted the militants in the village of Hyderabad, said Dur
Ali Shah, the mayor of Gereshk.
Shah said 30 to 35 people were killed or wounded but he could not provide
an exact breakdown. Villagers reported casualty tolls far higher than 30
but those figures were not immediately corroborated by officials. Six
houses also were destroyed during the clash, he said.
"Right now we do not know the number of Taliban casualties," Shah said.
Maj. John Thomas, a spokesman for NATO's International Security
Assistance Force, said there are ongoing NATO operations in the region
and that there has been several engagements with Taliban fighters.
"We're investigating further to see what other casualties there might
have been there," he said.
Civilians deaths caused by US and NATO-led troops have infuriated Afghans
and prompted President Hamid Karzai to publicly condemn foreign forces
for carelessness and viewing Afghan lives as "cheap."
He urged restraint and better coordination of military operations with
the Afghan government, while also blaming Taliban for using civilians as
human shields.
Violence has soared in Afghanistan with more than 2,800 people, mostly
militants, killed in fighting this year, according to an Associated Press
tally of figures from Western military and Afghan officials.
A count by the United Nations and an umbrella organization of Afghan and
international aid groups shows the number of civilians killed by
international forces was slightly greater than the number killed by
insurgents in the first half of the year.
An AP count based on figures from Afghan and international officials
found that militants killed 178 civilians in attacks through June 23 and
that Western forces killed 203. The US and NATO say they don't have
civilian casualty figures.
In the southern Helmand province's Sangin district, NATO-led and Afghan
troops clashed with Taliban fighters on Friday, leaving 15 militants
dead, said Ezatullah Khan, a district chief.
There were no casualties among NATO and Afghan troops, Khan said.
Also in the south, two suspected Taliban were killed while trying to
place a homemade bomb on the side of a road in Zhari district of Kandahar
province on Friday, said Ghulam Rasool, the district's police chief.
Three children were also killed Friday and another wounded when an old
rocket they were playing with exploded in Zabul province in the south,
said Gen. Yaqoub Khan, the provincial police chief.
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