NATO air raid kills Afghan civilians

968 0 216

A number of civilians have been killed and wounded in southern Afghanistan following a NATO air raid targeting two vehicles that foreign forces believed to be carrying Taliban fighters.

In a statement on Saturday, Nato said that it was investigating the incident, but did not release the number of dead and wounded.
Nato said the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) had called in an air attack on the two vehicles believing them to be carrying a Taliban leader and his associates, but later discovered they were transporting civilians.
The attack occurred on Friday in the Naw Zad district of Helmand province.
Civilian casualties in military operations in Afghanistan have become increasingly embarrassing for foreign forces battling the Taliban there ahead of a planned handover of security to Afghan forces.
The latest incident comes only two days after the coalition killed two civilians in the eastern province of Khost.
The two were walking near a car and were not seen until after a NATO helicopter gunship launched its attack, NATO said.
Civilian casualties
Earlier in the month, nine civilians, who Afghan officials say were children collecting firewood, were killed in a NATO air raid in eastern Kunar province, near the border with Pakistan.
The Kunar attack led to a rare public apology by General David Petraeus, the leading US troop commander in Afghanistan.
Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan's president, dismissed the apology as "not enough".
A recent UN report has said that at least 2,777 civilians were killed in fighting in Afghanistan in 2010.
Also on Saturday, Thomas de Maiziere, Germany's defense minister, visited Afghanistan in what was his first trip to there since taking the post.
German legislators have endorsed sending up to 300 crew members to man surveillance planes in Afghanistan, a move intended to take pressure off NATO allies enforcing a no-fly zone over Libya.
De Maiziere and Abdul Rahim Wardak, his Afghan counterpart, discussed Kabul's recent announcement that Afghan security forces would take the lead in seven areas across the nation from July.
PHOTO CAPTION
German defense minister Thomas de Maiziere, left, talks with Gen. David Petraeus, commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan at ISAF headquarters in Kabul Saturday March 26, 2011.
Al-Jazeera

Related Articles