Villagers say 37 Afghan civilians killed in U.S.-led air strike
www.chinaview.cn 2008-11-05 21:54:42   Print

    By Zhang Yunlong

    KABUL, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- As many as 37 civilians have been killed in an airstrike of U.S.-led troops in southern Afghanistan while attending a wedding party, local Afghan villagers said Wednesday.

    The bombing started at 2 p.m. local time Monday at a village in Shah Wali Kot district of Kandahar province, the Taliban heartland, after the foreign troops, believed to be the U.S. forces in the region, were attacked by Taliban militants from a mountain behind a house where the wedding ceremony was held.

    Haji Roozi Khan, owner of the mentioned house, told Xinhua on the spot that the air bombing and firing meant to retaliate on militants who hit the wedding gathering, killing 10 women, 23 children, and four men, all civilians.

    "The foreign forces' firing lasted until late that night and left another 35 people including the bride wounded," he said.

    The Xinhua reporter on the scene Wednesday saw many locals there were searching the debris for their relatives' dead bodies.

    The Afghanistan-based U.S. forces said in a statement it had initiated an investigation into the reported civilian killings and some unit of personnel was dispatched to the site.

    While congratulating Barack Obama on his victory in Tuesday's U.S. presidential elections, Afghan President Hamid Karzai Wednesday called on the new American leadership to prevent from harming and killing civilians in their military operations in Afghanistan, where 70,000 U.S. and NATO troops are fighting Taliban and al-Qaeda militants.

    "Our first demand is to avoid harming civilians in Afghanistan," Karzai noted.

    Civilian killings are sensitive and continuous happenings of this kind in the past years have spurred common Afghans' anger, if not hatred, towards U.S.-led foreign troops and undermined the popularity of the Karzai administration.

    The bloodiest one in years was on Aug. 22 when a U.S. airstrike in Shindand district of western Herat province, according to the UN and Afghan government probe, claimed over 90 civilian lives, which prompted the Afghan cabinet to pass a historic resolution asking for a re-regulation of foreign troops' presence in the war-torn country.

    The Afghan authorities had asked the U.S. and NATO troops to stop causing civilian casualties but the Western forces, mostly relying on air bombing to kill insurgents, continued to mis-strike civilian targets, either due to misleading information, aimless firing, or self-protection in cases of so-called "escalation of force."

    In several cases, the result of the probe done by the U.S. or the NATO forces usually came late and the figure of civilian deaths confirmed by them is much smaller than reported from the locals.

    Obama, the new U.S. president-elect, has said before that he, if got elected, will send 7,000 more troops to the Afghan battlefield, and he also threatened to launch uni-lateral attacks across the Afghan border, saying, if Pakistan is "unable" or "unwilling" to contain the reported escalating cross-border militant violence.

    Karzai in his Wednesday talk also demanded a change of strategy of the United States in fighting militants, saying, "The war on terror should be conducted in areas where the sanctuaries of terrorists and their training centers exist." He is apparently referring to the reported militant hideouts in the tribal areas across the Afghan-Pakistani border, which he has noted repeatedly before should be dismantled to end the insurgency and terrorist attacks inside Afghanistan.

    The U.S. forces in Afghanistan had conducted several bombing attacks into Pakistani soil which was said to target militants but sometimes killed civilians. Saying it has the capability to handle militants on its sovereign soil, Islamabad categorically condemned the U.S. cross-border attacks. 

Editor: An
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