This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/south_asia/6086064.stm
The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
'Civilians killed' in Nato raids | 'Civilians killed' in Nato raids |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Scores of civilians have been killed during Nato operations against Taleban fighters in southern Afghanistan, local officials and civilians say. | Scores of civilians have been killed during Nato operations against Taleban fighters in southern Afghanistan, local officials and civilians say. |
Nato says it is helping Afghan defence officials investigate the reports in Panjwayi district of Kandahar province. | |
The alliance had "credible reports" of some civilian casualties, but could not confirm reports of 60 dead civilians. It said 48 militants had been killed. | |
In September Nato said it had routed the Taleban in the area. | |
'Sorry not good enough' | |
Reports from Panjwayi district say the Nato raids began on Tuesday and continued into the night in Kandahar province. | |
Mud-brick houses damaged in Nato bombing last week | |
They said that several houses were hit, and civilians killed. | |
Villagers told the BBC Pashto service that the bodies of many locals had been pulled from the rubble of their homes after the raids and buried. | |
Panjwayi district chief Niaz Mohammad Sarhadi told the AFP news agency he had reports that about 60 civilians had been killed in the aerial bombardment. | |
Kandahar provincial council member Bismallah Afghanmal put the figure at more than 80. | |
"These kinds of things have happened several times, and they only say 'sorry'. How can you compensate people who have lost their sons and daughters?" | |
"The government and the coalition told the families that there are no Taleban in the area any more," he told the Associated Press news agency. | |
"If there are no Taleban, then why are they bombing the area? | |
Last month, the alliance said it had killed more than 500 militants during Operation Medusa in Panjwayi district. | |
'Human shields' | |
A spokesman for the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf), Maj Luke Knittig, was unable to confirm the high death tolls. | |
But he told reporters in Kabul: "Very sadly, civilians continue to get caught up in these engagements with tragic results. | |
"We are helping Afghan leaders there fly over the area to make an assessment," he added. | |
Nato spokesman Mark Laity told the same news briefing that Taleban fighters often used locals as "human shields", and the alliance made every effort to minimise civilian casualties. | |
Isaf said late on Wednesday that 48 had been killed in three separate engagements, including air strikes, which took place on Tuesday in Panjwayi district. | |
Afghan government officials were not immediately available for comment. | |
President Hamid Karzai has been under mounting pressure over the civilian death in the south and east, and has urged foreign forces to exercise more caution. | |
Last week, up to 21 civilians were killed in two Nato operations in Kandahar and neighbouring Helmand province. | |
In July 2002, a US air strike in Uruzgan province left 46 civilians dead and wounded more than 100, many of whom had been at a wedding party. |