NATO won’t launch air raids near homes: President Karzai

NATO will not conduct any more air strikes in residential areas, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said, after 18 civilians, most of them women and children, were killed in a recent raid provoking fresh rage against foreign forces.

June 11, 2012

Talat Zaki Hafiz



KABUL — NATO will not conduct any more air strikes in residential areas, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said, after 18 civilians, most of them women and children, were killed in a recent raid provoking fresh rage against foreign forces.

The commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, General John Allen, has apologized for the killings in Logar province during a joint operation with Afghan forces on Wednesday and promised an investigation into circumstances leading to the air strike.

Karzai met Allen and US ambassador Ryan Crocker on Saturday and said that such strikes were a violation of a strategic partnership agreement between the two countries last month both in “text and spirit”, the president’s office said a statement late on Saturday.

“NATO commander once again officially apologized about the civilian casualties in Baraki Barak district of Logar and agreed with President Karzai. He gave a commitment that his forces will not launch air strikes in residential areas,” it said.

NATO initially said its forces and Afghan troops came under fire during the operation to capture a Taliban commander and they called for an air strike. It said operational reports indicated that two women received non-life threatening injuries and that a number of insurgents were killed.

Later, as villagers displayed bodies of women and children from the ruins of two houses, the NATO-led force said it had ordered an investigation. Nine of the victims were children, including an infant, five were women and three were elderly people, police said. Karzai’s chief spokesman, Aimal Faizi, said the air strike was ordered unilaterally without coordinating with the Afghan forces on the ground.

Afghan forces had surrounded the compound and if there was firing coming from inside they could have dealt with it, he said. “A few minutes of patience would have saved the lives of civilians.”— Reuters


June 11, 2012
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