Afghan bombings even the Bush Regime admits were wrong.
- Dec 2001: 65 killed in bombing of convoy of tribal elders
- April 2002: Four Canadian soldiers killed
- July 2002: 48 killed when bomb hits wedding party
- April 2003: 11 killed by bomb in village of Shkin
- Dec 2003: Nine children killed by bombing in Ghazni Province; six
children killed in raid in Paktia province
[BBC]
US military admits six more child deaths in second Afghan raid
December 11, 2003
AFP
The US military admitted that six Afghan children were killed in a
bombing raid aimed at Islamic extremists, the second assault
within a 24-hour period to result in child casualties.
A US
spokesman said the bodies of the six were found under a collapsed
wall after an air raid late Friday in eastern Afghanistan's Paktia
province, among locations hit by a wave of violence blamed on
Taliban and al-Qaeda rebels.
The
admission follows protests from the United Nations and Afghan
President Hamid Karzai over a US operation in the neighbouring
province of Ghazni on Saturday that left nine children dead.
The
deaths were the latest in a series of so-called "friendly
fire" casualties to blight the US-led campaign in
Afghanistan, including an attack on a wedding party in July 2002
that left 48 dead.
US
Lieutenant Colonel Bryan Hilferty said aircraft and ground troops
were hunting a Taliban militant identified as Mullah Jilani when
they attacked a compound, 20 kilometres (13 miles) east of
Paktia's capital Gardez.
"After
we went there we discovered the bodies of two adults and six
children under a collapsed wall," he told reporters in Kabul.
"We
don't know what caused the collapse of wall because although we
fired on the compound there were other explosions inside the
compound," he said. The colonel did not identify the two
adults but said that Jilani was not found.
Hilferty
said troops had come under attack during the assault, prompting US
forces to raid the compound from the air and ground. Nine
suspected militants were captured and a large cache of weapons
were recovered.
The
colonel said he could not rule out the possibility of further
civilian casualties.
"I cannot
guarantee that we will not injure any more civilians, I wish I
could. The loss of any innocent life is tragic."
Hilferty
however said that if non-combatants surrounded themselves with
weapons and explosives "we're not completely responsible for
the consequences."
The
colonel said the assault was not part of Operation Avalanche, the
biggest US offensive in Afghanistan since the 2001 fall of the
Taliban, which was launched last week against extremists in east
and south Afghanistan.
President
Karzai has demanded an explanation for the child deaths at Ghazni
and dispatched investigators to the scene.
"It
was a sad scene. We are trying to find out ways in the best
possible manner to prevent incidents like that," he said
Wednesday.
"We
are thinking if aerial activity is helpful or if it causes
suffering."
The UN has also urged
a swift inquiry into the deaths and wants results to be made
public, charging that the blunder "adds to a sense of fear
and insecurity" following similar killings of innocent
civilians.
It
warned that civilian deaths had a "negative impact" on
Afghans.
The
latest attacks come against a backdrop of rising violence in many
parts of Afghanistan blamed on the Taliban and their allies.
Almost 400 lives have been claimed in the past four months with
the US military under regular attack.
Militants
have increasingly targeted aid and reconstruction workers as well
as US and Afghan troops in an apparent bid to undermine urgently
needed rebuilding work.
Workers on the key
Kabul-Kandahar road have been attacked several times by suspected
Taliban.
Taliban
militants are likely to kill two Indian road workers they
kidnapped at the weekend, a spokesman for the ousted militia said.
"There
is a strong possibility they will be killed because they are not
Muslims," the spokesman who calls himself Abdul Samad told
AFP by satellite phone.
The
pair were kidnapped Saturday in Zabul province after finishing
work on the key highway between Kabul and the main southern city
of Kandahar.
Some
11,500 US troops are hunting down Taliban and al-Qaeda holdouts,
mainly along the rugged border with Pakistan.
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