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Afghanistan: 40 civilians killed in US strike
By Joe Kay
11 May 2007
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At least 40 Afghan civilians were killed in air strikes on
Tuesday, adding to the mounting death toll from the escalation
of US operations in the country. The latest incident occurred
in the Sangin district of the southern province of Helmand, the
scene of stepped-up US and NATO attacks in recent months.
Earlier reports put the civilian death toll at 21, according
to the governor of Helmand, Assadullah Wafa. Reuters reported
the larger figure on Thursday, citing eyewitness accounts.
As usual, the US initially claimed that all of those killed
were Taliban fighters. This latest incident, however, appears
to have followed a pattern repeated in other areas recently. According
to military spokesman, US forces came under attack while patrolling
in the area, and one US soldier died in the fighting. The embattled
patrol responded by calling in air support, which carried out
indiscriminate bombing raids, including on local villages.
Major William Mitchell, a spokesman for the US-led coalition
troops in Afghanistan, claimed Wednesday, We dont
have any report of civilian casualties. Sergeant Dean Welch,
a US spokesman at the Bagram Air Force base, acknowledged there
were such reports, but said they were not confirmed.
A report in the Toronto Globe and Mail on Thursday refutes
these claims, however, noting that after the incident local villagers
brought their wounded and dead to a nearby military base to protest
the killings.
A grim tally emerged as angry villagers brought their
injured and dead to Forward Operating Base Robinson, an outpost
shared by Canadian, British, and US troops, Globe and
Mail reporter Graeme Smith reported from Sangin District.
There were seven women, three men and two children among
the dead; five women, five men and 15 children were injured.
The newspaper interviewed one of the survivors, a 13-year-old
boy named Rahmatullah. In addition to a wounded uncle, four of
his other relatives were killed, he said, but he dragged two of
his brothers alive from the mud rubble of a house. The people
who bombed us are bad guys, Rahmatullah said. They
should attack the Taliban, not us. The villagers who were
killed belonged to tribes generally considered hostile to the
Taliban.
Some residents rejected statements by Governor Wafa and the
US military that there were Taliban in the area, and that they
hid in civilian homes to use the civilians as shields. There
were no Taliban in our area, one resident of Sangin told
Reuters by phone.
The recent killings are part of a broader US-led offensive
to recapture parts of the country not under the control of the
puppet regime of Hamid Karzai in Kabul. In January, Defense Secretary
Robert Gates, with the support of both the Democrats and Republicans
in the US, announced an increase in the US-military presence to
prepare for a spring offensive.
On Wednesday, the military announced that about 4,500 troops
from the 101st Airborne Division would be sent to Afghanistan
to maintain the current troop strength at least through 2008.
There are currently about 25,000 US troops in Afghanistan, including
two combat brigades, in addition to troops from Britain, Poland
and other countries.
The deaths Tuesday come on the heels of several other attacks
that have killed scores of civilians. At the end of April, air
strikes in the western Herat Province killed at least 50, while
other attacks in the south have killed dozens, including one incident,
also at the end of April, in which 13 civilians were killed.
Near Jalalabad in the east, 6 Afghans were killed during a
raid in April, while 19 civilians were killed and 50 wounded when
US marines went on a killing spree in March.
All of these incidents are combining to sharply increase popular
opposition to the presence of foreign troops in Afghanistan. Each
of the killings has been followed by large protests, sometimes
lasting for days, demanding the withdrawal of US and other military
forces.
Growing concern within the Afghan government that popular opposition
could undermine the Karzai government was on display Tuesday,
when the upper house of the parliament voted for a military cease-fire
and negotiations with the Taliban.
Meanwhile, a US Army brigade commander issued a cynical apology
for the deaths of the 19 civilians near Jalalabad in March. Colonel
John Nicholson said he was deeply, deeply ashamed
by the incident, and said the military was issuing payments of
US$2,000 as essentially a symbol of our sympathy to them
and a way of expressing our genuine condolences over the
incident occurring.
Haji Lawania, who was injured and had two relatives killed
by the Marines, expressed what was no doubt the reaction of many
of those involved, saying, We dont want their money
and apologies. If somebody loses one of his family members, an
apology wont bring him back.
See Also:
US massacres of civilians spark protests
in Afghanistan
[5 May 2007]
NATO troops launch new offensives in
Afghanistan
[1 May 2007]
Highway massacre sparks anti-US
protests in Afghanistan
[5 March 2007]
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