Four civilians killed in NATO air strike in Afghanistan

December 11, 2006 - 0:0
KABUL (AFP) -- At least four Afghan civilians were killed and one was wounded in a NATO-led air strike against Taliban insurgents in eastern Afghanistan, a police commander said Sunday.

The civilians were killed on Saturday in an air strike that was part of a "mid-scale" operation launched this week against militants in Laghman province just east of Kabul, local police chief, Abdul Karim Omeryar said.

"Yes, a house was bombed by NATO planes. I know four people were killed and one was injured -- they were civilians," the police chief told AFP.

He said intelligence reports indicated Taliban fighters were hiding in the house targeted by International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) warplanes in the province's Alishing district.

"But only civilians were in that house. The casualties were also civilians," he said.

The Interior Ministry in Kabul confirmed the operation, codenamed "Western Hammer" but said it was investigating the civilian deaths.

ISAF also confirmed the raid.

"There was an engagement with a small group of insurgents, (Saturday) in Daulat Shah district. There was close air support. No report on civilian casualties," ISAF spokesman Major Dominic Whyte told AFP.

The provincial governor for Laghman, Mohammad Gulab Mangal, has appointed a committee to investigate civilian casualties, an official at his office told AFP.

"We've the police reports that civilians were killed in the NATO air strike. The governor has appointed a committee to establish the fact," he said.

Scores of civilians have been killed during operations by foreign troops against Taliban.

In October, ISAF admitted 12 civilians were killed in one of its air strikes against Taliban insurgents in the southern province of Kandahar. Other sources put the civilian toll at between 60 to 85.

A government-appointed investigation committee established by President Hamid Karzai is yet to reveal the results of their search.

Over 1,000 civilians are also among some 3,700 people killed in the overall violence across Afghanistan this year, the bloodiest since the 2001 toppling of the Taliban by a U.S.-led invasion, according to an official report.