Afghans call for Nato to leave after airstrike kills 27 civilians
Relatives of 27 people killed when Nato aircraft bombed a civilian convoy in southern
Afghan officials said that at least four women and a child were among the dead. Twelve other civilians were wounded when three minibuses were attacked on Sunday in a remote part of Uruzgan province.
“They came here to bring security but they kill our children, they kill our brothers and they kill our people,” said Haji Ghullam Rasoul, whose cousins died in the attack. “We’ve had enough.”
The local governor and the Interior Minister said that all of the victims were civilians. Nato commanders said that their new strategy was focused on protecting the population — but the airstrike capped a week in which more than 60 civilians were killed by Nato weapons. The Afghan Cabinet called the attack “unjustifiable”.
The convoy was travelling from Day Kundi to
Dutch and Australian troops are based in Uruzgan alongside US Special Forces. The
Mr Rasoul, who spoke to The Times from Tirin Kowt, the capital of Uruzgan, said that his dead cousins, Nasim and Aminullah, had young children. “Who will feed them now?” he said.
Day Kundi is one of the poorest Afghan provinces. An elder from Char Chino district in Uruzgan said that most of the victims were travelling to
General Stanley McChrystal, the
Nato acknowledged that it has previously relied on shoddy intelligence and called in airstrikes when there was no immediate need.
President Karzai repeated calls on Saturday for the coalition to prevent civilian casualties. On Sunday at least nine were killed when troops in
On Monday last week Nato and Afghan forces mistakenly killed five men and injured two others in
Last month four Afghan soldiers at a checkpoint in Wardak were killed after American troops called in an airstrike. In December Nato was accused of killing ten civilians, including eight schoolchildren, in Narang district in Kunar. Nato said that they were part of a bomb-making cell.
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