NATO airstrike killed 18 civilians:Karzai


kabul, afghanistan—Afghanistan’s president said Thursday that 18 people killed in a NATO airstrike in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday were all civilians.

NATO has so far said it has no records of civilian deaths from the pre-dawn strike Wednesday on a house in Logar province.

The NATO and Afghan troops were going after a local Taliban leader when the international coalition says they came under fire and called in an airstrike on the house.“This is unacceptable. It cannot be tolerated,” President Hamid Karzai said of the strike in Logar.

He criticized NATO for not being able to provide an explanation for the vans piled with women and children’s bodies that villagers displayed to reporters.

NATO confirmed only militant deaths from the strike but has sent an assessment team to investigate allegations that civilians were killed either alongside or instead of insurgents.

“The reason this team has been dispatched down there is because there is such a discrepancy between what our operational reporting indicates and what Afghan officials on the ground are saying happened,” said Maj. Martyn Crighton, a spokesman for the NATO force in Afghanistan. Villagers displayed 18 bodies at the provincial capital on Wednesday, including five women, seven children and six men.

Afghan officials said then that some or all of the dead men were militants. Since no government officials have visited the site of the attack, it was not clear if there might also be additional dead.

Wednesday was a particularly deadly day for Afghanistan as a trio of suicide bombers killed 22 people in the busy marketplace of Kandahar city.

Karzai said in the statement that he was cutting short his trip to China because of the attacks in Logar and Kandahar. He was expected back in Kabul on Friday, said Syamak Herawi, a spokesman for the president.

Karzai’s condemnation of the strike and NATO’s treatment of it serves as a reminder of the ongoing tension between Afghanistan and its Western allies as U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta visits.

Nighttime raids on militants taking cover in villages have been a repeated source of strained relations between the Afghan government, which says they put civilians in the crossfire, and its international allies.—AP

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