Afghanistan investigates civilian casualty reports in Kunduz strike
Funerals were held for the victims on Friday
Afghan authorities are probing reports that 14 civilians were killed or wounded during a military operation, the defense ministry said on Friday, July 20, with several officials saying women and children were among the victims.
The casualties were caused by an airstrike in the northern province of Kunduz on Thursday, Chardara district governor Zalmai Farooqi and villagers told AFP.
Villager Haji Shireen said 13 people, all women or children, were killed in the airstrike that also destroyed some houses in Robat village.
An AFP reporter said he saw 12 bodies when he visited the village on Thursday.
Kunduz regional hospital head Naeem Mangal said the bodies of 12 women and children had been brought to the medical facility.
“Women and children were martyred,” Farooqi said, blaming “foreign” forces for the airstrike.
U.S. forces had carried out air strikes “in support of Afghan-led ground operations” in the district, NATO’s Resolute Support mission said in a statement.
But “an on-the-ground assessment of those strikes revealed no indications they caused civilian casualties,” it added.
Funeral Ceremony has been held in Spinzar Stadium-Kunduz city for 14 civilians including 5 women who were killed an airstrike in #Chardara district, #Kunduz province, #Afghanistan yesterday. pic.twitter.com/bRdklf0uUn
— HumayoonBabur (@Humayoonbabur) July 20, 2018
U.S. Forces in Afghanistan did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.
“A high-ranking military and government delegation has been appointed to closely investigate the incident,” a defense ministry statement said.
Defense ministry spokesperson Mohammad Radmanish said that 14 people were killed, and added that two others were wounded, RFE/RL reported.
Kunduz governor spokesman Naimatullah Taimor confirmed an investigative team had arrived in Chardara district.
Civilian casualties in Kunduz
The incident comes days after a United Nations report showed the number of civilians killed in the nearly 17-year conflict hit a record high in the first six months of 2018.
The toll of 1,692 fatalities was one percent more than a year earlier and the highest for the period since the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan began keeping records in 2009.
Another 3,430 people were wounded in the war, down five percent from the same period last year, the report said.
Airstrikes caused 353 casualties in the six-month period, up 52 percent on last year. More than half of the civilian casualties were caused by the Afghan Air Force.
One of the worst incidents was in Kunduz in April, when an Afghan air strike on an outdoor religious gathering in Dasht-e-Archi killed or wounded 107 people, mostly children, a previous UNAMA report found.
The government and military said it had targeted a Taliban base where senior members of the group were planning attacks.
Kunduz has been the scene of fierce fighting between Afghan security forces and the Taliban, which has been resurgent since the withdrawal of NATO combat forces at the end of 2014.
As many as 40 security forces were killed in a series of Taliban attacks in Dasht-e-Archi district earlier this month, security sources told AFP previously.
With reporting from AFP