US Airstrikes Kill More Than 30 Civilians in Kunduz, Afghanistan

 

 

US Airstrikes Kill More Than 30 Civilians in Kunduz, Afghanistan

Scores of civilians killed in alleged US airstrikes to support ground op in Afghanistan (GRAPHIC)

RT.com

Scores of civilians, including children, have reportedly been killed in US airstrikes supporting a ground operation in Kunduz, Afghanistan, officials and media report. NATO forces in Afghanistan said the airstrikes were “to defend friendly forces under fire.”

Earlier on Thursday, United States Forces Afghanistan released a statement, saying that two US servicemen had died “as a result of wounds sustained during operations” in Kunduz.

“The service members came under fire during a train, advise and assist mission with our Afghan partners to clear a Taliban position and disrupt the group’s operations in Kunduz district,” the statement said.

READ MORE: 2 US soldiers killed, 2 wounded in Kunduz, Afghanistan

Resolute Support, a NATO-led training mission in Afghanistan, tweeted that the airstrikes in Kunduz had been carried out to defend “friendly forces under fire.”

Brigadier General Charles Cleveland, a spokesman for the United States military in Afghanistan, said that he couldn’t say whether the civilian deaths near Kunduz and the attack on US soldiers were related, but noted that the deceased American servicemen had been as advisers to an Afghan military operation.

“We have no evidence at this point of any civilian casualties, but we take all allegations very seriously,” he said, as cited by the New York Times. “Although this was an Afghan operation advised by US forces, US aircraft were used to defend all of the friendly forces.”

Afghan officials told Reuters that there had been heavy fighting between Taliban fighters and the US military about five kilometers from the city center. The US then reportedly called in airstrikes that resulted in numerous casualties.

Local activists shared photos of what they say are dead bodies of the airstrike victims with RT. RT cannot independently verify the authenticity of the images.

General Qasim Jangalbagh from the Kunduz police said the air raid had resulted in the deaths of about 26 people, AP reported.

Kunduz’s provincial spokesman, Mahmood Danish, told AFP that the airstrikes had killed 30 civilians, including women and children.

“Afghan forces and coalition troops conducted a joint operation against the Taliban insurgents. In the bombardment 30 Afghan civilians were martyred and 25 others were wounded,” he said.

Police spokesman Mahmoodullah Akbari gave similar toll to AFP, saying that infants as young as three months old were among the dead.

“I was working on the farm when suddenly the bombardment started in our area. When I came to my house seven members of my family, including women and children, were killed,” Kunduz resident Taza Gul told Pajhwok Afghan News.

Bilal Sarwary, a local journalist citing sources in the Afghan government, reported that at least 31 civilians had been killed during an Afghan-NATO special forces operation on Thursday night.

Citing Afghan government sources, he tweeted that “Afghan and US Special forces were surrounded and were taking heavy fire when the airstrike was called.”

No one involved in US airstrikes in Afghanistan brought to account – Russian Foreign Ministry

None of the US airstrikes that resulted in civilian deaths in Afghanistan has been properly and independently investigated so far, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said during a news briefing on Thursday.

“The history of the US and NATO anti-terrorist operation in Afghanistan, which lasts for 15 years, is full of such examples,” Zakharova said, adding that the US and its allies continue to “commit errors” and “no one bears any responsibility – neither at a personal level,.. nor at the state level.”

She noted that in November 2008, some 100 civilians died in the US bombing of a wedding ceremony in the Kandahar province, while another US airstrike conducted in the same year claimed the lives of about 100 civilians in the province of Herat, calling these incidents “the most high-profile ones.”

She also mentioned the US bombing of a hospital in the city of Kunduz run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) that resulted in the deaths of more than 20 medical specialists and patients in October 2015.

Zakharova stressed that the relatives of most of the victims of those strikes had not received any aid while no one has been brought to account for crimes against civilians. She also emphasized that “a state should bear responsibility for its actions,” adding that it is important for the international community to see “which way the US and their allies are heading in this aspect.”

The spokeswoman then welcomed the reported initiative of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to launch a full independent investigation into war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed by the US military in Afghanistan.

“We … believe that an impartial investigation of the criminal violent actions committed by the foreign and particularly the US military in Afghanistan will help to avoid further killing of Afghan civilians during combat operations,” she said.

Earlier, media reports stated that the ICC chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, plans to initiate a full investigation of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Afghanistan.

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http://www.rt.com/news/365194-kunduz-airstrike-killed-civilians/