News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News
News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News


 

 

 





 


 


Help RAWA: Order from our wish list on Amazon.com

RAWA Channel on Youtube

Follow RAWA on Twitter

Join RAWA on Facebook



Times Online, October 16, 2008

Nato airstrike blamed for deaths of 18 civilians in Afghanistan

Angry local people brought the bodies of at least six women and children, some of them badly disfigured, to the provincial capital Lashkargar.

Tom Coghlan in Kabul

Dead bodies of Afghans, who were killed allegedly by allied airstrikes in Nad Ali district of Helmand province
Wrapped dead bodies of Afghans, who were killed allegedly by allied airstrikes in Nad Ali district of Helmand province, are seen at the back of a vehicle in the city of Lashkar Gah the provincial capital of Helmand province south of Kabul, Afghanistan on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2008. The airstrike by foreign troops in southern Helmand province killed several women and children, a police chief said. (AP Photo by Abdul Khaleq)

A Nato airstrike in Helmand this afternoon may have killed as many as 18 women and children, according to local officials in the province.

Angry local people brought the bodies of at least six women and children, some of them badly disfigured, to the provincial capital Lashkargar and placed the bodies outside the house of the provincial governor, according to witnesses who spoke to The Times in Lashkargar.

There were protests in the city during the afternoon by crowds condemning British forces and the Afghan Government.

A spokesman for the British forces, Lieutenant-Colonel Woody Page, confirmed that Nato forces were deployed in an operation in Nad Ali, close to Lashkargar, today and that an airstrike took place at 12.40pm. “We are unable to confirm whether there were any civilian casualties,” he said.

An investigation into the incident was under way.

A spokesman for the Helmand Governor told The Times that the state of the bodies did not prove whether they had died as a result of an airstrike and he suggested that they might have died when a house accidentally collapsed.

“We have investigated this incident,” said Daoud Ahmadi. “We haven’t seen any bullet holes in the house and no explosive material in the house. The belief is that it collapsed itself and that the enemies of Afghanistan [the Taliban] are trying to take advantage of this.”

A BBC reporter in Lashkar Gah said he saw the bodies - three women and the rest children ranging in age from six months to 15. The families brought the bodies from their village in the Nad Ali district.
The Guardian, October 17, 2008

The Provincial Police Chief, Assadullah Sherzad, told the Associated Press that he believed an airstrike had killed several women and children in the area. He was not able to name a figure for the dead.

Civilian casualties in airstrikes have been a source of repeated friction between the Karzai Government and its Western backers and have sparked violent anti-Western protests in the past.

In the most recent such incident, separate investigations by the Afghan Government, the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission and the United Nations all concluded that more than 90 civilians died when US Special Forces raided a village in the western province of Herat on August 22.

US forces initially reported five civilian deaths, a figure amended to 33 deaths after mobile phone camera footage of the aftermath showing rows of dead including many women and children came to light.


nad_ali_civilians2.jpg

nad_ali_civilians.jpg
The bodies of Afghans, whom their families claim were killed in an air strike, are shown in Lashkar Gah of Helmand province. (Photos: Reuters)

nad_ali_civilians3.jpg
Dead body of an Afghan boy killed in ISAF bombing in Helmand. (Photo: PAN, Zainullah)

Category: US-NATO, Children, HR Violations, Protest - Views: 30225