From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. regrets deaths of 7 Afghan
youngsters
Islamic insurgents at a compound attacked by
planes kept the children from leaving, military says.
By M. Karim Faiez and Laura King
Special to The Times
June 19, 2007
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN — The U.S. military expressed regret Monday over the
deaths of seven Afghan children in an airstrike a day earlier but
blamed Islamic insurgents for preventing the youngsters from leaving
the compound that was hit.
American
officials said U.S.-led coalition forces were unaware of the presence
of noncombatants inside the compound in Paktika province, which also
contained a mosque and a madrasa, or religious school.
Seven
boys under the age of 16, including at least one as young as 10, were
killed in Sunday's airstrike, Afghan officials said. Paktika Gov.
Akhram Akhpelwak told the Associated Press that in a departure from
usual practice, local Afghan officials were not given advance notice of
Western troops' plans to hit the compound.
Accidental civilian
deaths at the hands of coalition troops have become a highly emotional
issue in Afghanistan. The country's pro-Western president, Hamid
Karzai, has appealed repeatedly for greater caution in military
operations in civilian areas, but public anger at his government is
growing as well.
The compound, in the Zargun Shah district of
Paktika province, in Afghanistan's southeast, was believed to have been
occupied by militants linked to Al Qaeda, the military said in a
statement. It said several militants were killed in addition to the
young boys.
U.S. Army Maj. Chris Belcher, a coalition
spokesman, said surviving children told authorities they were forcibly
kept inside the compound by insurgents.
"The people in the area … understand that the incident was the result
of hoodlums' activity in the area," Belcher said.
A full day of surveillance before the airstrike yielded no sign of the
boys' presence, he said.
U.S.
military officials traveled to the province to meet with local
authorities and express regret over the deaths. Afghan human rights
officials, who have been strongly critical of several other military
operations this year that resulted in multiple civilian deaths, said
they were investigating the incident.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan,
Western forces reported prolonged fighting with insurgents in the
southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, for months the scene of
such clashes. A Dutch soldier was killed, together with dozens of
Taliban fighters, the coalition said.
The fighting occurred in remote areas, and the casualty figures could
not be independently confirmed.
In
Kabul, police reported the detention of an unidentified suspect in
connection with the worst attack in months in the capital — a massive
suicide bombing Sunday that incinerated a bus carrying police trainees.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which killed nearly
three dozen people.
The blast heightened fears that militants
are gaining the ability to carry out large-scale attacks even in
heavily fortified areas of the capital. Past suicide attacks in Kabul
have caused far fewer casualties.
Suicide bombings are
increasingly becoming a favored tactic of the insurgents, who in
general are reluctant to engage in head-to-head battle against vastly
better armed troops.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times