At least five civilians, including three children, were killed overnight in a NATO airstrike in eastern Afghanistan, officials said yesterday.
The civilians, aged between 12 and 20, were killed while they were out hunting birds in the area of Saracha, a few kilometers from Jalalabad, the capital of eastern Nangarhar Province, provincial police spokesman Hazrat Hussain Mashreqiwal said.
A NATO spokesman said he was aware of the airstrike, but could not confirm any casualties.
Photo: EPA
“Last night around 11 pm, five civilians aged between 12 and 20 carrying air guns wanted to go hunting birds about 8km from the center of the city of Jalalabad. They were targeted and killed by a foreign forces airstrike,” Mashreqiwal said.
Their bodies were brought to the central hospital, he said.
Provincial spokesman Ahmad Zia Abdulzai confirmed the incident.
“Three of the civilians killed in the airstrike were schoolchildren, two were brothers,” Nangarhar education department spokesman Mohammad Atif Shinwari said.
Civilian casualties suffered in NATO operations have long been a source of friction between the Afghan government and US-led NATO troops, who are winding down operations as they prepare to withdraw by the end of next year.
Last month, a NATO airstrike killed at least 16 civilians, including women and children, in neighboring Kunar Province in eastern Afghanistan.
The airstrike hit a pickup truck and killed all on board, Afghan officials said.
However, NATO denied that civilians died in the attack, saying the strike had killed militants.
Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed in Afghanistan since the Taliban launched their insurgency in 2001 after being ousted in a US-led invasion.
As NATO troops wind down operations and Afghan security forces take charge of security responsibility countrywide, violence has been on the increase.
More than 1,000 civilians were killed and around 2,000 others were injured in the first half of this year, according to a UN report, a 23 percent increase from the same period last year.
The Philippines yesterday said its coast guard would acquire 40 fast patrol craft from France, with plans to deploy some of them in disputed areas of the South China Sea. The deal is the “largest so far single purchase” in Manila’s ongoing effort to modernize its coast guard, with deliveries set to start in four years, Philippine Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Ronnie Gil Gavan told a news conference. He declined to provide specifications for the vessels, which Manila said would cost 25.8 billion pesos (US$440 million), to be funded by development aid from the French government. He said some of the vessels would
CARGO PLANE VECTOR: Officials said they believe that attacks involving incendiary devices on planes was the work of Russia’s military intelligence agency the GRU Western security officials suspect Russian intelligence was behind a plot to put incendiary devices in packages on cargo planes headed to North America, including one that caught fire at a courier hub in Germany and another that ignited in a warehouse in England. Poland last month said that it had arrested four people suspected to be linked to a foreign intelligence operation that carried out sabotage and was searching for two others. Lithuania’s prosecutor general Nida Grunskiene on Tuesday said that there were an unspecified number of people detained in several countries, offering no elaboration. The events come as Western officials say
A plane bringing Israeli soccer supporters home from Amsterdam landed at Israel’s Ben Gurion airport on Friday after a night of violence that Israeli and Dutch officials condemned as “anti-Semitic.” Dutch police said 62 arrests were made in connection with the violence, which erupted after a UEFA Europa League soccer tie between Amsterdam club Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv. Israeli flag carrier El Al said it was sending six planes to the Netherlands to bring the fans home, after the first flight carrying evacuees landed on Friday afternoon, the Israeli Airports Authority said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also ordered
Former US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi said if US President Joe Biden had ended his re-election bid sooner, the Democratic Party could have held a competitive nominating process to choose his replacement. “Had the president gotten out sooner, there may have been other candidates in the race,” Pelosi said in an interview on Thursday published by the New York Times the next day. “The anticipation was that, if the president were to step aside, that there would be an open primary,” she said. Pelosi said she thought the Democratic candidate, US Vice President Kamala Harris, “would have done