Afghan Special Forces kill nine civilians: officials
Civilian casualties remain high in Afghanistan's grinding conflict with more than 10,000 killed or wounded in 2017
JALALABAD:
Afghan Special Forces have killed nine civilians in an apparently botched operation in the eastern province of Nangarhar, officials said Tuesday.
The victims were related to Afghan Senate chairman Fazel Hadi Muslimyaar, provincial spokesman Attaullah Khogyani told AFP.
"A delegation from Kabul has been sent to Nangarhar to investigate the incident," he added. The provincial health director confirmed the dead and wounded were brought to local hospitals in Jalalabad.
Details of the attack late Monday in Chaparhar district remained unclear and there was no immediate comment from the defence ministry. The Senate is parliament's upper house.
Afghan security force shrinks sharply
Civilian casualties remain high in Afghanistan's grinding conflict with more than 10,000 killed or wounded in 2017, according to the UN. The majority of casualties were caused by the Taliban and other militants.
But pro-government forces, including international troops, were responsible for 20 per cent of the civilian casualties last year -- a seven per cent increase from 2016.
The increase was partly due to a growing number of aerial bombings by Afghan and foreign forces, the UN said.
The US is the only international force known to be carrying out air strikes in Afghanistan.
What US generals get wrong about Afghanistan
Earlier this month, President Ashraf Ghani apologised after the UN released a blistering report into an Afghan Air Force strike in Kunduz on April 2 which killed 36 people including 30 children.
The UN investigators could not confirm if the casualties in that incident were all civilians.
Afghan Special Forces have killed nine civilians in an apparently botched operation in the eastern province of Nangarhar, officials said Tuesday.
The victims were related to Afghan Senate chairman Fazel Hadi Muslimyaar, provincial spokesman Attaullah Khogyani told AFP.
"A delegation from Kabul has been sent to Nangarhar to investigate the incident," he added. The provincial health director confirmed the dead and wounded were brought to local hospitals in Jalalabad.
Details of the attack late Monday in Chaparhar district remained unclear and there was no immediate comment from the defence ministry. The Senate is parliament's upper house.
Afghan security force shrinks sharply
Civilian casualties remain high in Afghanistan's grinding conflict with more than 10,000 killed or wounded in 2017, according to the UN. The majority of casualties were caused by the Taliban and other militants.
But pro-government forces, including international troops, were responsible for 20 per cent of the civilian casualties last year -- a seven per cent increase from 2016.
The increase was partly due to a growing number of aerial bombings by Afghan and foreign forces, the UN said.
The US is the only international force known to be carrying out air strikes in Afghanistan.
What US generals get wrong about Afghanistan
Earlier this month, President Ashraf Ghani apologised after the UN released a blistering report into an Afghan Air Force strike in Kunduz on April 2 which killed 36 people including 30 children.
The UN investigators could not confirm if the casualties in that incident were all civilians.