Civilian deaths in Nato-led strike raise tensions with Karzai

KABUL – Afghan president Hamid Karzai yesterday condemned an air strike by Nato-led forces which he said killed 10 election campaign…

KABUL – Afghan president Hamid Karzai yesterday condemned an air strike by Nato-led forces which he said killed 10 election campaign workers, although US officials maintained it was aimed at an Islamist leader.

Civilian casualties caused by foreign forces hunting militants have caused major tension between Mr Karzai and his Western allies. The latest incident came at a bad time as US defence secretary Robert Gates landed for unannounced talks.

Mr Gates’s arrival was also overshadowed by renewed worries about corruption, one of Washington’s biggest concerns in Afghanistan, after two officials from the country’s top private bank left their positions amid allegations of graft.

Mr Gates flew into the Afghan capital from Iraq, where he attended ceremonies to mark the end of US combat operations.

READ MORE

That milestone has thrown the US military focus back on to Afghanistan, where violence has reached its worst levels since the Taliban was ousted in 2001, despite the presence of almost 150,000 foreign troops, most of them American.

At a joint news conference, Mr Gates and Mr Karzai appeared to disagree over the air strike in northern Takhar province but the Afghan leader used milder language than in an earlier statement when he criticised the strike.

Those killed worked for a candidate in Afghanistan’s September 18th parliamentary elections, Mr Karzai said. US officials, including Mr Gates, said the strike was aimed at insurgents from the al- Qaeda linked Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

“The nature of the operation and the presence of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan’s personalities or activists have to be determined, but we do know that the parliamentary candidate is wounded and 10 were killed,” Mr Karzai said.

Mr Gates said he knew little about the incident. “This is the first that I had heard that civilians may have been killed and we will certainly look into that.”

Mr Gates also met Gen David Petraeus, commander of foreign forces in Afghanistan. – (Reuters)