Afghan villagers have disputed a US claim that seven people killed by the US-led coalition during a raid yesterday were militants.
The US military claimed the operation targeted a "known al Qaeda leader," believed to have facilitated the movement of foreign troops into eastern Kunar province.
"The al Qaeda leader is also believed to be in contact with other militants in the region ...."
The seven militants killed in that operation included an armed woman, it said. The military did not say if the "al Qaeda leader" was among the dead.
But villagers and a provincial official have disputed the military's report.
All those killed in late Friday's attack were civilians and belonged to one family, several residents said. A local official, on condition of anonymity, confirmed their accounts. The provincial governor refused to comment on the incident.
Other raids targeted the network of Jalaluddin Haqqani, a top military commander for the Taliban-led insurgents in southeastern Khost, the US military claimed.
At least 18 militants were killed in those attacks in a compound, it said.
It did not say whether there were any casualties among the coalition forces in any of those operations, but a separate statement Friday said one foreign soldier was killed in an engagement in an eastern area same day.
The Taliban could not be reached for comment and Reuters had no immediate independent verification of the accounts.
US-led troops overthrew the Taliban's radical Islamist government after it refused to hand over al Qaeda leaders wanted by Washington for the September 11 attacks which killed nearly 3,000 people in the United States.
Many more civilians have been killed in Afghanistan, nearly seven years on after the invasion and al Qaeda as well as Taliban leaders are still at large.
REUTERS