Daily Dispatch

New Zealand to probe army’s Afghan killings

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NEW Zealand ordered a top-level inquiry yesterday into allegation­s its special forces killed six civilians, including a three-yearold child, during a botched 2010 raid on an Afghan village.

The New Zealand military vehemently denies the accusation­s, which were first made in a book

Hit and Run published last year. The book alleged an elite SAS squad staged the raid as a revenge attack after a New Zealand soldier was killed, but faulty intelligen­ce meant it targeted villagers rather than insurgents.

It also claimed the military covered up the raid’s failure, falsely saying nine insurgents had died when it knew otherwise.

The Labour Party called for an independen­t inquiry while in opposition and attorney-general David Parker reviewed the case after last year’s election win.

Parker yesterday appointed former prime minister Geoffrey Palmer and supreme court judge Terence Arnold to head the probe.

“Bearing in mind the need for the public to have confidence in the NZDF, I have decided in the public interest that an inquiry is warranted,” he said.

Parker said he had seen video of the raid suggesting there were armed individual­s in the village but the footage was not conclusive, hence the need for the inquiry.

It will examine the conduct of troops during the raid, whether those killed were insurgents or civilians and the accuracy of military briefings given to the public and the government.

It is expected to take up to a year.

New Zealand sent a reconstruc­tion team and a small special forces contingent to join the Natoled operation in Afghanista­n in 2003. In August 2010, Lieutenant Tim O’Donnell became the first of New Zealand’s 10 military deaths in Afghanista­n when his patrol was hit by a roadside bomb.

The SAS raid in the northern province of Baghlan, carried out with US helicopter support, took place about two weeks later on August 22.

Mohammad Ismail, a district chief where the incident occurred, said eight people had died in the raid, all civilians.

The New Zealand military initially kept silent about its involvemen­t, then said nine insurgents had been killed and no civilians harmed.

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