The Commercial Appeal

Doctors Without Borders calls airstrike a war crime

Charity shuts Afghan hospital

- By Ali M. Latifi and W.J. Hennigan

KABUL, Afghanista­n — The medical charity Doctors Without Borders closed its hospital in the Afghan province of Kunduz on Sunday, and charged that a suspected U.S. airstrike that killed 22 people there appeared to have been a war crime.

The closing was a blow to the embattled northern province where more than 400 people have been injured in the last week in fighting between Afghan security forces and the Taliban. The group took control of the provincial capital briefly last week.

The Pentagon said there are three investigat­ions into the airstrike — one by the Defense Department, one involving both the U.S. and Afghanista­n, and one by NATO. Pentagon officials thus far have said only that a U.S. airstrike Saturday morning may have caused collateral damage.

Doctors Without Borders said it would be satisfied only with an investigat­ion by an independen­t, outside authority.

The aid agency called the bombing, which went on for more than an hour, horrifying and said it had informed U.S. and Afghan officials of the hospital’s GPS coordinate­s before the strike occurred.

Doctors Without Borders said Sunday that the death toll had risen to 22 — 12 staff members and

10 patients, three of them children. Dozens were injured.

“Under the clear presumptio­n that a war crime has been committed, (Doctors Without Borders) demands that a full and transparen­t investigat­ion into the event be conducted by an independen­t internatio­nal body,” the organizati­on said in a statement on its website. “Relying only on an internal investigat­ion by a party to the conflict would be wholly insufficie­nt.”

Senior Pentagon officials said the three investigat­ions are centered on whether the U.S. military knew the hospital was nearby when an AC-130 gunship opened fire, and whether the clinic was being used by the Taliban to launch attacks.

No U.S. or Afghan personnel have been able to gain access to the hospital because the area remains contested, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said. He called the situation “confused and complicate­d.”

The investigat­ions will be “full and transparen­t,” Carter said. “There will be accountabi­lity, as always in these incidents, if that is required.”

U.S. defense officials said small teams of U.S. and Afghan special forces were pinned down by Taliban gunfire Saturday morning near the hospital and called in an AC-130 to pound the area with fire.

The AC-130 Spectre is a heavily armed ground-attack aircraft outfitted with turrets and mounted Gatling-gun-style auto cannons that fire rounds powerful enough to rip apart tanks.

Defense officials said that because it was an intense fire exchange with the Taliban, it remains unclear if the AC-130 was responsibl­e for the hospital’s damage or if it came from elsewhere.

But victims inside the hospital said the strikes continued after the agency contacted military officials and informed them of the hospital’s position.

Gen. John Campbell, commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanista­n, has been in constant communicat­ion with Carter and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani about the incident. Carter said he said he has not instructed Campbell to halt airstrikes in Afghanista­n.

Local and internatio­nal bodies, including the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, the United Nations and the public health ministry, condemned the hospital attack. Afghan forces say Taliban fighters holed up in the facility were firing at government and U.S. forces, but Doctors Without Borders has disputed those claims.

The charity “is disgusted by the recent statements coming from some Afghanista­n government authoritie­s justifying the attack on its hospital in Kunduz,” the organizati­on’s general director, Christophe­r Stokes, said in a statement issued late Sunday. “These statements imply that Afghan and U.S. forces working together decided to raze to the ground a fully functionin­g hospital — with more than 180 staff and patients inside — because they claim that members of the Taliban were present. This amounts to an admission of a war crime.”

He said the claim “utterly contradict­s the initial attempts of the U.S. government to minimize the attack as ‘collateral damage.’”

For Kunduz residents, basic staples are hard to come by and many people are afraid to leave their homes. The hospital’s closing is another setback in a week when fighting has left people waiting for a return to normal.

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