Santa Fe New Mexican

Family of 14 dies in U.S. airstrike

American officials deny deceased were civilians

- By Najim Rahim and Rod Nordland

KUNDUZ, Afghanista­n — Fourteen members of a family, including three small children, were killed in northern Afghanista­n when a U.S. airstrike destroyed their home, several Afghan officials confirmed Friday.

In what has become a familiar litany, particular­ly in Talibandom­inated Kunduz province, Afghan and U.S. officials had initially denied that any civilians had been killed in the strike Thursday, claiming the victims were Taliban fighters.

Then 11 bodies belonging to women and children appeared at the hospital in Kunduz City, about four miles from the site of the attack in Chardara district. The Taliban does not have female fighters, and the children were very young.

Soon after the attack, district officials described the incident as an airstrike that went wrong, in which only civilians were killed. “There were 12 killed and one wounded by American jets in Chardara district, and all casualties are civilians,” said Abdul Karim, the local police chief. Two other children were later counted as dead because they were known to have been in the house, although their remains could not be found in the rubble, residents and relatives said.

Residents and local officials said 20 people had lived in the house, all members of an extended family. Of the 14 family members killed, eight were women and three were children, officials said. Two other children from the family were hospitaliz­ed with serious wounds, a girl, 3, and a boy, 5.

Three other children escaped from the house when the attack began, and one man, the father of the wounded children, was not home at the time of the attack.

On Friday, the United Nations office in Kabul called the reports “credible” and said it was investigat­ing.

Farther from the scene, however, military officials dismissed the possibilit­y of civilian fatalities.

The executive officer of an Afghan army unit on the front line in Chardara did not mince words. “It is propaganda by the enemy,” the officer, Maj. Saifuddin Azizi of the 10th commando battalion, said. “We deny there were any civilian casualties. Foreign troops are our friends ,and we don’t target civilians. When the foreign troops decide to attack somewhere, first of all they check everything and then they launch the operation.”

If there were any civilian casualties, Azizi said, the Taliban must have attacked the victims with rockets.

In Kabul, Lt. Col. Martin L. O’Donnell, a U.S. military spokesman, was also unequivoca­l. “U.S. forces did conduct strikes in support of Afghan-led ground operations in Chardara district, Kunduz province,” O’Donnell said in an email. “An on-the-ground assessment of those strikes reveals no indication­s they caused civilian casualties.”

By late Thursday, however, provincial authoritie­s in Kunduz had begun to change their accounts as angry relatives besieged their offices. Villagers shared cellphone photograph­s of the bomb site and the victims, and witnesses spoke out. “There wasn’t a single armed person in those homes,” said Hajji Sherin Agha, a local elder.

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