The Columbus Dispatch

Civilians killed in Afghan-us operation

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KABUL, Afghanista­n — Anti-taliban raids by Afghan forces backed by U.S. airstrikes killed at least 40 civilians attending a wedding party in the southern Helmand province, Afghan officials said.

The civilian deaths in Sunday night’s raids on Taliban hideouts further rattled Afghanista­n amid an upsurge in violence that’s followed the collapse this month of U.s.-taliban peace talks to end America’s longest war.

“We are saddened and devastated to hear that civilians have lost their lives in an incident in Helmand despite President Ghani’s repeated call for extra cautions in conducting military operations,” said Sediq Sediqqi, President Ashraf Ghani’s spokesman.

He added that Helmand’s provincial governor has been instructed to send an investigat­ive team to the area.

Abdul Majed Akhund, deputy provincial councilman, said most of the dead were women and children who were who were at a wedding ceremony in Musa Qala district. An additional 12 civilians were wounded and hospitaliz­ed in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province, Akhund said.

The civilian deaths occurred during the second of two raids undertaken in different areas of Musa Qala, Attahullah Afghan, head of the provincial council, said.

The operations killed 22 Taliban fighters, including foreigners, Afghanista­n’s defense ministry said in a statement. Fourteen people were arrested, including five Pakistani nationals and one Bangladesh­i. The statement said a large warehouse of supplies and equipment was also destroyed.

The raids came after a drone attack last week in eastern Afghanista­n’s Nangarhar province was blamed on U.S. forces. In that strike, at least 16 people were killed and tens of others wounded, most of them civilians. U.S. forces said that attack was targeting Islamic State militants. The violence comes as Afghanista­n prepares for presidenti­al elections on Saturday, a vote the Taliban vehemently oppose.

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