RT: NATO has officially confirmed that two Australian troops accidentally butchered two Afghan children in southern Afghanistan. The children were
tending cattle when they were slaughtered.
An official statement was made by the alliance after Afghan and
ISAF investigators visited Uruzgan province: "The boys were
killed when Coalition forces fired at what they thought were
insurgent forces," Reuters quoted ISAF head US General Joseph
Dunford as saying.
General Dunford also offered a “personal apology and condolences to the family of the boys who were killed."
The two children, 7 and 8 years old, were killed on February 28 during an attack in the southern province of Uruzgan. Australian troops were reportedly responding to an earlier attack in which Taliban militants shot at a helicopter carrying Australian soldiers.
The Australian Defense Department has not revealed further
details on the attack, but confirmed an “operational incident” in
the province, and that there were no Australian Defense Force
casualties, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.
Earlier on Saturday a spokesperson for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said that they were aware of an incident that “involves possible allegations of civilian casualties,” but did not confirm any other details.
“Obviously, we are taking these allegations very seriously,” the spokesperson added, and confirmed that an incident assessment team in the region was “looking into it.”
Excessive civilian casualties and deaths in the country at the hands of the NATO-led occupying force have been an ongoing problem, and extremely contentious issue. This February, at least 8 civilians, including women and children, were killed in a separate airstrike.
Despite United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) reporting a 12 percent drop in overall civilian casualties in 2012, the same report, released this February, detailed 7,559 civilian casualties that year, including 2,754 civilian deaths overall. The high numbers have garnered criticism from Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
The majority of Australia's 1,550 troops are based in Uruzgan, which is considered a fairly restive area. The troops focus on training and mentoring Afghan soldiers prior to next year’s withdrawal of NATO troops.
Source
banzai7
General Dunford also offered a “personal apology and condolences to the family of the boys who were killed."
The two children, 7 and 8 years old, were killed on February 28 during an attack in the southern province of Uruzgan. Australian troops were reportedly responding to an earlier attack in which Taliban militants shot at a helicopter carrying Australian soldiers.
Earlier on Saturday a spokesperson for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said that they were aware of an incident that “involves possible allegations of civilian casualties,” but did not confirm any other details.
“Obviously, we are taking these allegations very seriously,” the spokesperson added, and confirmed that an incident assessment team in the region was “looking into it.”
Excessive civilian casualties and deaths in the country at the hands of the NATO-led occupying force have been an ongoing problem, and extremely contentious issue. This February, at least 8 civilians, including women and children, were killed in a separate airstrike.
Despite United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) reporting a 12 percent drop in overall civilian casualties in 2012, the same report, released this February, detailed 7,559 civilian casualties that year, including 2,754 civilian deaths overall. The high numbers have garnered criticism from Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
The majority of Australia's 1,550 troops are based in Uruzgan, which is considered a fairly restive area. The troops focus on training and mentoring Afghan soldiers prior to next year’s withdrawal of NATO troops.
Source
banzai7
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