BFF-29 Eight civilians killed in Afghanistan air strike: officials

236

ZCZC

BFF-29

AFGHANISTAN-CONFLICT-US-STRIKE

Eight civilians killed in Afghanistan air strike: officials

JALALABAD, Afghanistan, Feb 15, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – An air strike in
Afghanistan has killed at least eight civilians, officials said Saturday, as
the war-torn country prepares for a “reduction in violence” under a deal
between Taliban militants and the United States.

The incident took place in the eastern province of Nangarhar on Friday when
a vehicle carrying civilians was struck, according to Ataullah Khogyani, a
spokesman for the provincial governor.

“The target of the attack was Taliban militants who wanted to establish
checkpoints on the road, but unfortunately civilians were hit,” he told AFP,
putting the death toll at eight.

Talib Khan, a relative of the dead, told AFP the victims had been driving
home from a picnic when their truck was hit, killing everyone inside.

Another relative, Shah Mir, 70, said: “No other breadwinner is left in my
house, all my three sons were killed. I have a dozen grandchildren, I don’t
know how to bring them up.”

It was not immediately clear who bombed the vehicle, but the US and Afghan
militaries are the only forces in Afghanistan conducting air strikes.

A US military spokesman said they were “looking into the incident” and an
Afghan defence ministry spokesman said they had launched an investigation.

The strike comes after US Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Thursday an
agreement with the Taliban was in place for a “conditions-based” seven-day
reduction in violence.

The move is part of a long quest to forge a deal that could eventually lead
to a comprehensive ceasefire.

It was not clear when the reduction in violence would start — a Taliban
official said it was imminent and a US official said Friday it would begin
“really soon”.

A UN agency in Afghanistan in December reported that more than 100,000
Afghan civilians had been killed or wounded over the past decade — a grim
milestone after more than 18 years of war since US and NATO allies invaded
the country following the September 11 attacks in 2001.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1732 hrs