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10 children killed by US air strikes in Afghanistan, says UN

Battle lasted about 30 hours in northern Kunduz province

Rod Nickel
KABUL, Afghanistan
Monday 25 March 2019 14:51 GMT
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U.S. Army specialist helped by comrades into a Black Hawk helicopter during a medical evacuation operation near the Arghandab river in Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan
U.S. Army specialist helped by comrades into a Black Hawk helicopter during a medical evacuation operation near the Arghandab river in Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan (REUTERS)

Ten children, part of the same extended family, were killed by a US air strike in Afghanistan, along with three adult civilians, the United Nations said on Monday.

The air strike early on Saturday was part of a battle between the Taliban and combined Afghan and U.S. forces that lasted about 30 hours in Kunduz, a northern province where the Taliban insurgency is strong.

The children and their family had been displaced by fighting elsewhere in the country, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said, releasing its preliminary findings about the incident. UNAMA said in a statement that it is verifying that all 13 civilian casualties occurred around the time of the air strike.

Three other civilians were wounded. The incident happened in the Telawka neighbourhood near Kunduz city.

Seargent Debra Richardson, spokeswoman for the NATO-led Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan, confirmed that US forces carried out an air strike, but she said on Monday that the mission still had not confirmed that it had caused civilian casualties.

She said the mission aims to prevent civilian casualties, while the Taliban intentionally hides among civilians.

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A record number of Afghan civilians were killed last year as aerial attacks and suicide bombings increased, the United Nations said in a February report. Child casualties from air strikes have increased every year since 2014.

Fighting has accelerated during a period of recurring talks between US and Taliban officials aimed at ending Afghanistan's 17-year war.

Reuters

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