Nato Afghanistan Kunar air strike 'kills 10'

  • Published
A wounded Afghan boy receives treatment at a hospital in Kunar province
Image caption,
Several children were also reported injured in the strike

At least 10 civilians, mostly women and children, have been killed in a Nato air strike in Kunar province in Afghanistan, local officials say.

At least three Taliban commanders were also said to have died in the attack.

The Nato-led Isaf force said it was aware of the reports of civilian deaths and was "looking into the circumstances" of the incident.

"We take every allegation of civilian casualties very seriously," Isaf said on its Twitter feed.

Several civilians were also injured in the raid.

"It is possible that those killed inside the house were family members of Taliban commanders or that Taliban commanders were taking refuge there," an Afghan government official told the BBC.

President Hamid Karzai ordered an inquiry and condemned the air strike. His office issued a statement saying that the war against terrorism was not to be fought in Afghan villages.

The strike took place in the Shegal district of Kunar, a province in the east of Afghanistan that borders Pakistan.

Last year a US drone attack killed Mullah Dadullah, a high-ranking Pakistani Taliban commander, in the same area.

Wednesday's strike came hours after US President Barack Obama confirmed plans for the withdrawal of roughly half of the 66,000 US troops in Afghanistan by early 2014.

The issue of civilian deaths caused by Nato strikes has been one of the greatest sources of tension between the US and Afghan officials, with President Karzai frequently speaking out in anger over deaths.

Earlier this month a UN report accused the US of killing hundreds of children in air strikes over the past four years.

The number of child casualties had doubled in 2010-2011 due to a "lack of precautionary measures and use of indiscriminate force", the study found.

Isaf called the claims "categorically unfounded" and "false".

Related Internet Links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.