NATO fails to stop civilian deaths: Karzai
Sun, 21 Feb 2010 10:45:00
KABUL – Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that NATO’s efforts to prevent civilian deaths...
NATO fails to stop civilian deaths: Karzai
Posted by Saudi Gazette Sunday, 21 February 2010 - 07 Rabi Al-Awaal 1431 H
KABUL
– Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that NATO’s
efforts to prevent civilian deaths during its operations are not enough
because innocent people keep dying, as the military alliance continued
its offensive in a key Taliban stronghold.
In a speech at the
opening session of the Afghan parliament, Karzai also repeated his call
to Taliban fighters to renounce Al-Qaeda and join with the government
– an appeal that may have more resonance after recent arrests of
Taliban leaders in Pakistan.
Karzai held up a picture of an
8-year-old girl who he said was the only one left to recover the bodies
of her 12 relatives, all killed when two NATO rockets struck their home
during the offensive in the southern town of Marjah. He called the incident a tragedy for all Afghanistan.
Karzai
said NATO has made progress in reducing civilian casualties and air
bombardments – which have been responsible for some of the
largest incidents of civilian deaths. And he thanked NATO commander
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who attended the speech, for “standing
with us honestly in this effort.” However, Karzai stressed that
the effort is not sufficient.
“We need to reach the point where
there are no civilian casualties,” Karzai said. “Our effort
and our criticism will continue until we reach that goal.”
His
comments came as NATO reported that its troops killed another civilian
in Marjah, bringing the civilian death toll from the operation to at
least 16.
NATO troops fired on the man after he dropped a box that
they believed held a bomb and started running toward them, NATO said in
a statement. They later found that the box contained materials that
could have been used to make a bomb, but no explosive.
Despite the presence of the suspicious materials, NATO categorized the dead man as a civilian.
The
unit involved will meet with local leaders to discuss how to keep such
incidents from happening again, and make a traditional condolence
payment to his family, NATO said.
The week-old operation in Marjah
is a major test of a new NATO strategy that stresses protecting
civilians over routing insurgents as quickly as possible.
But the
strategy has proved difficult. The painstaking process of separating
out innocent people from militants has also slowed troops’
progress in gaining control of the town.
In Marjah Saturday, small
arms fire and single sniper rounds intensified in a pocket near the
center of town as insurgent gun squads tried to close in on Marines,
who fought back with their own sniper fire and grenade launchers.
“Fighting
remains difficult in the northeast and west of Marjah, but insurgent
activity is not limited to those areas,” NATO said in a
statement, a reminder that they continue to face stubborn resistance in
the town of 80,000. – AP
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Article by:
Associated Press
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