Reuters, March 2, 2013


Two Afghan boys killed by NATO troops

The two boys were shot dead when they were mistaken for insurgents during an operation

NATO forces accidentally shot dead two boys during an operation in Afghanistan's south, the alliance said on Saturday, in the latest in a series of incidents involving allegations of civilian deaths at the hands of international troops.

The shooting in the southern province of Uruzgan could further strain the relationship between the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who has demanded U.S. Special Forces leave another province over allegations of torture.

The two boys were shot dead when they were mistaken for insurgents during an operation in the northwest of Uruzgan on February 28, ISAF commander, U.S. General Joseph Dunford, said in a statement.


A wounded Afghan boy receives treatment at a hospital in Kunar province after being injured in NATO airstrike
February 13, 2013: A wounded Afghan boy receives treatment at a hospital in Kunar province. A NATO air strike killed 10 civilians, mostly women and children, in a raid on a Taliban hideout in a remote region of eastern Afghanistan, local officials said. "Five children, four women and a man were killed in the raid," Kunar provincial governor, Sayed Fazulullah Wahidi, told AFP. (Photo: AFP)

"I offer my personal apology and condolences to the family of the boys who were killed," Dunford said in the statement.

"The boys were killed when Coalition forces fired at what they thought were insurgent forces," he said.

A team of Afghan and ISAF investigators visited the village on Saturday and met with local leaders, Dunford said.

Australian forces, who are deployed in Uruzgan, said earlier there had been an "operational incident" in the province but gave no details.

On February 13 a NATO air strike requested by Afghan forces killed 10 people - including five children and four women - in the eastern province of Kunar, prompting Karzai to ban his troops from requesting foreign air strikes.

Two weeks later he halted all special forces operations in the central province of Wardak after a series of allegations involving U.S. special forces soldiers and Afghan men said to be working with them.

(The story is corrected to add dropped word in title of NATO force in paragraph 2)

(Reporting by Dylan Welch and Mirwais Harooni; Writing by Dylan Welch; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

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