U.S.-led coalition troops killed three men, two children
and a woman, in a raid in southeastern Afghanistan, provincial
officials and village residents said on Wednesday.
They said the victims, from the families of two brothers,
were all civilians, but the U.S. military said the two brothers
were involved in conducting bombing operations using improvised
explosive devices.
The issue of civilian casualties is a sensitive one as
it undermines public support for the presence of foreign
troops and the pro-Western government of President Hamid
Karzai.
"We will join the jihad" and "Death to Bush",
chanted residents of the village of Muqibel in the province
of Khost where the incident happened overnight.
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Foreign troops raided two adjacent houses belonging to
two brothers and killed three men, two children and a woman
from the two families, district governor Gul Qasim told
Reuters.
The children, both boys no older than 10, had bullet wounds
to the head and chest, a Reuters witness said.
A large angry crowd of men gathered as villagers helped
the local imam wash the bodies before burial. Women could
be heard screaming and wailing from inside the houses.
"I condemn this strongly," Khost province Governor
Arsala Jamal told reporters. "Afghan (forces) were
not involved. It was a breach of the promise by coalition
troops that they would coordinate operations with us. It
is a challenge for us and it alienates people."
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