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2006-05-22 Afghanistan
Airstrike in South Afghanistan Kills 76
More details:U.S.-led coalition aircraft bombed a rebel stronghold in southern Afghanistan, killing about 60 suspected Taliban militants and 16 civilians, an Afghan governor said Monday. The coalition confirmed the strike on the village of Azizi in Kandahar province late Sunday and early Monday and said about 50 militants were killed. U.S. commander Lt. Gen. Karl W. Eikenberry told The Associated Press the military was investigating whether some civilians had also died.

The new deaths brought the toll of militants, Afghan forces and coalition soldiers killed to more than 265 since Wednesday, when a storm of violence broke out in the south — among the deadliest combat in Afghanistan since the Taliban's ouster in 2001.

Kandahar Gov. Asadullah Khalid said 16 civilians were killed in Monday's attack and 16 were wounded and taken to hospitals in Kandahar city, a former Taliban stronghold. "These sort of accidents happen during fighting, especially when the Taliban are hiding in homes," he said. "I urge people not to give shelter to the Taliban."

U.S. military spokesman Col. Tom Collins said the coalition forces targeted a Taliban compound and "we're certain we hit the right target." "It's common that the enemy fights in close to civilians as a means to protect its own forces," he added.

Many of the wounded sought treatment at Kandahar city's Mirwaise Hospital. One man with blood smeared over his clothes and turban said insurgents had been hiding in an Islamic religious school, or madrassa, in the village after fierce fighting in recent days. "Helicopters bombed the madrassa and some of the Taliban ran from there and into people's homes. Then those homes were bombed," said Haji Ikhlaf, 40. "I saw 35 to 40 dead Taliban and around 50 dead or wounded civilians." Another survivor from the village, Zurmina Bibi, who was cradling her wounded 8-month-old baby, said about 10 people were killed in her home, including three or four children. "There were dead people everywhere," she said, crying.

A doctor, Mohammed Khan, said he had treated 10 people from the village. Moments later, a pickup vehicle pulled up at the hospital with five men lying wounded in the back. It was not possible for reporters to reach Azizi village because police and foreign troops had blocked off the area, which is about 30 miles southwest of Kandahar.

The village is also known by the name Hajiyan. It is made up of about 30-35 large mud-brick compounds, each housing an extended family with up to 50 members. The village has a mosque and one madrassa, where boys study. It has no electricity and relies on wells for water. The Taliban resurgence, despite the presence of more than 30,000 foreign troops, including 23,000 from the United States in Afghanistan, has halted postwar reconstruction work in many areas and raised fears for this country's future.

Meanwhile in other violence, Mohammed Ali Jalali, the former governor of eastern Paktika province, was found dead after being kidnapped Sunday, local police chief Abdul Rehman Surjung said. Jalali was a respected tribal elder and a supporter of President Hamid Karzai.
Posted by Steve 2006-05-22 07:51|| || Front Page|| [13 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 Destruction of a madrassa? A religious school?? Expect choregraphed mass-seething from the Islamic world in 5.. 4.. 3..
Posted by Howard UK 2006-05-22 08:45||   2006-05-22 08:45|| Front Page Top

#2 I guess the real lesson here is that you don't want Taliban living anywhere near your house and kids. 500 meters away at least.
Posted by bigjim-ky 2006-05-22 09:07||   2006-05-22 09:07|| Front Page Top

#3 If they are giving sanctuary to the Taliban then they are collaborators, not civilians, plain and simple. We are fighting an insurgency, not a declaird military. The support structure for the insurgency, the sanctuary, comes from the villages that side with the insurgents. This makes them a fair target.
Posted by 49 Pan">49 Pan  2006-05-22 09:22||   2006-05-22 09:22|| Front Page Top

#4 In Afghanland many of the people who give the Taliban shelter do so because of coersion and in some cases the Taliban just take the shelter and essentially make the former tenants into hostages.

The death of such people is unfortunate. However, their death is not our fault -- it is the fault of the Taliban who, in no way, are operating under the laws of war.
Posted by mhw 2006-05-22 09:35||   2006-05-22 09:35|| Front Page Top

#5 mhw is right, often these civilians have no choice but to accept the Taliban, but their lives have to be weighed against the lives of other Afghan civilians who are being murdered by the Talib goons. Every Talib killed means civilians lived saved and future reconstruction projects secured.
Posted by Apostate 2006-05-22 09:55||   2006-05-22 09:55|| Front Page Top

#6 Forgive my nosiness, Apostate, and you needn't answer of course, but are you truly a Muslim apostate, or did you choose that nym (nic? I still am not sure of the appropriate terminology, sorry) for another reason? I ask only because if you are coming from a Muslim perpective, that puts a different colour on your comments than otherwise, just as anonymous5089's and JFM's comments about the situation in France weigh more because they are Frenchmen living there, or liberalhawk's, mhw's and Frank G's about Israel because they actually understand Israeli politics.
Posted by trailing wife 2006-05-22 11:49||   2006-05-22 11:49|| Front Page Top

#7 Trailing wife, I was born into a muslim family living in the West. I have never practised the muslim faith (or believed in Islam), but that doesn't stop me from being an apostate under Islamic law. I reckon there are many like me in the West, i.e. muslims who do not believe in the religion of their birth but don't shout about it so as not to upset their families. This is worth bearing in mind when you hear people mention "the fasting-growing religion" and similar phrases.
Posted by Apostate 2006-05-22 17:46||   2006-05-22 17:46|| Front Page Top

#8 Thank you, Apostate. Yours is an important voice here at Rantburg, to counter the fear that all those born Muslim are an active or supportive threat to our hard fought-for freedoms. Especially as we are deeply aware that the sentence for apostasy is not merely parental disappointment, but death.
Posted by trailing wife 2006-05-22 22:00||   2006-05-22 22:00|| Front Page Top

#9 Welcome from me too.
Posted by lotp 2006-05-22 22:15||   2006-05-22 22:15|| Front Page Top

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