Hundreds of Afghan villagers blocked a national highway yesterday to protest the alleged killing of a father and son in a raid by NATO forces in the country’s east.
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said the operation on Tuesday was in pursuit of a Taliban bomb-making expert linked to at least two attacks.
However, provincial police spokesman Abdul Ghafor said that two civilians had been killed when US-led coalition troops raided a house in Surkh Rod District, Nangahar Province, on Tuesday, and another three people detained.
“The coalition forces went into a house and killed a father and a son. They have arrested three people. They are innocent civilians, they are farmers and are not linked to any militant group,” he said.
Ghafor said that police had contacted the interior minister and NATO to try to secure the release of those detained.
ISAF’s statement said the international force had come under fire as it approached a compound and had killed insurgents. The operation had not killed or harmed any civilians, it said.
“As the security force approached the targeted compound ... they immediately received enemy fire from multiple locations. The assault force decisively engaged and killed two of the enemy fighters and disarmed a third,” it said.
Up to 600 residents blocked the main highway in protest yesterday, an Agence-France Presse reporter on the scene said. They chanted “Death to Americans” and “Death to Karzai,” referring to Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
The blocked section of highway connects Nangahar to the border of neighboring Pakistan to the east and to Kabul to the northwest.
Civilian casualties are an incendiary issue in Afghanistan, often cited by Karzai, who has repeatedly urged international forces to take preventative steps and conduct operations jointly with Afghan troops.
The overwhelming majority of civilian deaths and injuries in the Afghan war have been blamed on the Taliban, who rely largely on roadside bombs and suicide attackers, which kill and maim indiscriminately.
Civilian casualties rose by 31 percent in the first six months of this year, the UN said last week, with casualties among children up 55 percent.
The number of deaths caused by insurgents had risen from half in the same period last year, now accounting for 76 percent of the 1,271 deaths and 1,997 people wounded, it said in a report.
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