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UN probes claims US airstrike; Indian cross-border fire kills three
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Nov 7, 2016


Indian cross-border fire kills three: Pakistan
Muzaffarabad, Pakistan (AFP) Nov 7, 2016 - Pakistan accused India of killing three people including a policeman and wounding four others in cross-border firing Monday, at a time of heightened tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals.

The incidents occurred near the border dividing Indian-held Kashmir from the Pakistani sector of the territory.

"A policeman, a man and a woman were killed when Indian troops opened fire across the border in Nakyal sector," local official Zeeshan Nisar told AFP, adding four were wounded.

Nakyal lies on the Line of Control, the de facto border dividing the disputed Himalayan state between India and Pakistan, where firing which started early Monday was still continuing.

Nisar said three people were also wounded in the Neelum Valley by Indian troops.

Adnan Khursheed, another local official, confirmed the firing and casualties.

Separately, six people including two women were wounded in overnight cross-border firing in the Madarpur sector which also damaged 25 houses and three vehicles, local government official Chaudhry Altaf told AFP.

Officials in Nakyal sector say thousands of people have fled their homes due to the firing, though they were unable to confirm precise figures. More than 70 schools have also been closed in Nakyal and Goi sectors, authorities said.

Last week authorities on both sides closed hundreds of schools along frontier areas in the south of the territory when cross-border firing killed 14 residents.

Relations between the two countries have plummeted in recent months, with India blaming Pakistani militants for a raid on an army base in its part of Kashmir in September that killed 19 soldiers.

India said it responded by carrying out strikes across the heavily-militarised border, although Islamabad denies these took place.

The neighbours have been engaged in a diplomatic tit-for-tat ever since.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from Britain in 1947. Both claim the territory in full and have fought two wars over the mountainous region.

Tensions in Indian-administered Kashmir were already high before the army base attack over the July 8 death of a popular militant leader, with nearly 90 people killed in clashes with security forces since then.

The United Nations is investigating claims that up to 32 civilians were killed in a US airstrike in the volatile Afghan province of Kunduz last week, calling any loss of civilian life "unacceptable".

The strike early last Thursday triggered angry protests in Kunduz, with local officials saying at least 30 people had been killed, many of them children whose mutilated bodies were paraded through the streets by grieving relatives.

Civilian casualties caused by NATO forces have been one of the most contentious issues in the 15-year campaign against the insurgents, prompting strong public and government criticism.

US forces have conceded that the strike "very likely" resulted in civilian casualties and pledged a full investigation into the incident. A State Department spokesman called it a "terrible event".

The killings came just days before the US presidential election, in which Afghanistan has received scarcely a passing mention -- even though the situation there will be an urgent matter for the new president.

Either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton will inherit America's longest war with no end in sight.

It was also the second time in just over a year that a US airstrike has gone wrong in Kunduz.

Last year, a US air strike during fighting hit a hospital operated by Medecins Sans Frontieres on October 3, killing 42 people and sparking international outrage.

Late Sunday the UN's mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) announced it is investigating the allegations surrounding Thursday's strike.

"Preliminary findings indicate that the aerial operation killed at least 32 civilians and injured an additional 19 civilians, the vast majority of whom were women and children," a UNAMA statement said.

"The loss of civilian life is unacceptable and undermines efforts toward building peace and stability in Afghanistan," said Tadamichi Yamamoto, the UN special envoy to Afghanistan.

"When conducting aerial operations, international military forces should take all feasible measures to minimize civilian harm, including full analysis of the context for aerial strikes."

Thursday's strike came after a Taliban assault left two American soldiers and three Afghan special forces soldiers dead in the Boz-e-Kandahari area near the provincial capital.

Errant air strikes contributed to a 42 percent jump this year in casualties caused by pro-government forces compared to last year, according to the UN.


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Previous Report
THE STANS
US air strikes kill 30 Afghan civilians, officials say
Kunduz, Afghanistan (AFP) Nov 3, 2016
US air strikes early Thursday killed at least 30 Afghan civilians, including women and children, in the volatile northern province of Kunduz, officials said, after a Taliban assault left two American soldiers dead. The strike triggered emotionally charged protests in the provincial capital, with the victims' relatives parading mutilated bodies of dead children piled into open trucks through ... read more


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