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US probes Afghan air strikes that killed 17 'civilians'
by Staff Writers
Khost, Afghanistan (AFP) April 14, 2016


US anger over Syria doctor killed in 'targeted strike'
Washington (AFP) April 14, 2016 - The United States expressed outrage Thursday over the death of a leading Syrian doctor in what officials said appeared to be a targeted air strike.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said Doctor Hassan al-Araj had been a respected community leader and health professional in the northern town of Hama.

"The early indications are this doctor was deliberately targeted and killed, and all he was trying to do was save lives," he said.

Kirby did not say who was behind the "alleged air strike" but when asked who operates warplanes in the area said: "Well, the Russians do. The Russians do."

British-based monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Araj died in an air strike near a hospital outside near Hama.

Reports identify Araj as a renowned cardiologist in his 40s who operated a hospital and field clinics in an area around Hama held by anti-regime rebels.

Kirby said "initial indications" showed the apparent strike hit the doctor "in a car, by himself, on a road in a remote area, nobody else around."

"He was a widely respected and beloved medical professional," the US spokesman said, praising the doctor for setting up clinics to treat war victims.

"Attacks against civilians, particularly medical professionals, are just abhorrent," he said.

"And we continue to call on everybody -- particularly the regime -- to respect the right of medical professionals to do their jobs and to save lives."

Syria's five-year civil war has dropped in intensity since a shaky ceasefire began in February and UN-mediated peace talks got under way in Geneva.

But the truce is violated daily and US officials say the most attacks are launched by Russian-backed regime forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The US military is investigating air strikes it carried out this month in Afghanistan which Kabul said killed 17 "insurgents" but local officials and witnesses insisted Thursday were civilians.

US forces regularly launch air strikes in the name of counter-terror operations in the eastern regions bordering Pakistan, where the Taliban, Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda fighters have strongholds.

On April 6 "US forces conducted two counter-terrorism strikes in Paktika" province, Brigadier General Charles Cleveland said in a statement to AFP.

"Currently there is no evidence of civilian casualties. However, we are conducting a thorough investigation into the strikes," he added, without saying why they were carried out or the number of victims.

Haji Hussain Khan, a tribal elder from Gomal district, said three drone strikes killed 17 people.

"They were civilians who were carrying weapons for their own protection as the area is not under government control," he said.

District governor Shaista Khan corroborated the account, saying those killed were members of the Kakarzai tribe returning from a meeting over a land dispute.

"The 17 victims were all civilians. There were youths and tribal elders among them," he said.

But an Afghan official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the dead were "armed insurgents linked to Al-Qaeda".

"All the victims were armed insurgents," Paktika governor Aminullah Shariq added.

Later Thursday, Cleveland told Pentagon reporters in a video call that the US military conducted "just under" 100 counter-terrorism strikes in the first three months of the year in Afghanistan.

Most of these focused on the IS group and were carried out in Nangarhar province, on the border with Pakistan.

The strikes come at a fragile moment in Afghanistan, where local troops assumed responsibility for the country's security at the start of 2015, taking over from NATO forces.

Since then, the Taliban have hit local troops hard, including the brief capture of the major city of Kunduz, jolting confidence Afghan government forces can hold their own.

Cleveland said about 5,500 Afghan security forces were killed last year alone.

"That's very difficult for any military to sustain... but the military did not collapse," Cleveland noted, adding he was optimistic Afghan forces would fare better in 2016.

Further complicating the picture, the US military estimates between 1,000 and 3,000 IS fighters are now in Afghanistan.

"It's probably on the lower end of that," Cleveland said.

The IS fighters comprise disaffected Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, as well as Uzbek Islamists and locals.

Also present are 100-300 Al-Qaeda fighters, Cleveland said, and are rivals of the IS group.


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