Police in Afghanistan said Wednesday that US-led air strikes against insurgents had killed 100 people, most of them civilians, in one of the deadliest such attacks in nearly eight years. The US military opened an investigation into the operation overnight Monday into Tuesday in the remote western province of Farah, as Afghan President Hamid Karzai ordered his government to probe reports of high civilian casualties.
"During the aerial bombardment and ground operations, more than 100 people have died," western Afghanistan police spokesman Abdul Rauf Ahmadi told AFP, basing his information on reports from police, the Red Cross and locals.
"Twenty-five to 30 of them are Taliban, including from Chechnya and Pakistan, and the rest are civilians including children, women and elderly people," he said. Teams from the Afghan government, international forces and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) would travel to the area to investigate, he added.
Deputy provincial governor Mohammad Younus Rasouli said that he had seen the bodies of 20 children brought by villagers to the provincial capital, also called Farah. The clashes and air strikes were in volatile Bala Buluk, district about 600 kilometres (350 miles) south-west of Kabul.
Provincial police chief Abdul Ghafar Watandar also said 100 people had been killed in two villages in the district, at least 30 of them civilians. "Now we are trying to find out what number of them are combatants and what number are civilians," he said.
Taliban were in control of the area, making it difficult to verify numbers, Farah province governor Rohul Amin said. Insurgents who attacked the security forces took shelter in civilian homes, accounting for at least some of the civilian casualties, he said.
"Dozens of people were killed, including women and children," ICRC spokeswoman Jessica Barry told AFP. One of the dead was a community volunteer for the Afghan Red Crescent Society, who was killed along with 13 members of his family, she said.