ajpirzada
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Saturday, May 15, 2010
SURKHROD: Police shot dead an Afghan protester in eastern Afghanistan on Friday after hundreds of villagers demonstrated against Nato raids which they said killed 11 civilians overnight, a local official said.
Crowds of men marched through the streets of Surkhrod district in Nangahar province, with chants like Death to Americans, Long Live the Taliban and pelted stones at government buildings before they were fired on by police.
Haji Jamal, head of the local provincial council, told Reuters that one of the protesters had been shot dead by police gunfire. The interior ministry was not immediately available for comment.
The protest erupted after a Nato-led raid overnight in a village in Surkhrod district angered residents who said the raid killed innocent civilians.So-called night raids on Afghan houses by foreign troops in the hours of darkness are a frequent source of friction between the Afghan government and the Nato-led force.
The US and Nato commander, General Stanley McChrystal, has given instructions that night raids be carried out only as a last resort and with Afghan troops in the lead, to prevent incidents where Afghans defending their homes are mistaken for insurgents. McChrystal has however refused to ban night raids outright, as requested by President Hamid Karzai. McChrystals instructions say they can still be an effective and necessary tactic.
Nato-led forces said an overnight operation had taken place in Surkhrod district and that only insurgents had been killed, including a Taliban sub-commander, and no civilians had been harmed.
Reports indicate no civilians were harmed during the operation, a Nato statement said. It did say how many people were killed. Ali Khan, who lives next door to the homes which were raided said he heard helicopters land at about 1 am (2030GMT).
And then the gunshots started. We were terrified and we couldnt come outside, he told Reuters.Dozens of Afghan and foreign troops raided three homes and we found out in the morning that nine people were killed and two others are missing, Khan said.
In a separate incident, an Afghan provincial governor in restive southeast Afghanistan survived an assassination attempt on Friday after a suicide bomber on a bicycle blew himself up near an official motorcade in the town of Gardez.
Afghan protest on civilian deaths turns violent
SURKHROD: Police shot dead an Afghan protester in eastern Afghanistan on Friday after hundreds of villagers demonstrated against Nato raids which they said killed 11 civilians overnight, a local official said.
Crowds of men marched through the streets of Surkhrod district in Nangahar province, with chants like Death to Americans, Long Live the Taliban and pelted stones at government buildings before they were fired on by police.
Haji Jamal, head of the local provincial council, told Reuters that one of the protesters had been shot dead by police gunfire. The interior ministry was not immediately available for comment.
The protest erupted after a Nato-led raid overnight in a village in Surkhrod district angered residents who said the raid killed innocent civilians.So-called night raids on Afghan houses by foreign troops in the hours of darkness are a frequent source of friction between the Afghan government and the Nato-led force.
The US and Nato commander, General Stanley McChrystal, has given instructions that night raids be carried out only as a last resort and with Afghan troops in the lead, to prevent incidents where Afghans defending their homes are mistaken for insurgents. McChrystal has however refused to ban night raids outright, as requested by President Hamid Karzai. McChrystals instructions say they can still be an effective and necessary tactic.
Nato-led forces said an overnight operation had taken place in Surkhrod district and that only insurgents had been killed, including a Taliban sub-commander, and no civilians had been harmed.
Reports indicate no civilians were harmed during the operation, a Nato statement said. It did say how many people were killed. Ali Khan, who lives next door to the homes which were raided said he heard helicopters land at about 1 am (2030GMT).
And then the gunshots started. We were terrified and we couldnt come outside, he told Reuters.Dozens of Afghan and foreign troops raided three homes and we found out in the morning that nine people were killed and two others are missing, Khan said.
In a separate incident, an Afghan provincial governor in restive southeast Afghanistan survived an assassination attempt on Friday after a suicide bomber on a bicycle blew himself up near an official motorcade in the town of Gardez.
Afghan protest on civilian deaths turns violent