KABUL (Reuters) - President Hamid Karzai said U.S. forces had bombed a
home in southern Afghanistan, killing a small child and wounding two
women, and condemned the attack as a sign of disregard for civilian
lives, his spokesman said on Thursday.
The strike could not have come at a worse time, as Karzai is engaged in
a stand-off with the U.S. government over a bilateral security
agreement that will decide whether U.S. troop stay in Afghanistan beyond
2014.
"It shows that U.S. forces have no respect for the
decisions of the Loya Jirga and life of civilians in Afghanistan," said
Karzai's spokesman, Aimal Faizi.
"If such operations continue, there will be no agreement."
The United States has threatened to pull its troops out of Afghanistan
after 2014 - an outcome known as the "zero option", as it did in Iraq
two years ago - unless a deal is clinched by the end of this year,
Karzai, however, has so far refused to sign, despite getting approval
from the Loya Jirga last week. The council almost unanimously advised
him to seal the agreement promptly, saying this was in the national
interest.
Karzai instead has refused and made additional demands
on the United States, including the return of all Afghan prisoners from
its prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The child killed in
Thursday's bombing was two or three years old, Faizi said, adding that
the attack took place after the targeted individual ran into a home for
safety.
"They give no importance to the life of civilians. They are killing civilians like flies," Faizi said.
"That should have been a red line for them... Even if he was an insurgent they shouldn't have fired on the house."
A man was killed in a separate strike in the same province on Thursday
afternoon, Faizi added. Local officials had yet to confirm whether the
victim was an insurgent or not.
(Reporting by Jessica Donati and Mirwais Harooni; editing by Mark Trevelyan)
Source: Yahoo News
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