Fifty one villagers including women and children were killed in recent fighting in Western Afghanistan, provincial officials reported Wednesday. But the U.S.-led coalition said it had no reports of civilian deaths.
The coalition says two military operations, including airstrikes, conducted between Friday and Sunday by U.S. and Afghan forces in Herat province's Zerkoh Valley killed 136 suspected Taliban - the deadliest fighting in Afghanistan since January.
The bloodshed sparked angry anti-U.S. protests this week by villagers, and Mohammad Homayoun Azizi, chief of the Herat provincial council, said two council members who visited the area reported to him that 51 civilians were killed.
The officials were part of a high-level delegation including lawmakers, police and intelligence officials who investigated the incident.
Azizi said the 51 bodies were buried in three different locations and included women and children. The dead included 12 relatives of a man named Jamal Mirzai, he said.
"People say the coalition troops should cooperate with the government, including Afghan forces. They should also be careful in civilian areas," Azizi said.
Herat regional police commander Akram, who goes by one name, said the delegation had also reported to Herat's military council on Wednesday that there were 51 civilian deaths, including 18 children and women, and that eight people were listed as missing.
A separate group of U.N. officials was in the region to investigate. They were focusing on the "possible displacement of people and possible indiscriminate use of force," said Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan.
He did not have further details on the U.N.'s findings.
Sgt. Dean Welch, a spokesman for the coalition, said Wednesday that its units were still operating in Zerkoh Valley, but have no reports of civilian casualties yet.
In a statement on Monday, it said coalition and Afghan forces had destroyed seven Taliban positions in the valley and killed 87 fighters during a 14-hour engagement Sunday, including an airstrike. Another 49 Taliban were killed two days earlier by a combination of gunfire and an airstrike. One U.S. soldier was also killed, the coalition said.
Afghan officials have pleaded repeatedly with international forces to exercise caution to prevent civilian casualties during their operations.
Reports of civilian deaths have deepened Afghans' distrust of the international forces and of the U.S.-backed government as they try to combat a resurgent Taliban militia - itself accused of indiscriminate attacks that often claim civilian lives.
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