Airstrike kills 20 in Afghanistan’s Helmand province

An injured boy receives treatment at a hospital after an airstrike in Helmand province, in southern Afghanistan. (AP Photo)
Updated 29 November 2018
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Airstrike kills 20 in Afghanistan’s Helmand province

  • Authorities investigating if the deaths caused by Afghan or US-led troops
  • Civilian casualties have risen sharply following escalation of foreign and Afghan operations, says UN

KABUL: At least 20 people, all believed to be members of a single family, were killed in an airstrike during a joint operation against Taliban militants in Afghanistan’s southern Helmand province, local officials said on Wednesday. 

The deaths add to the growing number of casualties among noncombatants in the country’s widening war.

Ghafoor Javid, a spokesman for the defense ministry in Kabul, told Arab News that authorities were investigating to find out if the deaths were caused by Afghan or US-led troops.

The airstrike was carried out overnight in Zemarai Darab village in Helmand’s Garmsir district.

A coalition spokesman also said an investigation was underway.

“The initial information is that both Taliban and civilians were killed. We do not know how many. Phones are not working there, so it will take time to find out how many,” Karim Attal, head of the provincial council for Helmand, said.

The office for Helmand’s governor also confirmed the fatalities among civilians, but declined to say how many.

A local source put the death toll at 20 and said all the victims appeared to belong to one family.

Women and children were among the dead, he said. Images on social media showed several burnt bodies and graphic pictures of child casualties.

The deaths follow a recent escalation in fighting in Afghanistan. According to the UN, civilian casualties caused by foreign and Afghan operations have risen dramatically.

“Relentless attacks leading to large numbers of casualties are beating down Afghans’ morale,” the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement.

“Civilian casualties in this country have risen for eight years in a row, with violence in 2018 killing a record number of citizens — 1,692 — in the first six months alone,” it said.

Deaths among noncombatants have led to a widening rift between the populace and the Afghan government and foreign troops.

Thousands of civilians have died in operations by Afghan and foreign troops in recent years, according to estimates, with noncombatants also bearing the brunt of attacks by militants.

Earlier this week, dozens of people staged a protest in Logar province, south of Kabul, following an airstrike they said had killed civilians there.


EU looks to soften energy bill pressures for industry, document shows

Updated 7 sec ago
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EU looks to soften energy bill pressures for industry, document shows

  • Brussels is looking for quick fixes after companies warned they cannot compete with rivals in China and the US
  • The paper said the Commission would look at network charges

BRUSSELS: The European Union is examining energy taxes, network charges and carbon costs as possible areas for short-term measures to ease pressure on industries hit by high energy prices, a document seen by Reuters showed.
Brussels is looking for quick fixes after companies warned they cannot compete with rivals in China and the US — even before this week’s surge in oil and gas prices ⁠sparked by the US-Israeli ⁠war on Iran. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has pledged to present options for EU leaders to consider at a summit on 19 March.
A Commission paper prepared for a meeting of EU Commissioners on Friday showed the bloc is exploring short-term measures to help the hardest-hit regions ⁠and sectors, without undermining longer-term climate laws meant to shift Europe to a cheaper, low-carbon energy system.
“Any proposal for legislative change will not deliver immediately and a bridge solution may be needed to reduce energy prices in the next 2-5 years until the clean transition eases pressure on power prices as already seen in some regions,” said the document, seen by Reuters.
The paper said the Commission would look at network charges — which make up about 18 percent of ⁠industrial ⁠power bills — and national taxes and levies, as well as carbon costs, which account for around 11 percent of bills.
It noted that governments are underusing existing tools to cut companies’ energy bills, including state aid to offset carbon costs and contracts for difference that guarantee industrial consumers a stable power price. The document said that if energy supplies are disrupted further, Brussels must be ready to introduce measures to encourage consumers to use less energy, as it did in 2022 when Russia slashed gas deliveries.
A Commission spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.