KABUL, Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai marked the ninth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the U.S. on Saturday by insisting the origins of the continued Taliban insurgency are not in Afghanistan.
Karzai did not mention neighboring Pakistan by name, but it was clear he was referring to the insurgent sanctuaries there when he said the war should "focus on the sources and the origins of terrorism."
The president said by focusing on Afghanistan, the coalition endangers Afghan civilians who were freed from Taliban rule in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion that followed the 9-11 attacks. He urged NATO to do everything to avoid civilian deaths.
"The villages of Afghanistan are not the origins and the sanctuaries of terrorists," Karzai said. "Innocent Afghan people should not be the victims in the fight against terrorism."
Civilian deaths are a flashpoint issue in Afghanistan because they seriously undermine support for the war. Karzai has repeatedly urged NATO to take all necessary measures to protect civilians. NATO says it is doing all it can to avoid innocent casualties, but says insurgents often use civilians as human shields during attacks.
Meanwhile, fighting continued Saturday in different parts of Afghanistan.
NATO said in a statement that together with Afghan forces it destroyed multiple enemy positions in the Zharay district of southern Kandahar province, the hotbed of the Taliban insurgency.
The targets were around the village of Ghariban, an area "plagued with improvised explosive device activity and populated with insurgents," the statement said.
In a separate incident Saturday, a bomb blew up a vehicle driving on a dirt road near the southern Afghan village of Senjeray, wounding six children and killing their parents, according to U.S. Capt. Jeff Holt, 25, of Russellville, Arkansas.
Afghans brought the wounded children to the gate of a hilltop U.S.-Afghan base in Senjeray, where U.S. medical teams treated them. Two of the children suffered severe head trauma and facial lacerations, and were evacuated by helicopter to a military field hospital in Kandahar, Holt said.
"It was a big one," Holt said of the blast, which blew the vehicles engine 200 meters yards away and left a seven foot wide crater in the road. "It was meant for one of our" heavily armored vehicles.
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Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez and Robert H. Reid contributed to this report.
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