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US Commander in Afghanistan apologises for hospital attack

US Commander in Afghanistan apologises for hospital attack

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

FILE - An Afghan National Army soldier stands guard at the gate of a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, on Thursday, October 15, 2015. Photo: AP

KUNDUZ: The new commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan apologised Tuesday to the people of Kunduz for the deadly attack on a hospital in the city last year that killed 42 people. US Army General John Nicholson travelled to the northern city to meet local leaders and relatives of those who died in the October 3 attack. A US Air Force AC-130 gunship attacked the hospital run by medical charity Doctors Without Borders in what Nicholson called a 'horrible tragedy.' Nicholson's wife Norine accompanied him to Kunduz, along with acting defense minister Masoom Stanekzai. More than a dozen US military personnel have been disciplined for mistakes that led to the sustained attack. A US military report on the hospital attack is expected to be released within days. A separate US report on the incident obtained last fall by The Associated Press said the aircraft fired 211 shells at the hospital compound over 29 minutes before commanders realized the error and ordered a halt. Afghan officials, including Stanekzai, insisted that Taliban fighters, who had overrun the city on September 28, were using the hospital as a base from which to attack Afghan forces. No evidence has been found to support the claims. Doctors Without Borders, also known by its French initials MSF, immediately ceased operations in Kunduz and has yet to return. The hospital was the only trauma clinic in northern Afghanistan. The Taliban's insurgency spread across the previously peaceful north of the country last year, following the end of the international combat mission in 2014. Military leaders expect another year of fierce fighting amid uncertainty about the future of the peace process and talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban.