KABUL,
May 29, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – US forces on
Monday, May 29, opened fire randomly at thousands of Afghans
protesting a fatal traffic incident involving a US convoy.
The
Kabul correspondent of the Doha-based satellite channel said at least
30 Afghans were killed and scores wounded in the deadly incident.
A
public health ministry official said on condition of anonymity that at
least 40 wounded people had been admitted to hospitals, Reuters said.
Other
news reports, however, gave other accounts of casualties.
A
spokesman for Afghan President Hamid Karzai said at least seven
civilians were killed during the protest.
A
Reuters reporter at the scene saw one man shot dead and several
wounded people being taken away.
The
violence erupted after one civilian were killed and three others
wounded when a US military vehicle ploughed into a dozen other
vehicles in the capital Kabul.
The
incident sent hundreds of men rampaging through the streets of Kabul,
hurling stones at the US convoy and smashing vehicle windows.
Afghan
police also opened fire when they came to the assistance of the US
troops, according to Reuters.
Public
Anger
Protesters
then marched on parliament and the presidential palace, tearing down a
billboard poster of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, smashing windows
and looting shops as they went.
"We
don't accept Karzai any more as a president. We protest against him:
death to Karzai!" shouted Jaweed Agha, one of the protesters.
A
Reuters journalist said he saw shops being looted downtown Kabul, and
a house belonging to a foreigner and the office of Care International
aid group being ransacked.
Several
hundred congregated at an intersection leading to the heavily
fortified US embassy chanting slogans of "Death to America"
and burning American flags.
Several
dozen forced their way past a police cordon guarding the road to the
US embassy and threw stones at vehicles carrying foreigners, prompting
the occupants to fire in the air before turning back.
The
US embassy staff were immediately evacuated for fears of being
attacked by the protestors.
"Embassy
staff have been moved to a secure location. It is a regular procedure
during any unrest in the city," US embassy spokesman Chris Harris
told Reuters.
The
US-led coalition also said it was investigating the incident, while
Karzai summoned the top commander of the coalition for an explanation.
Monday's
violence comes after more than four hundred people were killed in
attacks across Afghanistan since Wednesday, May 17.
The
US-led forces describe most of the fatalities as Taliban fighters and
their supporters, a claim usually challenged by Afghans.
The
United States has 23,000 troops in Afghanistan, the highest number
since it invaded the country to oust the Taliban regime in late 2001.
NATO
is expanding its force from 9,000 to 16,000, in preparation for taking
over security responsibilities in the south from US-led forces.