Turkish Helicopter Crash Kills 14 in Afghan Capital

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A Turkish helicopter crashed into a house on the outskirts of Kabul on Friday, killing 12 Turkish soldiers and two Afghan civilians in what appeared to be Ankara's deadliest incident in Afghanistan.

The bodies of two women were recovered from the rubble after the crash in Bagrami district, in the east of the capital, the local interior ministry told Agence France Presse, correcting an earlier death toll.

Police and local residents were digging to find survivors, ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi told AFP.

The Turkish military said 12 of its soldiers were killed when the Sikorsky helicopter came down at 10:25 am (05:55 GMT), in what is believed to have been the deadliest incident for its troops in Afghanistan.

A spokesman for the U.S.-led NATO force in Kabul confirmed the helicopter was operated by the International Security Assistance Force.

"We are investigating the cause of the crash but there were no reports of insurgent activity in the area," he said.

Kabul CID chief Mohammed Zaher said the final death toll was "12 Turkish nationals onboard the chopper plus two Afghan civilians living in the residential house".

The Afghan interior ministry said a boy was also wounded.

The civilian casualties were likely to be another source of upset for Afghan leader Hamid Karzai who on Thursday called on international troops to stop patrolling in villages after an American soldier killed 16 civilians on Sunday.

Turkey, NATO's sole Muslim member, currently has around 1,800 soldiers serving in the U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, deployed in Kabul, neighboring province Wardak in the north.

In October, Turkey extended by another year its Kabul regional command of the ISAF. Unlike its European allies, Turkey's mission is limited to patrols and its troops do not take part in combat operations.

Turkey refused a combat role against Islamist insurgents in a country where it has historically close ties with Afghans.

Helicopter crashes are fairly frequent in Afghanistan, where poor roads mean that the 130,000-strong NATO mission relies heavily on air travel.

Last August, an American Chinook was shot down by the Taliban near Kabul, killing eight Afghans and 30 Americans, including 22 Navy SEALs from the same unit that killed Osama bin Laden in neighboring Pakistan earlier that year.

It was the deadliest single incident for American troops in 10 years of war in Afghanistan.

NATO combat troops are scheduled to leave Afghanistan gradually and hand over responsibility for national security to Afghan forces by the end of 2014.

On Thursday, Karzai said his government would be ready to take over in 2013.

Comments 5
Default-user-icon Mr. Stance (Guest) 16 March 2012, 16:49

Erdogan contradictory policy: fighting the Qaeda in Afghanistan and helping them in Syria.

Default-user-icon John 101 (Guest) 16 March 2012, 17:25

Turks! Can they do anything right?

Missing freemaronite 16 March 2012, 18:59

Its sad only about the 2 afghan civilians.

Default-user-icon Tarek (Guest) 16 March 2012, 20:28

There's no al Qaeda in Syria. It is purely the people's wants and needs. Only a challenged and blind case can believe that this is Al Qaedas moves.

Default-user-icon Salvado (Guest) 17 March 2012, 03:59

Consider it a price worth paying??? for belonging to the "boys' club."