KABUL (AFP) - The Afghan government said Saturday it believed more than 100 Taliban may have been killed in an air strike in the south of the country and did not rule out civilian casualties.
But General Mohammad Zahir Azimi, a defense ministry spokesman, rejected some media reports that scores of civilians were killed or wounded in the US-led coalition strike Thursday in Helmand province.
Azimi said it was unclear how many people had been killed in the attack on a large gathering of Taliban.
"But the enemy casualty is very high," he told a press conference in the capital, Kabul. "There might be more than 100 killed."
Hospitals in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand, and in the nearby city of Kandahar, said Friday that nearly 40 civilians had been brought in for treatment.
But Azimi questioned this figure, saying: "Even if there were civilians, there were very few of them. Their number would not reach 10."