British military action killed at least 64 children in Afghanistan, report says

A British soldier going on foot patrol in Afghanistan.
An investigation found the true number of child deaths caused by British military action in Afghanistan could be as high as 135. Credit: PA

A one-year-old baby boy was among dozens of children killed following British military action in Afghanistan, an investigation has found.

Compensation was paid by the armed forces to the relatives of 64 confirmed victims under the age of 18, over the course of nine years.

But the true number of fatalities could be as high as 135 if those described as someone’s "son", "daughter", "nephew" or similar are taken into account.

Findings from the Action on Armed Violence (AOAV) suggest there is "absolutely no evidence" of British forces deliberately targeting civilians or children, with the deaths necessarily put down to "poor targeting, over-use of heavy weaponry or fighting in populated areas".

The analysis of compensation payments made from 2006-2014 found that between April 2007 and December 2012 there were 38 incidents involving 64 confirmed child fatalities where the British military paid out.

If more vague mentions of "son", "daughter" or "nephew" are factored in this number rises to 135 across 47 incidents over the wider nine-year period.

The AOAV pointed out that Afghanistan has a young population with a median age of 18, making it fairly likely that any given mention of someone’s "son" or "daughter" refers to a child.

It found that the average age of children killed, in some 27 cases where this was given, was six.

The youngest was a one-year-old baby boy, who died in March 2009. Just months later, an 18-month-old girl was also killed.

Crossfires and airstrikes were found to be the two most common specified causes of death, with a strike on one village killing eight members of the same family.


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Between 2006 and 2014 the total paid out for incidents with confirmed child deaths was £144,593 - this figure also includes compensation for adult fatalities.

Narrowing this down to claims involving child deaths - 36 from 27 incidents - the average payout per victim comes to £1,656, including compensation covering injuries and property damage.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence said: "Any civilian death during conflict is a tragedy, more so when children and family members are involved. The UK armed forces work hard to minimise that risk, which regrettably can never be entirely eliminated.

"This is done through a package of rigorous targeting processes built upon committed intelligence work, strong engagement protocols, thorough training for those operating in conflict and clear-eyed assessments after an engagement.

"We investigate reports of civilian casualties and are always open to re-examine where new information is submitted.

"We are following the US Department of Defence review in this field and will take into account any outcomes that may assist our own processes."