German troops based in north Afghanistan mistakenly killed at least five Afghan soldiers, NATO forces said today, hours after the Germans lost three of their own soldiers in a gunfight with insurgents.
A statement from NATO said that last night a unit of German soldiers was approached by two unmarked civilian vehicles which failed to stop when troops signalled them "using a variety of methods" in the northern province of Kunduz.
"The force eventually fired on the vehicles killing at least five Afghan soldiers ... Initial reports indicate that the two civilian cars were part of an Afghan national army patrol en route to Kunduz," NATO-led forces said in a statement.
The German troops were on their way to the scene of a gunfight with insurgents in which three German soldiers were killed and five others seriously wounded hours earlier, the statement said.
Earlier, the governor of Kunduz province, Mohammad Omar, said six Afghan soldiers had been killed in the incident which happened near Chardara district.
In February a NATO airstrike aimed at insurgents attacking a joint NATO-Afghan patrol in Kunduz accidentally killed several Afghan policemen.
Germany is the third-largest NATO contributor to the war with some 4,300 troops in Afghanistan, most of them based in northern Kunduz where Taliban attacks and strength have increased over the past year.
Reuters