US President Obama apologises to MSF chief over bombing of Afghan hospital
Obama expresses condolences and and says the US will provide a 'transparent, thorough and objective accounting of the facts and circumstances of the incident'

US President Barack Obama on Wednesday apologised to Doctors Without Borders (MSF) for a deadly US air strike on an Afghan hospital, as the medical charity demanded an international investigation.
Three separate probes – by the US military, NATO and Afghan officials – are under way into Saturday’s catastrophic strike in the northern Afghan city of Kunduz which left 22 people dead.
The US military has offered a series of shifting explanations for the bombing raid, from initially talking about “collateral damage” to now admitting, as Obama did in his call to MSF chief Joanne Liu, that the strike was a mistake.
One report said the top US and NATO commander in Afghanistan thought American forces had broken their own rules of engagement in carrying out the strike, which sparked international outrage.
Obama called Liu to “apologise and express his condolences for the MSF staff and patients who were killed and injured when a US military airstrike mistakenly struck an MSF field hospital in Kunduz”, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.