ASADABAD, Afghanistan: Emotional Afghan President Hamid Karzai Saturday urged international troops to “stop their operations in our land”, his strongest salvo yet in a row over mistaken civilian killings. Karzai's comments came after a week in which a relative of his was killed in a raid by foreign forces and he rejected an apology by the US commander of troops General David Petraeus for the deaths of nine children in a NATO strike. “I would like to ask NATO and the US with honour and humbleness and not with arrogance to stop their operations in our land,” Karzai said, visiting the dead children's relatives in Kunar province, eastern Afghanistan. “We are very tolerant people but now our tolerance has run out.” He added that Kabul and his Western backers in the war against the Taliban were well aware that Pakistan's border areas, where insurgents have hideouts, ought to be the focus of international military campaigns. Karzai also met relatives of those caught up in another incident in Kunar in which Afghan officials say 65 people died but NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) says left up to nine people injured. The president cried as he held a girl who he said had her leg amputated following the latter attack. A spokeswoman for ISAF could not immediately comment. The latest Kunar incident, which happened as the children gathered firewood, forced the always-sensitive issue of civilian casualties caused by international troops back to the top of the political agenda in Afghanistan. – Agence France