KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - NATO and Afghan troops clashed with Taliban insurgents and called in air strikes, killing at least 50 suspected militants and dozens of civilians, including women and children, local officials and villagers said Friday.

The fighting started Thursday night in the village of Kumbarak in Helmand province, and NATO forces told residents to evacuate their homes because of the clashes, said Gereshk district chief Abdul Manaf Khan.

The air strikes killed 50 Taliban and 28 civilians, Khan said, citing villagers' reports. He said the bodies have already been buried, and the fighting continued Friday.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force said it did not have any information about the incident and was looking into it.

The report could not be immediately verified due to the area's remoteness and instability, although a local legislator and a resident also said there were civilians among the dead.

Malim Mirwali, a member of Parliament for Gereshk, said that more than 40 civilians were killed in the air strikes -- a figure that one local resident also cited.

"The war planes came and bombed these villagers -- more than 40 civilians killed, including women and children,'' said villager Nimatullah Khan.

"The villagers' bodies were buried this morning because the weather was hot. Right now, the people are scared, and the operation is ongoing between these forces and the Taliban,'' he said.

The latest violence comes a day after reports of U.S.-led coalition and Afghan troops battling with militants in the south, leaving more than 60 suspected Taliban dead. A NATO soldier was killed in another incident.

Violence has risen sharply in Afghanistan in the last two months. More than 3,500 people, mostly militants, have been killed in insurgency-related violence this year, according to an Associated Press tally of casualty figures provided by Western and Afghan officials.

Repeated reports of civilian fatalities in air strikes have hurt public support for the foreign military mission in Afghanistan.