Afghan Civilian Deaths Hit Record As Suicide Attacks Surge

  • 7/15/2018
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The number of civilians killed in Afghanistan in the first half of this year has increased by 1 percent, compared to the same period last year, according to a report released Sunday by the United Nations. Deaths rose 1 percent to 1,692, although injuries dropped 5 percent to 3,430 in the January-June period, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said in its latest civilian casualty report. Overall civilian casualties were down 3 percent from the first six months of 2017. UNAMA started a systematic documentation of civilian casualties in 2009. The UN mission renewed its call on parties to the conflict to increase efforts to protect the civilian population and work toward reaching a peaceful settlement. Sundays report and others like it reflect the grim reality of Afghanistan today. Since the US and NATO forces formally concluded their combat mission at the end of 2014, a resurgent Taliban have stepped up their attacks across the country and an ISIS affiliate has also emerged to launch horrific high-profile attacks that have claimed the lives of scores of civilians. The UN report also cited a lull in June, when the Taliban accepted a three-day cease-fire over the Eid al-Fitr holiday that caps the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. The insurgents later rejected a subsequent call by President Ashraf Ghani to extend it. Ghani has repeatedly extended calls to the Taliban for peace talks but they have rejected them outright. Speaking at a press conference Sunday in Kabul, Ghani said the NATO summit last week in Brussels fully backed his governments efforts and peace initiatives. "The brief cease-fire demonstrated that the fighting can be stopped and that Afghan civilians no longer need to bear the brunt of the war," the report quoted Tadamichi Yamamoto, the UN Secretary-Generals Special Representative for Afghanistan. "We urge parties to seize all opportunities to find a peaceful settlement - this is the best way that they can protect all civilians," added Yamamoto, who is also head of UNAMA. According to the report, 157 women were among those killed and 387 were wounded in the January-June period, the report said. The mission also recorded a total of 1,355 child casualties, with 363 deaths and 992 children wounded in the first six months of the year. "UNAMA continued to document the toxic consequences of this conflict, with Afghan boys and girls killed, maimed, sexually assaulted, abused, recruited and used by parties to the conflict," said Danielle Bell, missions human rights chief. The violence, she added, "continued to erode the rights of children to education, health-care, freedom of movement and other fundamental rights, as well as family life, playing outdoors and simply enjoying a childhood free of the brutal effects of war." The use of improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, remained the leading cause of civilian casualties, according to the report. The combined use of suicide and non-suicide bombings caused nearly half of all civilian casualties. The report attributed just over a half — or 52 percent — of civilian casualties from suicide and complex attacks in the first half of the year to the ISIS terrorist group, mainly in the capital of Kabul and the eastern Nangarhar province, where it has gained a foothold. On Thursday, at least 10 civilians were killed in Nangarhars Khogyani district after the army launched an operation against insurgents there, said Ajmal Omar, a member of the provincial council. The dead were mostly shopkeepers caught in the cross-fire. The Taliban were responsible for 40 percent while the remainder were attributed to unidentified anti-government elements, the report said.

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