2015 civilian injuries in Afghan war with Taleban worst since 2009

This news has been read 6497 times!

An Afghan man carries a bouquet of roses to celebrate Valentine’s Day in Kabul, Afghanistan on Feb 14. (AP)
An Afghan man carries a bouquet of roses to celebrate Valentine’s Day in Kabul, Afghanistan on Feb 14. (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan, Feb 14, (Agencies): Civilian injuries in Afghanistan’s long war with the Taleban rose last year, with women and children again bearing the brunt of the violence, the United Nations said in a report on Sunday. A total of 3,545 civilians were killed in 2015 as a result of the war, the UN report said, with another 7,457 wounded.

The figures mark a 4-percent drop in civilian deaths, but a 9-percent rise in civilian injuries, compared to 2014. The UN’s Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said 2015 had the “highest number of total civilian casualties recorded by UNAMA since 2009.” It also said that 10 percent of civilian casualties were women, up 37 percent from the year before. It says 25 percent were children, up 14 percent. “The most important finding in the report is that 11,002 Afghans — civilians, noncombatants — have died or been injured in 2015; this figure surpasses by 4 percent the same figure for 2014,” said UNAMA head Nicholas Haysom. “The truth is the figures in themselves are awful — over 11,000 Afghans died or were injured last year as a result of this conflict,” he said.

The report found that most of the dead and injured were caught in crossfire. The annual report, titled Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict, is based on on-site investigations where possible. It attributed 62 percent of all civilian casualties to anti-government elements, which includes the Taleban who have been fighting to overthrow the Kabul government for 15 years. Another 17 percent were blamed on progovernment forces and 2 percent on international military forces. The US-NATO combat mission ended in 2014, with troops reduced to around 13,000.

While they officially have a “train, advice, assist” mandate, the US forces regularly conduct air strikes to back up Afghan forces, and are empowered for “force protection,” which can see them engage in selfdefensive combat. The UNAMA report highlighted large-scale attacks in the capital Kabul, particularly two suicide attacks on Aug 7 that it said caused 355 civilian casualties, including 43 dead and 312 wounded. “This was the highest number of civilians killed and injured in one day since UNAMA began systematically recording civilian casualties in 2009,” it said.

The Taleban’s assault on the northern city of Kunduz, on Sept. 28, also caused significant civilian casualties, it said, with 493 civilian deaths and 1,392 injured during weeks of fighting after the insurgents took control. The vast majority of the casualties were the result of ground engagements between the government forces and insurgents between Sept 28 and Oct 13, it said. “Ground engagements between parties to the conflict caused 1,116 deaths and 3,021 wounded, up 15 percent on 2014 and the leading cause of civilian casualties in Afghanistan,” UNAMA said.It added that improvised explosive devices, such as roadside bombs, caused 713 deaths and wounded 1,655 people. “While this represents a 20-percent decrease it is still the second leading cause of civilian casualties in Afghanistan,” it said. Afghanistan’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah said the UNAMA report did not comprehensively cover violent incidents across the whole country, covering instead “high-conflict areas in 12 provinces.”

In a statement, Abdullah said the Afghan government’s own data showed attacks in more than 24 of the country’s 34 provinces which were not included in the UNAMA report. He said that unattributed civilian casualties — which UNAMA puts at 17 percent — should mostly be blamed on the Taleban. “UNAMA’s decision to not attribute such a large number of civilian deaths misrepresents reality and could help the Taleban and other terrorist groups avoid accountability and escape justice,” his statement said. Meanwhile, Afghanistan on Sunday summoned Pakistan’s ambassador to the foreign ministry in Kabul to express “serious concerns” over the kidnapping of a former Afghan governor in Islamabad, the ministry said in a statement. Sayed Fazlullah Wahidi, a former governor of Herat province, was snatched by unidentified men in an upscale district of the Pakistani capital on Friday, police have confirmed. Afghanistan has fraught relations with Pakistan, which it blames for sponsoring Taleban militants fi ghting an ongoing bloody insurgency. On Sunday the foreign ministry expressed concern to ambassador Sayed Ibrar Hussain and urged Islamabad to throw all its resources into finding Wahidi, described as one of the “big personalities” of the war-torn country

This news has been read 6497 times!

Related Articles

Back to top button

Advt Blocker Detected

Kindly disable the Ad blocker

Verified by MonsterInsights