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Amnesty Intl Calls for Probe of 'Deliberate' Civilian Killings

"The Afghan authorities must investigate and bring to justice the perpetrators of a brutal series of attacks amounting to war crimes that have killed at least 24 civilians in little over a week," said Amnesty International on Wednesday. 

Amnesty International cited the June 15 attack in which five health workers were killed and four others were injured after gunmen opened fire at various polio vaccination centers across the city of Jalalabad in Nangarhar province.

The incident comes shortly after two car bombs killed at least seven civilians and injured at least six others in a district of west part of Kabul on June 12. 

“The targeting of civilians with near total impunity continues unabated. While peace talks falter and preparations for the full withdrawal of international forces gathers pace, it’s Afghanistan’s civilians who are paying the brutal price of this conflict,” said Samira Hamidi, Amnesty International’s South Asia Campaigner. 

“The Afghan authorities must end this cycle of impunity by launching independent and effective investigations into these and other attacks on civilians and bring those responsible to justice. We urge all parties to the conflict to take all measures necessary to protect civilians and respect international humanitarian law. And we call on the international community to make the protection of civilians and of minorities a central component of their ongoing support of the peace process,” the report said.

On June 8, ten mine clearers working for the international humanitarian organization The Halo Trust in Baghlan province were killed in an attack that injured 16 others. 

Health workers, humanitarians, human rights defenders and journalists have been particularly targeted in a wave of assassinations since the start of peace talks in Doha last year, the report said.  

At least 24 have been killed since January  2021, including two doctors in separate attacks in northern Parwan and western Farah provinces in the past week. With the exception of one of the killings, no other investigations have taken place, and nobody has been brought to justice in any of the cases. 

This week’s attack on the polio vaccination centers in Jalalabad, which caused the vaccination drive to be suspended in Eastern Afghanistan, follows a similar attack in March which left three health workers in Nangarhar dead.  

Afghanistan and Pakistan are the only two countries in the world where polio remains endemic, according to authorities.

Amnesty Intl Calls for Probe of 'Deliberate' Civilian Killings

Three days ago, five health workers were killed and four others were injured in an attack by gunmen on polio vaccinators in Nangarhar.

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"The Afghan authorities must investigate and bring to justice the perpetrators of a brutal series of attacks amounting to war crimes that have killed at least 24 civilians in little over a week," said Amnesty International on Wednesday. 

Amnesty International cited the June 15 attack in which five health workers were killed and four others were injured after gunmen opened fire at various polio vaccination centers across the city of Jalalabad in Nangarhar province.

The incident comes shortly after two car bombs killed at least seven civilians and injured at least six others in a district of west part of Kabul on June 12. 

“The targeting of civilians with near total impunity continues unabated. While peace talks falter and preparations for the full withdrawal of international forces gathers pace, it’s Afghanistan’s civilians who are paying the brutal price of this conflict,” said Samira Hamidi, Amnesty International’s South Asia Campaigner. 

“The Afghan authorities must end this cycle of impunity by launching independent and effective investigations into these and other attacks on civilians and bring those responsible to justice. We urge all parties to the conflict to take all measures necessary to protect civilians and respect international humanitarian law. And we call on the international community to make the protection of civilians and of minorities a central component of their ongoing support of the peace process,” the report said.

On June 8, ten mine clearers working for the international humanitarian organization The Halo Trust in Baghlan province were killed in an attack that injured 16 others. 

Health workers, humanitarians, human rights defenders and journalists have been particularly targeted in a wave of assassinations since the start of peace talks in Doha last year, the report said.  

At least 24 have been killed since January  2021, including two doctors in separate attacks in northern Parwan and western Farah provinces in the past week. With the exception of one of the killings, no other investigations have taken place, and nobody has been brought to justice in any of the cases. 

This week’s attack on the polio vaccination centers in Jalalabad, which caused the vaccination drive to be suspended in Eastern Afghanistan, follows a similar attack in March which left three health workers in Nangarhar dead.  

Afghanistan and Pakistan are the only two countries in the world where polio remains endemic, according to authorities.

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