(AhlulBayt News Agency) - The number of children killed or injured in the war in Afghanistan is on the rise, according to a United Nations report released Wednesday.
The U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) “is deeply concerned by the continuing increase in child casualties, which have risen year-on-year since 2013,” the report says.
From Jan. 1 to Sept. 30, 639 children were killed and another 1,822 were injured, according to the report. That’s a 15 percent increase from the same period in 2015.
More than half of the child casualties were caused by ground engagements.
Children were also a large percentage of the overall number of civilians killed or injured by unexploded ordnance, which claimed a total of 510 civilian casualties.
“Eighty-four percent of victims from unexploded ordnance were children,” Danielle Bell, UNAMA human rights director, said in the report. “All parties must systematically track, mark and clear unexploded ordinance in order protect current and future generations of children from harm.”
In all, 2,562 civilians were killed and 5,835 were injured in the first nine months of the year, according to the report. That’s a 1 percent decrease from the same period last year.
Anti-government forces such as the Taliban were responsible for 61 percent of the casualties.
The rest of the casualties were either jointly attributed because they happened during ground fighting where it was hard to tell exactly which side was responsible, or were attributed to unexploded ordnance of unknown origin.
The number of casualties from anti-government forces was a 12 percent decrease from the same period last year, but UNAMA continued to document illegal or indiscriminate attacks from those forces.
“Notwithstanding these decreases, attacks conducted by anti-government elements directly targeting civilians or in areas with a large civilian presence continued,” the report said. “UNAMA recorded attacks intentionally targeting peaceful civilian demonstrators, educational facilities, judicial and media workers, as well as attacks conducted in civilian-populated urban areas including bazaars and religious facilities.”
For example, UNAMA documented 75 attacks targeting education. The report also highlighted the ISIS in Iraq and Syria's attack on a peaceful protest in Kabul in July, which killed 85 people in the deadliest single attack in the capital since 2001.
“There is an urgent need for the government to implement the National Civilian Casualty Prevention and Mitigation policy,” Tadamichi Yamamoto, head of UNAMA, said in the report, “and for anti-government elements to cease the use of indiscriminate and illegal devices and tactics.”
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source : The Hill
Thursday
20 October 2016
12:42:28 PM
786724
The number of children killed or injured in the war in Afghanistan is on the rise, according to a United Nations report released Wednesday.