Bomb kills two human rights workers in Kabul

Published June 28, 2020
Kabul police spokesman Ferdaws Faramurz confirmed the attack, which has not been claimed by any group. 
 — AFP/File
Kabul police spokesman Ferdaws Faramurz confirmed the attack, which has not been claimed by any group. — AFP/File

KABUL: Two employees of Afghanistan’s human rights body were killed in a bomb attack in Kabul on Saturday, the agency said.

The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission said the pair died when a homemade “sticky bomb” attached to their vehicle exploded in the morning.

Kabul police spokesman Ferdaws Faramurz confirmed the attack, which has not been claimed by any group.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan condemned the killings.

“There can be no justification for attacks against human rights defenders,” it said on Twitter, calling for an immediate probe.

It comes less than a week after two prosecutors and three other employees from the attorney general’s office were shot dead by gunmen on the outskirts of Kabul.

On May 30, a television journalist was killed when a minibus carrying employees of private television channel Khurshid TV was hit by a roadside bomb in the city. That attack was claimed by the militant Islamic State group.

Violence had dropped across much of the country after the Taliban offered a brief ceasefire to mark the Eidul Fitr festival last month, but officials say the insurgents have stepped up attacks in recent weeks.

Most attacks by the Taliban have targeted Afghan security forces, although there are regular police reports that civilians have been killed in roadside bomb blasts.

On Saturday, the National Security Council said 21 civilians were killed and 30 wounded in attacks over the past week across 14 provinces.

The Taliban and Afghan government are preparing to enter into much delayed peace talks aimed at ending the war in the country.

But officials warn that continuing violence could hamper efforts to launch the talks.

The “Afghan government, on its part, sees no obstacle to begin the peace talks,” Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman to President Ashraf Ghani, told reporters on Saturday.

“It is the Taliban who make obstacles.”

The Taliban insist they are ready to take part in the talks only after all 5,000 of their militants held in Afghan jails are released.

Their release is stipulated in an accord signed between the Taliban and Washington in February.

Afghan authorities have freed 3,895 Taliban prisoners so far in a bid to kick-start the peace negotiations, Sediqqi said.

Prisoner release was accelerated after the Taliban offered a rare three-day ceasefire that ended on May 26.

Published in Dawn, June 28th, 2020

Opinion

Editorial

Solidarity with Palestine
Updated 29 Nov, 2024

Solidarity with Palestine

The wretched of the earth see in the Palestinian struggle against Israel a mirror of themselves.
Little relief for public
29 Nov, 2024

Little relief for public

INFLATION, the rate of increase in the prices of goods and services over a given period of time, has receded...
Right to education
29 Nov, 2024

Right to education

IT is troubling to learn that over 16,500 students of the University of Karachi (KU) have defaulted on fee payments...
A hasty retreat
Updated 28 Nov, 2024

A hasty retreat

Govt should not extend its campaign of violence against PTI and its leaders, thinking it now has the upper hand. Enough is enough.
Lebanon truce
28 Nov, 2024

Lebanon truce

WILL it hold? That is the question many in the Middle East and beyond will be asking after a 60-day ceasefire ...
MDR anomaly removed
28 Nov, 2024

MDR anomaly removed

THE State Bank’s decision to remove its minimum deposit rate requirement for conventional banks on deposits from...