Blast on bus kills 34 Afghans, wounds 17
HERAT: At least 34 people were killed in western Afghanistan when their bus hit a Taliban roadside bomb, officials said on Wednesday, the same day a US peace envoy indicated a peace deal with the insurgents could be imminent.
Even in a conflict where civilians die daily, Wednesday’s blast stood out as particularly devastating, as most of the victims were women and children.
The explosion ripped through the bus around 6am in Farah province, authorities said, along a busy highway to neighbouring Herat.
“It was dark, and the bus hit a mine,” passenger Ali Juma said from a hospital in Herat. “There were many casualties, martyrs and wounded people.” The explosion came amid a US push for peace with the Taliban that after several slow months now appears to be making progress.According to a UN report released on Tuesday, 1,366 civilians were killed and another 2,446 wounded during the first six months of 2019.
Afghan officials blamed the Taliban for Wednesday’s explosion, saying they had planted a bomb along a busy highway with the aim of hitting security forces.
The insurgents did not deny or claim involvement, saying they would investigate the “sad incident”.
Muhibullah Muhib, a police spokesman for Farah province, said all the victims were civilians, mostly women and children.
“A passenger bus travelling on the Kandahar-Herat highway hit a Taliban roadside bomb killing 34 innocent people and wounding 17 others,” he said.
Sediq Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Afghan presidency, confirmed the toll, blaming the incident on the Taliban, while Nasrat Rahim, the interior ministry spokesman, called the blast a “barbaric act of the terrorists”.
“Sadly, this senseless loss of life is all too common in Afghanistan,” Onno van Manen, the Afghanistan director for Save the Children, said in a statement.
“Just in the past month hundreds of children have been killed or injured as a result of explosive weapons.” The Taliban, who now control or influence about half of Afghanistan’s territory, recently signed on to a vague pledge to reduce civilian casualties, but violence has continued unabated.
Civilians have long paid a disproportionate price in the nearly 18 years since the US invaded Afghanistan, and last year was a record for civilian casualties.
Numbers are down by 27 percent so far this year, but children accounted for almost a third of the overall total of civilian deaths and injuries.
The bloodshed is only expected to worsen now that official campaigning for Afghanistan’s presidential election, set for September 28, is underway.
At least 20 people were killed on Sunday, the first official day of the campaign, and 50 wounded when a suicide attacker and gunmen targeted the Kabul office of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s running mate, Amrullah Saleh.
Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2019