11 Apr 2015, 03:00 pm Print
On Thursday, the Prosecutor’s Office in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif was attacked, and Friday morning, two incidents occurred, the first involving a suicide bomber in Jalalabad city, and the second, a road-side bomb explosion in Ghazni province.
“These incidents highlight once again the tragic reality that it is Afghan civilians who bear the brunt of the reckless use of violence,” said the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and head of UNAMA, Nicholas Haysom.
“The killing of civilians and the indiscriminate use of IEDs must cease immediately,” he urged in a statement from UNAMA.
Improvised explosive devices were the second largest cause of civilian casualties in Afghanistan during 2014. International humanitarian law explicitly prohibits the use of weapons whose effects may not be limited and attacks which are not directed at a specific military objective and requires all parties to uphold their legal obligations to at all times avoid harm to civilians.
On 12 April, UNAMA will release its latest figures on civilian casualties in Afghanistan covering the first quarter of 2015.
Photo: Fardin Waezi/UNAMA
- Meet Shabana Mahmood: Could she take over as UK’s first Pakistani-origin Muslim PM?
- Dalai Lama's Office breaks silence on Epstein claims
- Russia says suspect in shooting of GRU Deputy detained in Dubai
- Mystery gunman strikes: Top Russian General shot in dramatic Moscow incident
- Begging bowl: Pakistan PM says he feels “ashamed” seeking loans abroad

