Taliban 'killing thousands of civilians'

Death toll soaring as a result of insurgent attacks, says UN report

More Afghans are dying in their country's bloody insurgency than at any time since 2001, a new UN report says, thanks largely to the Taliban's use of indiscriminate roadside bombs and suicide attackers. The findings released yesterday came as at least six civilians were shot dead in Helmand and a series of bomb attacks around the country killed or wounded bystanders.

According to the UN, at least 2,412 civilians were killed last year and a further 3,566 wounded as a direct result of the war between Taliban-led insurgents and the Western-backed government. This could, however, be a fraction of the true total: human rights advocates say many families caught up in the insurgency live in areas too dangerous for researchers to collect information on casualties.

In the latest incident in Helmand province on Sunday, witnesses claimed that Nato and Afghan forces opened fire after a protest of about 2,000 people turned violent. One of the demonstrators, Haji Jan Gul, said his son was killed after throwing stones at foreign and Afghan troops. Nato insisted its soldiers did not fire on the crowd, saying the only shot from its troops had hit and killed an enemy sniper. But the incident, triggered after rumours spread that foreign troops had burned a copy of the Koran during a raid, served as a sharp reminder of the tensions between the foreign forces and civilians in one of the most volatile parts of the country.

Elsewhere a truck bomber wounded several civilians in the southern province of Kandahar, and a civilian was killed when a bomb he was trying to defuse exploded.

The biggest culprits, according to the report, are the Taliban and their allies, whom the UN holds responsible for 67 per cent of all civilians reported killed last year, a total of 1,630. More than a thousand were blown up in roadside bombs and suicide attacks targeting the Afghan government and its international backers.

Furthermore, the UN said that the Taliban deliberately targeted civilians with "assassinations, abductions, and executions if they are perceived to be supportive of, or associated with, the Government or the international community". The Taliban criticised the findings, claiming the US Department of Defence had leant on the UN to massage the figures.

"These suicide attacks and roadside bombs most often kill innocent Afghans, not international forces," Mudassir Rasuli, an Afghan human rights advocate, said. "They are not in the way of Islam and they are against international law. This indiscriminate disregard for lives must stop."

Civilian deaths caused by Western troops fell 28 per cent last year, a vindication of US General Stanley McChrystal's policy of restricting the use of air strikes as part of his reinvigorated hearts-and-minds campaign. Even so, 359 civilians were still killed in air strikes. In one of the most controversial incidents, German forces called in a strike on two fuel tankers hijacked by the insurgents and surrounded by civilians siphoning off petrol. Gen McChrystal has reassured President Hamid Karzai, a fervent critic of the coalition's use of air strikes, that everything will be done to protect civilians. Yet he is also the architect of the troop surge that will see 37,000 more foreign soldiers arrive in Afghanistan this year, which will almost certainly result in an increase in violence.

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Top stories
News in pictures
World news in pictures
UK news in pictures
UK news in pictures
More stories
       
Independent
Travel Shop
India and Shimla
14 nights from only £1899pp Find out more
Prague city break
Three nights from £199pp Find out more
4* Soreda hotel break, Malta
Seven nights all-inclusive from £399pp Find out more
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

Day In a Page

National archives: Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them

Newly unearthed papers reveal a shocking extra dimension to the constitutional crisis over monarch’s abdication
Sent down at the Old Bailey: A tour of the world's most famous court

Sent down at the Old Bailey

A tour of the world's most famous court
Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness

The Hangover actor Zach Galifianakis’s date for his movie premieres isn’t arm candy  – it’s his 87-year-old friend who he saved from homelessness
British football scores an own goal

British football scores an own goal

Many managers barely survive a year in post. Martin Baker talks to experts who make a case for clubs using forensic business skills to find the best staff
James Lawton: Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again

James Lawton

Sergio Garcia cracks as major fault line opens up again
Dylan Hartley: Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong

Dylan Hartley talks tough

Northampton have spent the season proving all our critics wrong
Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

Watch out Watford: Here comes the secretive Bilderberg Group

A meeting of global power brokers in a Hertfordshire hotel is exciting conspiracy theorists, but what are they really about?
'The ultimate all-in-one home entertainment system': Microsoft finally unveils its Xbox ONE console

'The ultimate all-in-one home entertainment system'

Microsoft finally unveils its Xbox ONE console
Plenty of Fish dating site founder pulls 'Intimate Encounters' option to ward off sleazy men

Plenty of sleaze

Dating website pulls intimate 'hook-up' section to curb harassment
Inferno author Dan Brown 'honoured' to be invited to join the Freemasons

The Freemasons’ Code

Dan Brown reveals the message that told him door to the lodge is open
Not secure any more: G4S boss heads for exit at last

Not secure any more: G4S boss heads for exit at last

Nick Buckles survived the Olympics débâcle and a £5bn bid fiasco but a profit warning finally triggered his downfall
How to say ‘I’m a sellout’: Tumblr’s David Karp’s message of reassurance to his staff sounded very familiar

How to say ‘I’m a sellout’

Tumblr’s David Karp’s message of reassurance to his staff sounded very familiar
Why clubs are keen to take a stand

Why clubs are keen to take a stand

There's a real desire around the grounds for safe standing. But will the authorities listen?
In the end the fans decided Tony Pulis had made a pig's ear of the job at Stoke City

In the end the fans decided Tony Pulis had made a pig's ear of the job at Stoke City

Disillusion with a siege mentality and negative playing style made change inevitable
James Lawton: The James Hunt I knew is the subject of a new F1 movie

James Lawton: The James Hunt I knew is the subject of a new F1 movie

British driver was fascinating man whose epic duel with Niki Lauda in 1976 was typical of an era of glamour and glory – but also the ever-present threat of death