Afghan civilian casualties rise for the fifth year

February 04, 2012 11:37 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:10 am IST - KABUL:

In this August 2011 file photo, Bibi Hur cries over her injured daughter at a hospital in Herat, west of Kabul. She lost three of her children and two more injured by a road side bomb.

In this August 2011 file photo, Bibi Hur cries over her injured daughter at a hospital in Herat, west of Kabul. She lost three of her children and two more injured by a road side bomb.

A record number of Afghan civilians were killed in the conflict here last year, the majority at the hands of the Taliban and other insurgent groups whose use of homemade bombs became more prevalent and whose suicide bombers killed more people each time, according to the annual U.N. report on civilian casualties.

Although the number killed — 3,021 civilians — represented a relatively small, eight per cent increase in casualties over 2010, it was the fifth straight year in which civilian casualties rose. The overall trend suggested that the fighting was worsening and that, for all the talk about peace efforts and a drastic increase in the number of insurgents that NATO has killed and captured, day-to-day dangers for Afghan civilians were rising.

“To the Afghan people, the credibility and value of a peace negotiation process and progress toward peace will be measured by reduced civilian casualties and improvements in security,” said Georgette Gagnon, the director of human rights for the U.N. office here and the leader of the team that produced the report.

“Only through increased actions to protect civilians will the relentless toll of death and injury to Afghan children, women and men be ended during and following a peace process.”

The report, which has been released in each of the past five years, records the deaths of all non-combatants based on the United Nations' reporting and investigations, and it has come to serve as a grim metronome of the war that documents the conflict without rhetoric.

Of the documented deaths, 77 per cent were caused by the Taliban and other insurgent groups, an increase from 2010 despite repeated pledges by the Taliban to try to avoid killing civilians. By contrast, the number of civilians killed by pro-government forces, including NATO troops, the Afghan Army and government-backed militias, fell to 410, or 14 per cent of the total killed. In nine per cent of cases, the party responsible was not clear.

The Taliban's responsibility for a rising number of deaths raises questions about the sincerity of their public pledges to try to avoid harming civilians. In both the code of conduct issued under the name of the Taliban leader Mullah Muhammad Omar and in subsequent Taliban statements, the insurgents have pledged to be careful not to hurt civilians.

Most injurious were homemade bombs, which accounted for 967 deaths. Most are victim-activated anti-personnel mines, some so sensitive that a 45-pound child who treads on one while playing in a field can set it off, U.N. officials said. Such bombs do not differentiate between military and civilian targets and appear frequently to be scattered in areas regularly traversed by civilians.

Casualties from suicide bombings increased 80 per cent, with 431 civilians dying in suicide attacks. The techniques used and the targeting of civilians were clear in most of those cases, the report said. Among the most devastating was one in Kabul on December 6, when tens of thousands worshippers gathered to mourn Imam Hussein, one of the pivotal figures in the Shia branch of Islam. A man wearing a suicide vest killed 56 people, according to the United Nations.

There has been a gradual drop in casualties attributed to NATO troops since 2009. Although the drop was relatively small in 2011, it occurred despite intensive combat operations in southern and eastern Afghanistan. Generally, when NATO increases operations, there is also an increase in casualties. The United Nations praised NATO's efforts both to adjust its tactical directives to troops and to retrain them to adhere to the new standards.

Still, aerial attacks by NATO accounted for the most civilian deaths, with nearly 200 people killed when NATO used aircraft to bomb houses it believed held insurgents.

Overall, the 39-page report charts a series of disturbing signs that suggest that the country could become even more dangerous.

The report notes that more than 185,000 Afghans, a 45 per cent increase over 2010 and more than in any previous year, were displaced in 2011, many as they fled conflict. The report also points out that while casualties caused by NATO are dropping, those that were the fault of Afghan government forces rose almost 200 per cent just for the six-month period of June to December.

In that period, Afghan security forces killed 41 civilians, almost twice the number killed in the same six-month period in 2010. As Afghan forces take over more tasks currently carried out by NATO troops, there are serious concerns that casualties by pro-government forces could rise again. — New York Times News Service

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