Taliban fighters attacked a group of mine-clearing workers in the north of Afghanistan on Tuesday evening, killing 10 and leaving at least 14 injured, police said early Wednesday according to dw.com.
The attack happened in the Baghlan-e-Markazi district of Baghlan province, to the north of the capital Kabul. The injured victims were taken to a hospital in the nearby town of Pul-e-Khumri.
No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Afghan interior ministry spokesman Tareq Arian told reporters that the Taliban was to blame
“The Taliban entered a compound of a mine-clearing agency… and started shooting everyone,” Arian said.
The province governor’s spokesman, Jawed Basharat, told AFP news agency that the attack happened in an area controlled by government forces.
Insurgents targeting aid workers
The victims had been working for the international land mine-clearing organization Halo Trust, Afghan news site TOLO News reported.
The NGO has around 2,600 employees in the country, according to its website. As a result of decades of ongoing conflict, Afghanistan is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world.
Baghlan has been the scene of intense fighting between Taliban and government forces in recent months, with the insurgents planting roadside bombs that have often ended up killing or wounding civilians.
NGOs and aid organizations have frequently been the target of attacks in Afghanistan, according to details from the International NGO Safety Organization (INSO). Some 180 such incidents were reported in 2020, resulting in the deaths of 14 NGO workers. Another 27 people have been injured, and 42 have been kidnapped.
Violent conflicts erupt as the US withdraws
Afghanistan has been marked by constant violent attacks on both military and civilian targets, but this violence has surged since May 1 when the US began to withdraw its remaining forces from the country.
The Taliban were removed from power when the US invaded in 2001. The insurgents have begun to take advantage of the weakened Afghan security forces following unsuccessful attempts to broker a peace deal before the US and its allies leave.
On Monday, fighting was reported in 26 of the country’s 34 provinces, killing at least 150 government soldiers in 24 hours.
Alongside the Islamist forces of the Taliban, Afghanistan is also home to other insurgent groups such as Islamic State with whom the Taliban are also vying for power.