Afghanistan | Militant attack kills 9 Afghans working for Czech charity

In this Thursday, May 21, 2015 file photo, local militia group fighters walk past a building torched by Taliban fighters at Talawka village in Kunduz province, north of Kabul

In this Thursday, May 21, 2015 file photo, local militia group fighters walk past a building torched by Taliban fighters at Talawka village in Kunduz province, north of Kabul

Militants attacked a remote guesthouse and killed nine Afghans working for a Czech charity yesterday, as a new report by Brown University warned that almost 100,000 people have been killed in Afghanistan since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion overthrew the Taliban regime and sparked an insurgency.
Yesterday’s attack took place in the Zari district of northern Balkh province at 2 a.m., when gunmen burst into the workers’ rooms as they slept, said Abdul Basset Ayni, director of the province’s rural development department.
Nine people, including a woman, who were working on reconstruction projects were shot dead. The nine were employed by a Czech organization called People in Need, and included five project staff, two guards and two drivers, the charity’s country director Ross Hollister told The Associated Press.
Hollister said the staff were working on infrastructure projects for the Afghan government’s National Solidarity Program, which oversees rural development projects across the country.
“They were building schools, hospitals, water projects,” Hollister said. People in Need has been in Afghanistan for 12 years, he said, and has projects in all 104 of Zari’s villages.
All the dead were Afghan nationals, Ayni said, adding that an investigation team had been sent to the area. The motivation and perpetrators were still unknown and no group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.
Balkh has recently been beset by insurgent activity and a spike in violence since the Taliban launched its warm-weather offensive in late April.
Guesthouses favored by foreigners have been targeted in the capital, Kabul, by Taliban militants in recent weeks. Fourteen people were killed at the Park Palace hotel in mid-May, including nine foreigners. The Taliban have said that foreign installations are among their priority targets as the 13-year-old war escalates across the country.
A revitalized insurgency appears to be using a new strategy of sending much larger numbers of men on the battlefield to fight and hold territory, and has, according to Afghan officials, linked up with other anti-government and extremist groups, including the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and the East Turkestan Independence Movement.
Meanwhile, the Brown University study — called Costs of War and produced by the university’s Watson Institute for International Studies — looked at war-related deaths, injuries and displacement in Afghanistan and Pakistan from 2001 to last year, when international combat troops left Afghanistan.
Along with those killed, it said that another 100,000 people had been wounded in Afghanistan. For both countries, civilian and military deaths total almost 149,000 people killed, with 162,000 seriously wounded, according to the report’s author, Neta Crawford.
Noting a rise in annual figures for those killed and wounded in recent years, she said the figures show the war in Afghanistan is not ending.
“It is getting worse,” Crawford said.
The study is also backed by U.N. figures, which show that in Afghanistan, civilian casualties rose 16 percent in the first four months of 2015, with 974 people killed and a further 1,963 wounded. Lynne O’Donnell, Mazar-I-Sharif, AP

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