Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Civilian carnage surges in Afghanistan
Civilian carnage surges in Afghanistan
May 13, 2026 12:10 AM

  Wheeling himself out of the children's ward of Kabul's Emergency Surgical Centre for War Victims, Qasem appeared unmoved by the autumn sun and flowers he turned his wheelchair to face.

  "I'll never get better," the seven-year-old from Ghazni province said as his left leg protruded from the red-and-black wheelchair he has been relegated to since stepping on an improvised explosive device weeks earlier.

  Despite his disillusionment, the fact that Qasem was able to make it from his home in the eastern province to Kabul's emergency center bodes well for him. Patients at the Italian-run hospital, which is dedicated to treating victims of war-related violence, have a high recovery rate.

  "He will get better. It will take time, several months, but he will be able to walk again," Luca Radaelli, the hospital's medical coordinator, told Al Jazeera.

  Having stepped on the explosive in early October, Qasem now represents one of the grim statistics on civilian casualties in Afghanistan's 13-year war. A United Nations report on the protection of civilians released on Saturday cited a 14 percent nationwide jump in casualties in 2013.

  Like Qasem, 34 percent of civilian deaths and injuries reported by United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan were caused by improvised explosive devices (IEDs) - the conflict's deadliest killer of noncombatants.

  Thirty-six percent of the dead and wounded were children. It was the deadliest year for women and children since 2009.

  "These people, women and children, represent the most vulnerable groups who are being caught in the crossfire of the conflict," the center's head nurse Tijana Maricic told Al Jazeera.

  Surge in casualties

  The figures for 2013 are eye-opening: 2,959 killed and 5,656 wounded. The figures came close to 2011's record numbers of 3,133 civilian deaths and 4,706 injuries.

  Since 2007 - the year the UN began documenting civilian casualties in the Afghan conflict - more than 17,500 civilians have died.

  In Kabul, Qasem was one of several patients being treated for explosive-related wounds. Only a few meters from him, five young women also from Ghazni, were receiving medical care after their car drove over a deadly device.

  The UN report said anti-government forces were responsible for 74 percent of civilian casualties in 2013. The Taliban, meanwhile, again described claims about its role in the violence as Western propaganda.

  "These reports are produced by the US embassy and then published under the name of United Nations," the Taliban said in a statement, adding it has gone to great lengths to limit civilian casualties.

  The Taliban has its own definition of "civilian", which excludes those they believe are linked to the Afghan government or foreigners.

  According to the UN report, about 27 percent of all 2013 casualties were the result of fighting between government forces and armed opposition groups. International forces caused about three percent, including those killed during 54 aerial assault operations, the report said.

  On treating victims of the conflict, Radaelli said the Emergency center's primary objective is to provide the best treatment possible, especially as the casualty toll continues to rise, but also not to take sides.

  He added that the group does not receive financial assistance from the Italian government, which has had troops on the ground in Afghanistan.

  "We are here because we are welcome," Radaelli said.

  Not taking sides

  For the hospital's staff - the majority of whom are Afghan - neutrality dates back to the late 1990s amid fighting between Ahmad Shah Massood's Northern Alliance and the Taliban, led by Mullah Mohammad Omar. By treating the war wounded no matter their affiliation, the Italian non-profit soon won the support of both Massood and Mullah Omar.

  In 1999, Massood handed over a former police academy in the Panjshir Valley to the group to turn into a trauma hospital. Mullah Omar soon followed suit, providing a former kindergarten built by the Soviets during their 1979-89 occupation of Afghanistan.

  As first-hand responders, Emergency center staff paint a grim picture of the civilian casualty toll in Afghanistan. Despite the operation of 40 first-aid stations and a hospital in the southern province of Helmand, Radaelli said the situation for civilians "has gotten much worse since 2010".

  Since then, Emergency has seen a 40 percent annual increase in admissions, he said, and in the capital the rate has increased by 70 percent.

  Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of Helmand, has witnessed a civilian casualty surge of 174 percent in the three years since 2010.

  Despite the uptick in cases, the Emergency center operates with the same facilities it has had since 2010 - 97 beds, one intensive care unit and two operating theatres in Kabul.

  Staff say resource constraints are accentuated because many patients come for treatment from other hospitals - both government-run facilities and those operated by foreign forces - where they do not receive adequate care.

  "By the time they reach our hospital it may already be too late," Maricic said.

  With only one percent of Afghanistan's 2014 budget allocated to healthcare, the issue of a lack of adequate medical facilities is likely to increase.

  Radaelli said the group will continue to provide care for wounded Afghans even after this year's withdrawal of international troops.

  "We were here during the 1999 bombings. We will be here after 2014. America or not, it makes no difference for us," he said.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Seven-year-old Qasem was recently wounded by an improvised explosive device in eastern Ghazni province.

  Source: Aljazeera

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
'My Husband jailed for protesting Israel's wall'
  By Majida Abu Rahmah   On International Human Rights Day in 2008, my husband Abdallah Abu Rahmah was in Berlin receiving a medal from the World Association for Human Rights. Last year on the same day, 10 December, Abdallah was taken away at 2am by Israeli soldiers who broke into our...
'Israel stripped body organs off Palestinians'
  An Israeli Knesset member says there is evidence showing that deceased Palestinians were stripped bare of their vital organs while in police custody in Tel Aviv.   Israeli politician and leader of the Arab nationalist party, Ahmad Tibi, said on Saturday that a medical institution in Israel harvested appendages from the...
14 Palestinian homes demolished in Jerusalem in November
  The Land Research Center (LRC) of the Arab Studies Society in Jerusalem reported that the Israeli authorities conducted 187 violations against Jerusalem in November, and demolished 14 Palestinians homes in addition to issuing orders to demolish 170 homes.   The center prepares and publishes its reports in cooperation with the Civil...
Besieged Gazans raise money for Haiti
  Palestinians, living in the Gaza Strip under years of Israel siege, are in efforts to donate what little they have to help those struck by the earthquake in Haiti.   The reason for the destruction might be different, but Palestinians say they understand Haiti's pain.   Gaza is still considered under Israeli...
Displaced and desperate in Gaza
  One year has passed since the beginning of Operation Cast lead, Israel's 22-day military assault on the besieged Gaza Strip and suspended is a word that best describes daily life in the Strip; the internal reconciliation process, 'peace talks' with Israel, and most importantly, reconstruction being halted until further notice....
Settlers 'stone' school children
  Twaneh School in Hebron has seen some improvements since former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair paid it a visit as UN Middle East envoy last year.   The track leading from the school to the new main road joining Jerusalem to Israeli settlements on the south eastern slopes of Palestine is...
Nigeria Muslims: 'Our homes were razed'
  Awalu Mohamed was one of the first to arrive in the mining village of Kuru Karama to discover burned human remains and corpses thrown into communal wells and sewage pits.   "There are so many, many corpses," says Mohamed, of the Jamatu Nasril Islam aid group.   He described how 62 corpses...
'They kept pumping bullets into us'
  The Iraqi government is under increasing pressure to aggressively pursue the prosecution of American military personnel accused of killing Iraqis.   The recent decision by Ricardo Urbina, a district judge, to dismiss charges against five security contractors accused of gunning down 17 Iraqis, including women and children, in September 2007 has...
'The building of a steel wall is a new war on Gaza'
  Khaled Mishaal, the head of Hamas’s political bureau, stated Monday that the building of the steel wall on the Palestinian-Egyptian borders is a new war against Gaza people and their resistance.   In a televised statement, Mishaal recalled remarks made by UNRWA commissioner-general Karen Abu Zaid in which she described this...
Israel strips 4577 Palestinians of right to live in Jerusalem
  Israel stripped 4,577 Palestinians of right to live in Jerusalem in 2008, blocking residency status, at a faster rate than at any time in the history of the Jewish state, an Israeli rights group said on Wednesday, citing official Israeli statistics.   "Revocation of residence has reached frightening proportions," said Dalia...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved