Nine Afghan girls killed by blast

KABUL — Nine young and impoverished Afghan girls lost their lives in a land-mine explosion Monday while they were collecting firewood in eastern Afghanistan, officials said.

The blast, outside a village in the Chaparhar district of Nangarhar Province, left three other girls wounded. All the victims were schoolchildren, between 9 and 11 years old, according to information provided by government officials.

Gallery

Latest stories from Foreign

Chinese activist Chen says Beijing pressuring him out of NYU

New York University officials puzzled by allegations, say Chen’s fellowship ending on schedule

Syrians fleeing war find more misery in Greece

Syrians fleeing war find more misery in Greece

Economic meltdown leaves little help for thousands of desperate refugees.

Obama and Putin fail to resolve differences over Syria

Obama and Putin fail to resolve differences over Syria

President’s three-day European visit begins with an ad dress to students and the launch of a G-8 summit.

World Digest: June 17, 2013

Southern Egyptians angered by Islamist appointment; Bulgarian premier calls security pick a mistake.

Impasse in Assange saga continues

Impasse in Assange saga continues

No diplomatic breakthrough comes in the standoff between Britain and Ecuador over the WikiLeaks founder.

The provincial governor’s office initially said 10 girls were killed by the land mine, and two injured. But officials later revised the number of fatalities to nine, with three injured.

The governor’s office did not say whether the land mine was an old one left over from the Afghans’ war against Soviet invaders, or a new one planted in the current conflict between Taliban-led insurgents and foreign troops led by the United States.

Roadside bombs and land mines kill or maim scores of Afghan civilians monthly in Afghanistan. The devices are the main cause of casualties among foreign troops.

In a separate incident in Kabul, a suicide bomber blew up a vehicle laden with explosives outside the offices of Contrack, a McLean, Va.-based firm located near military bases used by foreign forces in Afghanistan’s capital.

At least 15 people were wounded, most of them Afghan workers at the firm, Kabul’s deputy police chief Daoud Amini said.

The powerful blast was heard across the city, sending a plume of smoke up in the air and causing damage to the company’s compound, witnesses said. A Taliban spokesman said the group was behind the attack that targeted Contrack.

Also Monday, the U.S. Embassy in Kabul issued a warning to American citizens in the country reminding them to be cautious about their movements. The embassy did not say if the warning was linked to the attack on the firm or if it came as a result of another possible threat.

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges

    World Digest: June 17, 2013