9 children killed in landmine blast in Afghanistan

9 children killed in landmine blast in Afghanistan

The device, said to be from the Russian invasion in 1979, went off as the children played with it in Ghazni province.

Swathes of Afghanistan are littered with unexploded devices from the Soviet invasion, the civil war that followed, and the 20-year Taliban insurgency. (Wikimedia Commons pic)
KABUL:
Nine children were killed in a blast in southeastern Afghanistan that was caused by a landmine laid during the country’s decades of conflict, a provincial official said today.

The mine went off as a group of young boys and girls were playing with it in the Geru district of Ghazni province yesterday, said the provincial head of the information and culture department, Hamidullah Nisar.

“An unexploded mine left over from the time of the Russian invasion went off when they were playing with it,” Nisar told AFP.

“Unfortunately, it killed nine children.”

Ghazni police said the children – five girls and four boys – were aged from four to ten years old.

Swathes of Afghanistan are littered with unexploded mines, grenades, and mortars from decades of conflict, spanning from the Soviet invasion in 1979, the civil war that followed, and the 20-year Taliban insurgency against foreign-backed governments.

Violence has reduced dramatically since the Taliban seized power in August 2021, ending their insurgency.

Unexploded ordnance and mines, however, still claim lives regularly, with the International Committee of the Red Cross saying children are the main victims.

Also yesterday, another child died and five other people were wounded when unexploded ordnance went off in Herat province, local police said on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

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