Suicide blast, airstrikes kill 20 Afghan civilians

Afghan security personnel arrive at the site of an explosion near a bank in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Tuesday. (AP)
Updated 30 August 2017
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Suicide blast, airstrikes kill 20 Afghan civilians

KABUL: Some 20 civilians were killed by airstrikes and a suicide bombing in Afghanistan, officials said Tuesday.
The deadly attacks, the latest in a spell of rising violence in the country, come days ahead of the Muslim religious festival Eid Al-Adha.
It is as yet unclear whether the airstrikes were carried out by the US-led coalition or the Afghan military.
They hit Shindand district of Herat province overnight, officials said. Children and at least two women were among the victims.
The strikes were carried out by drones targeting a command center of Taliban insurgents, at least 16 of whom were killed, said provincial officials.
A Herat lawmaker said the civilian death toll could be much higher, but had no further details.
Graphic images of victims’ severed bodies have circulated on social media. The Afghan government and US-led coalition have not commented on the raids, which usually draw public anger and have occurred repeatedly in the past 16 years.
“These types of repeated mistakes will stir more anti-government anger,” Zia Ulhaq Amarkhail, a politician and former CEO of the election commission, said in a statement. “This will not help to win hearts and minds of the Afghans.”
Meanwhile, a suicide blast hit a branch of Nawe Kabul Bank on a busy road near government offices and the US Embassy.
The bomber was trying to enter the bank to cause as many casualties as possible, a police source said, adding that the bomber was identified and shot dead, but managed to detonate the explosives attached to his body. Five people were killed and eight wounded, the Interior Ministry said.
The blast comes days after an attack by Daesh affiliates on a Shiite mosque in Kabul that claimed nearly 30 lives. Daesh has carried out a series of deadly attacks against Shiites in Afghanistan recently.
Analysts say the radical group is trying to fan sectarian violence in a country wracked by decades of war.


US heading to ‘authoritarianism’, warns Human Rights Watch

Updated 14 sec ago
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US heading to ‘authoritarianism’, warns Human Rights Watch

  • HRW: US President Donald Trump has shown ‘blatant disregard for human rights and egregious violations’
WASHINGTON: Human Rights Watch warned Wednesday that President Donald Trump was turning the United States into an authoritarian state as democracy declines globally to its lowest ebb in four decades.
Trump’s return to the White House has intensified a “downward spiral” on human rights that was already under pressure from Russia and China, the New York-based advocacy and research group said in its annual report.
“The rules-based international order is being crushed,” HRW said.
In the United States, the group said, Trump has shown “blatant disregard for human rights and egregious violations.”
In descriptions that would have been unthinkable in the US section of its previous annual reports, the group pointed to the deployment of masked, armed agents — the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency — which has carried out “hundreds of unnecessarily violent and abusive raids.”
“The administration’s racial and ethnic scapegoating, domestic deployment of National Guard forces in pretextual power grabs, repeated acts of retaliation against perceived political enemies and former officials now critical of him, as well as attempts to expand the coercive powers of the executive and neuter democratic checks and balances, underpin a decided shift toward authoritarianism in the US,” the report said.
Human Rights Watch repeated its finding that the United States engaged in enforced disappearances — a crime under international law — by sending 252 Venezuelan migrants to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador.