Ten killed in attack in Afghan city of Jalalabad

Afghan volunteers carry an injured youth on a stretcher to a hospital following an attack that targeted an education department compound in Jalalabad on Wednesday, July 11. (AFP)
Updated 11 July 2018
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Ten killed in attack in Afghan city of Jalalabad

  • There were three attackers, two of whom detonated suicide-bomb vests, while the third was shot by security forces
  • It was the third major attack in less than two weeks in Jalalabad

JALALABAD, Afghanistan: Gunmen attacked an education department office in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad on Wednesday and held out against security forces for some four hours before the assault ended with at least 10 people killed, officials said.

As the attack ended, the provincial governor’s spokesman Attaullah Khogyani said the casualties included 10 people wounded.

He said there were three attackers, two of whom detonated suicide-bomb vests, while the third was shot by security forces.

It was the third major attack in less than two weeks in Jalalabad, the main city of Nangarhar province, following a blast that killed a group of Sikhs on July 1 and a second that killed at least 12 people on Tuesday.

With NATO member countries meeting in Brussels, the attacks have underscored the instability in much of Afghanistan where the NATO-led Resolute Support mission has been training and advising Afghan forces.

This year, backed by intensive US air strikes, Afghan forces have claimed success in holding the Taliban back from major cities and US commanders say they have been hitting other militant groups like Daesh hard.

But attacks on civilian targets have continued, causing heavy casualties.

Officials in Washington have told Reuters that President Donald Trump has been frustrated with the lack of progress and is expected to launch a review of the US strategy.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday’s attack but both of the other assaults in the city this month were claimed by Daesh, which is opposed to both the Western-backed government in Kabul and the Taliban.

The attack on the education department appeared to follow the pattern of previous attacks including an assault on an office of the Save the Children aid group in Jalalabad in January and another on the city accounts office in May.

Nangarhar province, on the porous border with Pakistan, has become a stronghold of Daesh, which has grown into one of Afghanistan’s most dangerous militant groups since it appeared around the beginning of 2015.

On the other side of the country, in the western province of Farah, four people were killed and three wounded when their car set off a roadside bomb as they were traveling to a wedding, a provincial official said.


Four migrants die in US immigration custody over first 10 days of 2026

Updated 5 sec ago
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Four migrants die in US immigration custody over first 10 days of 2026

  • Trump administration increases migrant detentions, aims for more deportations
  • DHS says death rate aligns with historic norms amid rising detentions

WASHINGTON: Four migrants died while in custody of US immigration authorities over ​the first 10 days of 2026, according to government press releases, a loss of life that followed record detention deaths last year under President Donald Trump.
The deaths included two migrants from Honduras, one from Cuba and another from Cambodia, and occurred from January 3-9, according to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Trump administration aims to ramp up deportations and has increased the number of migrants in detention. As of January 7, ICE statistics ‌showed that the ‌agency was detaining 69,000 people. The numbers were ‌expected ⁠to ​rise ‌following a massive ICE funding infusion passed by the US Congress last year. At least 30 people died in ICE custody in 2025, the highest level in two decades, agency figures showed.
Setareh Ghandehari, advocacy director at Detention Watch Network, called the high number of deaths “truly staggering” and urged the administration to shutter detention centers.
US Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said the rate of deaths ⁠had remained in step with historic norms as the detention population has climbed. “As bed space has ‌expanded, we have maintained  higher standard of care ‍than most prisons that hold ‍US citizens — including providing access to proper medical care,” McLaughlin said.
The Cuban detainee, ‍Geraldo Lunas Campos, 55, died on January 3 in Camp East Montana, a detention site opened by the Trump administration on the grounds of Fort Bliss in Texas. ICE said it was investigating the death of Lunas, adding that officials said he ​had become disruptive and placed him in isolation. Officials later found him in distress, and emergency medical technicians pronounced him dead, ⁠ICE said.
The two Honduran men — Luis Gustavo Nunez Caceres, 42, and Luis Beltran Yanez–Cruz, 68 — died in area hospitals in Houston and Indio, California, on January 5 and 6, respectively, both following heart-related issues, ICE said.
Parady La, a Cambodian man, 46, died on January 9 following severe drug withdrawal symptoms at the Federal Detention Center in Philadelphia, ICE said. The administration began using that space last year, it said. The Trump administration has greatly reduced the number of migrants released from detention on humanitarian grounds, a move critics say has driven some to accept deportation. In addition to the in-custody deaths, an ICE officer ‌fatally shot a Minnesota mother of three last week, an incident that sparked protests in Minneapolis and cities around the country.