The
Taliban on Sunday dismissed a U.N. report that roadside bombs are causing most
civilian casualties in Afghanistan as “Western propaganda.”
Taliban
spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed that the insurgents only use the weapons to
target foreign troops and the Afghan security forces.
“By
spreading such propaganda they are trying to prevent us from planting bombs
which cause the deaths of invaders in our country,” he said in an emailed
statement.
On
Saturday, the U.N. mission in Afghanistan urged the insurgents to end the use
of improvised explosive devices, saying they were by far the biggest killer of
civilians in the conflict. The organization used the term in reference both to
bombs detonated by remote control and land mines that go off when a vehicle
goes over them.
The call
came a day after 19 civilians died and 15 were injured when their bus struck a
mine in northern Balkh province on Friday. The U.N. said that blast was caused
by an IED planted on a busy public road and set off by a pressure plate. It
said the bomb was “consistent with documented patterns and tactics of choice by
the Taliban.”
Insurgent-placed
homemade bombs continue to be the deadliest weapon for civilians, according to
the world body. IEDs killed 340 civilians and injured a further 599 over the
past nine months, an increase of almost 30 per cent compared to the same period
last year, the U.N. said.
The
Taliban spokesman denied that any insurgents were operating in the area of
Balkh province where Friday’s blast occurred.
He also
said the Taliban use only remote-controlled roadside bombs which, unlike the
devices automatically activated by pressure-plates, allow a bomber to choose
the time of the blast and specifically target coalition troops and their Afghan
allies.
About
half of the casualties suffered by coalition forces in recent years have been
caused by roadside bombs and mines.
Also
Saturday, a service member with the NATO military coalition was killed by a
bomb in the south, the alliance said in a statement. The coalition did not
provide the service member’s nationality or any other details about the
incident. The NATO force usually waits for national authorities to give such
information.
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