Afghanistan: 2 children killed in mortar mine blast in Wardak province

By ANI | Published: April 2, 2023 11:07 PM2023-04-02T23:07:28+5:302023-04-02T23:10:09+5:30

Kabul [Afghstan], April 2 : Two children in Afghstan were on Saturday killed in a mortar mine blast, Afghstan-based ...

Afghanistan: 2 children killed in mortar mine blast in Wardak province | Afghanistan: 2 children killed in mortar mine blast in Wardak province

Afghanistan: 2 children killed in mortar mine blast in Wardak province

Kabul [Afghstan], April 2 : Two children in Afghstan were on Saturday killed in a mortar mine blast, Afghstan-based Khaama Press reported.

Yusuf Israr, the provincial police spokesperson, said the explosion caused by a mortar mine of past wars resulted in the death of two children in Sayedabad district on Saturday evening while the children were playing with it.

A similar incident occurred on Friday evening in the Sarkhakan area of the Shah Joi district of Zabul province, resulting in one child's death and three others' injuries, according to Khaama Press.

Meanwhile, according to local sources, another blast that happened on Tuesday, March 28, caused the death of two children and injured four others in the northern Jawzjan province.

Recently, the incidence of unexploded devices from past wars has increased in several parts of the country, resulting in the death and hurt of men and women, including children.

The presence and existence of unexploded devices and the remnant in war-torn Afghstan pose significant threats to people's lives, particularly children, according to Khaama Press.

International bodies have since last November, contributed to support demining in the country, including Australia, Denmark, Germany, Japan, Sweden, the United States, the UK, the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humtarian Affairs (OCHA).

However, Afghstan is still reportedly one of the most mine-contaminated countries in the world, taking the lives of scores of people monthly, including children, due to the explosion of unexploded devices left over from the four decades of civil war, as per Khaama Press.

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