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Afghanistan Civilian Deaths: 2011 Was Deadliest Year For Civilians In Afghan War

By By KAY JOHNSON 02/ 4/12 06:46 AM ET AP

Afghanistan Civilian Deaths
Afghan men bury victims of a fuel tanker blast near Bagram air base some 50kms north of Kabul on October 26, 2011. (SHAH MARAI/AFP/Getty Images)

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Last year was the deadliest on record for civilians in the Afghan war, with 3,021 killed as insurgents ratcheted up violence with suicide attacks and roadside bombs, the United Nations said Saturday.

Taliban-affiliated militants were responsible for more than three-quarters of the civilian deaths in 2011, the fifth year in a row in which the death toll went up, the U.N. said.

The figures were a grim testament to the violence the Taliban and allied Islamist militants can still unleash in Afghanistan, even as NATO begins to map out plans for international troops to draw down and give Afghan security forces the main responsibility for fighting insurgents by the end of 2014.

"A decade after the war began, the human cost of it is still rising," said Georgette Gagnon, director for human rights for the U.N. mission in Afghanistan. The number of civilian deaths was up 8 percent over the previous year.

Deaths in suicide bombings jumped dramatically to 450, an 80 percent increase over the previous year. While the number of suicide attacks remained about the same, they killed more civilians. On Dec. 6, a bomber detonated his explosives-filled vest at the entrance of a mosque in Kabul, the capital, killing 56 worshippers during the Shiite Muslim rituals of Ashoura. It was the single deadliest suicide attack since 2008.

The single biggest killer of civilians remained the ever-more-powerful roadside bombs planted by insurgents. The homemade explosives, which can be triggered by a footstep or a vehicle and are often rigged with enough explosives to destroy a tank, killed 967 people – nearly a third of the total.

The 130,000-strong coalition force led by the U.S. says it has been hitting the Taliban hard, seizing their one-time strongholds while expanding and training the Afghan army and police to take over primary responsibility for waging the decade-old war.

Still, insurgent attacks are killing more and more civilians, according to a detailed annual U.N. report.

The increased presence of security forces managed to reduce civilian casualties in the troubled southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, but the U.N. said insurgents simply pulled back and focused instead on areas along the country's border with Pakistan, relying more on roadside bombs and suicide attacks in places like bazaars, schoolyards, footpaths, and bus stations.

"The tactics have changed," said Jan Kubis, the U.N. Secretary-General's special representative to Afghanistan. "The anti-government forces being squeezed in certain areas ... move to some other areas and again use these inhuman, undiscriminating weapons like human-activated explosive devices and suicide attacks."

He pointed out that the Taliban itself banned the use of land mines as "un-Islamic and anti-human" in a 1998 proclamation issued while the hard-line movement ruled Afghanistan with their harsh interpretation of Islamic law.

The U.N. report said there is little difference between mines and the buried homemade bombs used by the Taliban. The majority of improvised explosives have about 9 pounds (20 kilograms) of explosives and are triggered by pressure plates rigged to explode when a person steps on it or a vehicle passes over.

"These are basically land mines," Kubis said of the roadside bombs. "So why is this 'inhuman and un-Islamic' weapon being increasingly used?"

The sheer number of roadside bombs that insurgents planted last year overwhelmed security forces' improved ability to detect and neutralize them. An average of 23 roadside bombs per day were either detonated or discovered and defused last year – twice the daily average in 2010, the U.N. report said. Actual explosions increased by 6 percent.

The report's toll of 3,021 civilians dead in violence related to the war and 4,507 more wounded made 2011 the deadliest year for Afghan civilians recorded by the U.N. since it started keeping a detailed count of civilian casualties five years ago. Last year's figure was roughly double the number from 2007.

The U.N. attributed 77 percent of the deaths to insurgent attacks and 14 percent to actions by international and Afghan troops. Nine percent of cases were classified as having an unknown cause.

The number of civilian deaths caused by insurgents was up 14 percent over 2010, the U.N. said, while those caused by security forces went down 4 percent.

Last year was also the second-deadliest year of the decade-long war for international forces in Afghanistan, with at least 544 NATO troops killed. The coalition has been in Afghanistan since the aftermath of the 2001 American-backed intervention to topple the Taliban, which followed the hard-line Islamist regime's refusal to hand over al-Qaida terrorist chief Osama bin Laden, who sponsored the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the U.S.

While the total number of civilian deaths caused by international and Afghan forces dropped, the number of civilians killed by air strikes targeting insurgents rose to 187 in 2011, accounting for nearly half the deaths attributed to forces supporting the government.

The number of civilians killed during controversial, coalition-led night raids on homes dropped to 63 in 2011, down 22 percent from the previous year, the U.N. said.

The U.N. noted a shift in where the violence affecting civilians was centered. In 2010, the provinces with the highest numbers of civilian casualties were the southern Taliban strongholds of Helmand and Kandahar, where an increased number of U.S. troops pushed to take back territory from insurgents.

While those two provinces still had the most deaths in 2011, their numbers dropped, while civilian deaths went sharply up in southeastern provinces including Khost and Paktika, and the eastern provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar. All those areas lie along Afghanistan's volatile border with Pakistan, where many of the Taliban's leaders and the al-Qaida-allied Haqqani network are believed to be based.

Insurgents also intensified an assassination campaign against people associated with the Afghan government. The U.N. report documented 495 targeted killings in 2011, including provincial and district officials, peace council members and pro-government tribal elders. Assassinations were up 3 percent from the previous year and up 160 percent from 2009.

Among the highest profile assassination victims last year was former President Burhanuddin Rabbani, head of the high peace council charged with seeking talks with the Taliban. He was killed by a suicide bomber claiming to carry a message from the insurgents.

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KABUL, Afghanistan -- Last year was the deadliest on record for civilians in the Afghan war, with 3,021 killed as insurgents ratcheted up violence with suicide attacks and roadside bombs, the United N...
KABUL, Afghanistan -- Last year was the deadliest on record for civilians in the Afghan war, with 3,021 killed as insurgents ratcheted up violence with suicide attacks and roadside bombs, the United N...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred303
Let's Be Friends ^_^
11:02 PM on 02/09/2012
I'm sure this will not get as much news coverage as Syria , America doing something wrong? They always get a free pass. but a brown country? nope that's' a war crime!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ttsgw
Atheist and secular humanist
01:28 AM on 02/06/2012
Who cares as long as it gains the military industry, its owners and executives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ttsgw
Atheist and secular humanist
01:26 AM on 02/06/2012
Who cares as long as the military industry benefits.
03:15 PM on 02/05/2012
Unfortunately this part of the world has been fighting since the beginning of time! Regardless how long the U.S. stays the violence will continue! Although the civilian death's are unfortunate what of the death's of our U.S. service personal? We need to leave this horrid place sooner that later!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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sophie M
ANTI WAR./animal rescue
02:10 PM on 02/05/2012
They are still killing one another .. (and us )
and we are still spending 300 million dollars there...EVERY DAY, each and EVERY DAY.
10 years of fattening up the MIC.
what a shame .
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
se72748
02:05 PM on 02/05/2012
Arm the Arab women and watch the Arab male population plunge .
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LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
11:35 AM on 02/05/2012
Obama denounces Assad's role in kil. l. ings.

Meanwhile, here in Afghanistan........................
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nico Jordaan
Double Standards dont apply to me!
07:44 AM on 02/05/2012
Yay yua USA kill us all and make us pay!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glitterik
Mexico Daydreams ....
07:24 AM on 02/05/2012
Afghanistan is such a toilet. I am so sorry for the women "living" there, if one can label their abysmal existence that, but the whole country is like a lost Brazilian tribe--best left alone and not contacted. Except Cheney and his puppet saw some strategic reason to be there and used 9/11 as their excuse. I hope Obama gets us outta there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ussuri
ask questions, question answers
09:02 AM on 02/05/2012
American women , especially those from ghetto and trailer parks live in haven ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wistfulslinking
World traveller, bon-vivant, writer..
09:54 AM on 02/06/2012
Obama is hiring thousands of recently returned militray to go right back there, at 4xs the cost to taxpayers. They work in the same postions they have for years on US bases, under the same commands, sitting next to uniforms, but in jeans and earning triple pay.

Of course, he can now spin, "the troops are home".
03:54 AM on 02/05/2012
What's a civilian? In Afghanistan, they farm during the day, usually opium poppies, and plant roadside bombs at night.
03:12 AM on 02/05/2012
some one needs to police here forget about the arabs , crooked politicians and lawers making it impossible to get fair trials ,, police treat our own people no differently than the govts in these countrys , yet everyone is still so self righteous , companies paying barely enough to get by , cities engineering traffic everywhere to keep you spending money on gas , this country is not a very nice place , why don t you all wake up , unless you are rich or make alot of money ,this place sucks
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
se72748
02:09 PM on 02/05/2012
Most everyone thinks their own country is superior to all others.Americans think the same thing.Its what we know,what we are used to,who we are.The truth of the matter is,everyone is right.What is right for an Arab, is completely ,not right for an American and vice a versa.
10:27 AM on 02/06/2012
i am an honest person as much as i can be , this country has nothing to do with who i am
12:54 AM on 02/05/2012
years of study and observation ..i arrived at the conclusion..the us dosent go into a war to win ...never has since WW11..the strategy is simple:

1) massive bombing to soften the enemy so they cant win....then
2) prolong fighting...keeps the war machine moving..big $$$ the longer you can fool the public and keep it going........thats the Industrial/Military complex.
3) rebuilding contracts that line their pockets with $$$$$
over and over again
12:43 AM on 02/05/2012
another proud moment in american history
12:10 AM on 02/05/2012
End the war already!!!
12:40 AM on 02/05/2012
America is a "waring" nation! When this one is over there will be another just around the corner! I have no faith in our government ever opting for peace!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ussuri
ask questions, question answers
09:06 AM on 02/05/2012
how about the stupid citizenry that supports those wars and sends their sons and husbands to kill and be killed?
bloodthirsty, evil.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
soldier123
Ask not what your country can do for you but what
11:53 PM on 02/04/2012
and obama want to release these animals
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ussuri
ask questions, question answers
09:06 AM on 02/05/2012
what a stupid post!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
soldier123
Ask not what your country can do for you but what
10:30 AM on 02/05/2012
it it stupid if you are stupid and have not read other news articles.