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Afghanistan
Four Civilians Killed In Raid On Health Clinic In Wardak: HRW
2019-07-13
[ToloNews] HRW reports that eyewitnesses said that security forces entered the clinic in the Day Mirdad district.

Afghan special forces raided a medical clinic in Wardak province on the night of July 8-9, 2019, and executed four civilians, Human Rights Watch said in a report on Friday.

Afghan authorities should promptly and thoroughly investigate the attack and appropriately prosecute those responsible, the HRW said.

Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that security forces entered the clinic in the Day Mirdad district.

They killed a family caregiver and then detained and bound staff and family members accompanying patients. They then separated four people for questioning ‐ the clinic’s director, a lab worker, a guard, and a family caregiver. All except the director were later found dead from gunshots.

Under the laws of war, deliberate attacks on medical facilities and the summary killing of civilians or incapacitated combatants are war crimes.

"Attacks on medical facilities challenge the very foundations of the laws of war, and will persist if those responsible go unpunished," said Patricia Gossman, associate Asia director. "It’s imperative for the Afghan government to prosecute the commanders who ordered the killings as well as the soldiers who pulled the trigger."

A member of the local health council told Human Rights Watch that at about 9 p.m. on July 8, he heard helicopters and knew a raid was underway. At 5 am, he and others from the health council went to the clinic and found the guard’s room shattered by a rocket that had left a crater.

A clinic staff member said that the special forces tied the hands of all the staff and visiting family caregivers and took them to one room, where they questioned them about whereabouts of the Taliban
...the Pashtun equivalent of men...
. Then they took four men with them, including the clinic’s director, Dr. Wahidullah, and told the remaining staff to stay in the room.

After the special forces unit had left, local villagers discovered the bodies of the three men who had been taken for questioning. The villagers were unable to locate Dr. Wahidullah, whom they believed the forces may have detained. The body of the other family caregiver was also found on the premises.

On July 11, the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA), a humanitarian organization that runs the clinic, described the incident as a "shocking violation" of international humanitarian law and said that "such outrageous use of force against civilians and health facilities constitutes a serious violation of applicable international humanitarian law and it affects provision of health services delivery to the people in the local community." The clinic treats everyone, regardless of their political affiliation.

Afghan cops had previously targeted the Day Mirdad clinic. On February 17, 2016, an Afghan special forces unit accompanied by international forces raided the facility, dragging away two patients and an 11-year-old child who was accompanying an adult patient and rubbed out all three outside the hospital premises.

Afghanistan's Ministry of Defense, however, has said that the operation was carried out on a Taliban stronghold in the district.
An Nahar adds:
The clinic -- run by the non-governmental Swedish Committee for Afghanistan -- was attacked in 2016, allegedly by both international and Afghan army troops. Three people were killed in that incident.

On Wednesday, Toby Lanzer, deputy head of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, said 2019 has been a deadly year for health and aid workers. So far this year, 77 aid workers have been killed, injured or kidnapped compared with 76 in all of 2018, he said.
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