Source: UNAMA

AFGHANISTAN PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICT ANNUAL REPORT 2016 KABUL, AFGHANISTAN FEBRUARY 2017

“This appalling conflict destroys lives and tears communities apart in every corner of Afghanistan. Real protection of civilians requires commitment and  demonstrated concrete actions to protect civilians from harm and for parties to the conflict to  ensure accountability for indiscriminate and deliberate acts of civilian harm.”
Tadamichi Yamamoto, United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan, Kabul, February 2017.

“Children have been killed, blinded, crippled – or inadvertently caused the death of their friends – while playing with unexploded ordnance that is negligently left behind by parties to the conflict. Women continue to be brutally punished in parallel so-called ‘justice’ processes while religious minorities are targeted as they pray in their mosques. The consequences of each act of violence ripple through families and entire communities that are left broken, unable to sustain themselves and largely failing to obtain any semblance of justice or reparation. After nearly 40 years of constantly evolving armed conflict in Afghanistan, a Daesh franchise has now surfaced as an additional, deadly component. It is about time the various parties to the conflict ceased the relentless commission of war crimes and thought about the harm they are doing to their mothers, fathers, children and future generations by continuing to fuel this senseless, never-ending conflict.” 

Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Geneva, February 2017

DOWLOAD REPORT :  protection_of_civilians_in_armed_conflict_annual_report_2016_final280317

Table of Contents

Methodology 1
Executive Summary  3
Recommendations  11
I.  Human Rights Protection in Conflict-Affected Areas  15
Women and Armed Conflict  15
Children and Armed Conflict  18
Explosive Remnants of War  24
Impact of Armed Conflict on Health-Care  27
Impact of Armed Conflict on The Right to Freedom of Expression  31
Deliberate Sectarian Attacks against the Shia Muslim Religious Minority  34
Conflict-Related Displacement  36
Cross-Border Engagement  37
II.  Ground Engagements – Civilians Caught in Cross-Fire  39
Civilian Casualties Attributed to Afghan National Security Forces  45
III.  Anti-Government Elements & Daesh/Islamic State Khorasan Province  50
Improvised Explosive Devices  52
Suicide and Complex Attacks  59
Targeted and Deliberate Killings by Anti-Government Elements  63
Conflict-Related Abduction of Civilians  66
Parallel Justice Structure Punishments  68
Deliberate Targeting of Civilians and Civilian Objects  71
Taliban Claims of Responsibility and Public Statements  75
Daesh/Islamic State Khorasan Province  78
IV.  Pro-Government Forces  82
Tactics and Incidents Causing the Most Harm to Civilians  82
Aerial Operations  83
Partnered search operations  89
Killings of Civilians by Afghan National Security Forces  90
Pro-Government Armed Groups  93
Afghan Local Police  96
Government Policies and Mechanisms for Civilian Casualty Mitigation  98
V. Legal Framework  100
VI. Glossary  105
Annex 1: Attacks Claimed by Taliban: Breakdown by Target Type  112
Annex 2: Table of Taliban Allegations of “War Crimes”  113
Annex 3: Press Statements by USFOR-A PUBLIC AFFAIRS  114
Annex 4: Statement by the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan on the
UNAMA 2016 Report on Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict  116
Annex 5: NATO Resolute Support Official Response to the UNAMA 2016 Report on
Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict  119
Annex 6: Taliban Response to UNAMA 2016 Report on Protection of Civilians in Armed
Conflict  121

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