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Finnish aid workers shot dead in Afghanistan | Finnish aid workers shot dead in Afghanistan |
(about 9 hours later) | |
Two Finnish aid workers were shot dead in the centre of Herat, western Afghanistan, on Thursday hours after a marketplace bomb killed at least six people in the northern province of Takhar. | |
The attacks came at a time of heavy violence and political tension, as election officials preside over a painfully slow recount of contested ballots in a fraud-plagued presidential poll. | |
Civilian casualties climbed to record levels in the first six months of this year, UN figures showed, as insurgents test the security forces in the wake of Nato troop drawdowns. | Civilian casualties climbed to record levels in the first six months of this year, UN figures showed, as insurgents test the security forces in the wake of Nato troop drawdowns. |
The aid workers were travelling in a local taxi when their attacker pulled up beside them, riding pillion on a motorbike, and shot the two women through the window. | |
"They were travelling to their office when they were attacked in the Shar-e Nau area of Herat," said provincial governor Fazlullah Wahidi. "An investigation is now under way." | |
The taxi driver and a colleague in the front seat were arrested, Herat police chief Abdul Rauf Ahmadi said. The Taliban declined to claim responsibility for the attack, saying they were still investigating. | |
"The barbaric fate of the women affects us all. The act is particularly shocking as the women were in Afghanistan to help local people," Finnish president Sauli Niinistö said in a statement. He also demanded that the killers be brought to justice. | "The barbaric fate of the women affects us all. The act is particularly shocking as the women were in Afghanistan to help local people," Finnish president Sauli Niinistö said in a statement. He also demanded that the killers be brought to justice. |
The women worked for a well-respected Christian organisation, International Assistance Mission, which has been active in Afghanistan since 1966, providing medical aid, education and economic support. | |
Despite its religious background, the group only does development work; proselytising is forbidden in Afghanistan, where the penalty for converting from Islam is death. | Despite its religious background, the group only does development work; proselytising is forbidden in Afghanistan, where the penalty for converting from Islam is death. |
Several other IAM employees were killed in a 2010 attack on a medical convoy in northern Badakhshan, when British doctor Karen Woo also died. | Several other IAM employees were killed in a 2010 attack on a medical convoy in northern Badakhshan, when British doctor Karen Woo also died. |
The marketplace bomb was attached to a motorbike and aimed at a police car, AP reported, but detonated when only civilians were in the area. As well as six killed, another 26 were injured, several of them children. | |
The Taliban did not claim responsibility for either attack, saying only that they were investigating the shootings in Herat. | The Taliban did not claim responsibility for either attack, saying only that they were investigating the shootings in Herat. |
Also on Thursday, a suicide bomber hit a checkpoint in eastern Nangarhar province, killing a local police commander and his bodyguard. Security has declined in many parts of Afghanistan, with a rise in crimes such as kidnapping and robbery as well as insurgent attacks. | |
The Taliban traditionally step up attacks during the summer "fighting season", when snow-melt and vegetation growth make it easier for soldiers to slip over mountain passes from safe havens in neighbouring Pakistan, and conceal themselves and weapons in Afghanistan. | The Taliban traditionally step up attacks during the summer "fighting season", when snow-melt and vegetation growth make it easier for soldiers to slip over mountain passes from safe havens in neighbouring Pakistan, and conceal themselves and weapons in Afghanistan. |