Deccan Chronicle

2 Afghan SC women judges shot

US envoy blames Taliban as new trend of killings target high profile figures

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Kabul, Jan. 17: Gunmen shot dead two Afghan women judges working for the Supreme Court in an ambush in the country’s capital on Sunday, officials said, an attack the top US envoy in Kabul blamed on the Taliban.

Violence has surged across Afghanista­n in recent months despite ongoing peace talks between the Taliban and government — especially in Kabul, where a new trend of targeted killings aimed at high-profile figures has sown fear in the restive city.

The latest attack, which US Charge D’Affaires Ross Wilson blamed on the Taliban, comes just two days after the Pentagon announced it had cut troop levels in Afghanista­n to 2,500, the fewest in nearly two decades.

The attack on the judges happened as they were driving to their office in a court vehicle, said Ahmad Fahim Qaweem, a spokesman for the Supreme Court. “Unfortunat­ely, we have lost two women judges in today’s attack. Their driver is wounded,” Qaweem said.

There are more than 200 female judges working for the country’s top court, the spokesman added.

Kabul police confirmed the attack, which no group has claimed so far.

Afghanista­n’s Supreme Court was a target in February 2017 when a suicide bomb ripped through a crowd of court employees, killing at least 20 and wounding 41.

The latest widespread attack drew

condemnati­on,

with Wilson blaming the Taliban directly as he called for an investigat­ion.

“The Taliban should understand that such actions for which it bears responsibi­lity outrage the world and must cease if peace is to come to Afghanista­n,” wrote Wilson on Twitter.

The shooting came just hours after a high-level meeting between the Taliban negotiatio­n team and US special envoy for

Afghanista­n Zalmay Khalilzad, along with the head of US forces in Afghanista­n, General Scott Miller, according to tweets by a Taliban spokesman.

During the sit-down, spokesman Mohammad Naeem said the insurgents called again for the release of the group’s remaining jailed fighters, along with the removal of the Taliban from the UN blacklist.

The Afghan government has already released almost 5,000 Taliban inmates despite widespread concern that the fighters would be used to reinforce the insurgents' ranks.

President Ashraf Ghani also accused the Taliban of launching an “illegitima­te war and hostility”.

“The government once again reiterates its call on the Taliban that violence, terror, brutality and crimes... will only prolong the war in the country,” he said in a statement issued by the presidenti­al palace.

The head of the Afghanista­n Independen­t Human Rights Commission also condemned the murders, calling the ongoing killings a “systematic massacre”.

“Afghanista­n is losing one of its most important gains, its educated & profession­al cadre, in what seems to be a systematic massacre & the world seems to be just watching. This must stop,” tweeted Shaharzad Akbar.

The killing also spurred a rare statement from the Chinese embassy in Kabul, offering condolence­s to the victims’ families. —

 ?? AFP ?? A woman walks at the site where gunmen shot dead two Afghan women judges working for the Supreme Court, in Kabul on Sunday. —
AFP A woman walks at the site where gunmen shot dead two Afghan women judges working for the Supreme Court, in Kabul on Sunday. —

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