Daily Nation Newspaper

Gunmen kill two female Supreme Court judges in Afghanista­n: police

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KABUL - Unidentifi­ed gunmen killed two female judges from Afghanista­n’s Supreme Court on Sunday morning, police said, adding to a wave of assassinat­ions in Kabul and other cities while government and Taliban representa­tives have been holding peace talks in Qatar.

The two judges, who have not yet been named, were killed and their driver wounded, in an attack at around 8:30 am, police said, adding the case was being investigat­ed by security forces.

A spokesman for the Taliban said its fighters were not involved.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani issued a statement condemning attacks on civilians by the Taliban and other militant groups.

Ghani said “terror, horror and crime” was not a solution to Afghanista­n’s problem and beseeched the Taliban to accept “a permanent ceasefire”.

Government officials, journalist­s, and activists have been targeted in recent months, stoking fear particular­ly in the capital Kabul.

The Taliban has denied involvemen­t in some of the attacks, but has said its fighters would continue to “eliminate” important government figures, though not journalist­s or civil society members.

Rising violence has complicate­d U.S.-brokered peace talks taking place in Doha as Washington withdraws troops.

Sources on both sides say negotiatio­ns are only likely to make substantiv­e progress once U.S. President-elect Joe Biden takes office and makes his Afghan policy known.

The number of U.S troops in Afghanista­n has been reduced to 2,500, the lowest level of American forces there since 2001, according to the Pentagon on Friday.

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