The Denver Post

String of fatal attacks has people pointing a finger at government

- By Thomas Gibbons- Neff and Fatima Faizi

The series of assaults, while highlighti­ng a city under violent siege, has also exposed growing, and very public, discontent with an Afghan government unable to protect its people despite its many public promises.

The public cry for security has juxtaposed starkly with the stalled peace negotiatio­ns between Afghan and Taliban officials in Doha, Qatar, where both parties have haggled for weeks over ground rules for the talks with little progress.

Hundreds of miles away from the gilded ballrooms and fancy hotels in Doha, rising violence across Afghanista­n has left many deeply skeptical of the notion that the talks could reach a peaceful resolution anytime soon.

That has been especially acute in Kabul, where constant targeted killings, carried out by unnamed attackers, have bred an environmen­t of fear and anxiety.

In rural areas across the country, daily life is dominated by pitched battles between the Taliban and the government.

October was the deadliest month in Afghanista­n for civilians since September 2019, according to data compiled by The New York Times. At least 212 civilians were killed.

The most recent was Yama Siawash, a former anchor for Tolo News, Afghanista­n’s first 24- hour news network, who was killed Saturday morning, along with two others. The cause of death: a magnetic bomb — a signature weapon of the unclaimed attacks that have become commonplac­e around the capital. His death was a discouragi­ng coda to a violent week.

Siawash’s close friend and former colleague, Parwiz Shamal, pointed to the Afghan government’s failures before singling out the attackers.

“I have no faith in the government.

They can’t control anything. We see that day by day the situation gets worse,” Shamal said.

Two days earlier, Abdul Wasi Ghafari, an Afghan army colonel and the father of Zarifa Ghafari, one of Afghanista­n’s first female mayors, herself often threatened, was shot at close- range in front of his house in Kabul, even as the military was warning that he could be attacked.

The Taliban claimed credit for the killing, though the insurgent group often uses unclaimed attacks as well to spread fear and undercut the Afghan government — all while trying to avoid committing high- profile urban assaults under a February agreement with the United States that encouraged, but did not say outright, that all sides would reduce violence.

In turn, under that deal, all U. S. troops would eventually withdraw from the country.

After a surge of crime and violence in Kabul this fall, President Ashraf Ghani appointed the senior vice president, Amrullah Saleh, to take charge of security in the capital, so far with mixed results.

“There have been a lot of statements and meetings by the government,” Shaharzad Akbar, the chairwoman of the Afghanista­n Independen­t Human Rights Commission, said of the rise in violence. “But when you look at

the daily life of civilians they don’t see an increased confidence in their security.”

Saleh’s plan, called the “Kabul Security Compact,” has drawn critical public scrutiny, particular­ly his decision to post pictures across Kabul, some drawn from social media, of people accused of crimes, detailing their offensives on the posters. But in at least two instances, an Afghan official said, officials mistakenly used photos of people not accused of a crime.

“I think everyone in Kabul feels unsafe, they feel like the government isn’t delivering,” said Said Sabir Ibrahimi, an Afghan researcher at New York University’s Center on Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

Despite the Islamic State group’s claim that two of its gunmen had carried out the attack, Saleh and other Afghan government officials accused the Taliban of the massacre. The Taliban, after publicly condemning the attack, then accused the Afghan government of sheltering and supplying the Islamic State.

The back- and- forth was criticized in a Twitter post by Zalmay Khalilzad, the U. S. special envoy for Afghan peace.

“This barbaric attack is NOT an opportunit­y for the government and the Taliban to score points against each other. There is a common enemy here,” Khalizad said.

A famous journalist, the father KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N » of an oft- threatened mayor and at least 22 others, many of them university students — all were killed within the span of a week in Kabul, Afghanista­n’s capital, the victims of targeted assassinat­ions and a terrorist attack.

 ?? Mariam Zuhaib, The Associated Press ?? Afghans check a car destroyed by a magnetic bomb in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Saturday. The bomb attached to the vehicle of Yama Siawash, a former presenter on Afghanista­n’s TOLO TV, exploded early Saturday, killing the journalist and two other civilians, Kabul police said.
Mariam Zuhaib, The Associated Press Afghans check a car destroyed by a magnetic bomb in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Saturday. The bomb attached to the vehicle of Yama Siawash, a former presenter on Afghanista­n’s TOLO TV, exploded early Saturday, killing the journalist and two other civilians, Kabul police said.

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