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Humanitarian crisis grows in war zone:
rights groups
SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN: Civilians trapped by the fighting
can¡¦t farm, leave their home to buy food or get medical treatment if they fall
ill or are injured
AFP, KABUL
Monday, Feb 22, 2010, Page 5
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US soldiers of the 984th Military Police
Company, from Fort Carson, Colorado, take images of Afghans¡¦ retinas near
Kalagush in Nuristan Province on Feb. 14.
PHOTO: AFP
People living on the front line of a major US-led offensive
against Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan are trapped in their homes
with little access to food and health care, rights groups say.
Hundreds more who fled the area before fighting began over a week ago are
receiving little help in harsh winter conditions, they said.
¡§We are seriously worried about the safety of civilians, especially in the
Marjah area,¡¨ said Ajmal Samadi, head of the independent group Afghan Rights
Monitor.
¡§People who are ill cannot get to hospitals, and others cannot bring them
medicines. They cannot get food, or even go outside to look after their farms,¡¨
he said.
He said food prices were rising due to the assault and people with medical needs
¡X from war wounds to pregnancy ¡X were largely unable to get treatment.
The assault on the Marjah and Nad Ali districts of Helmand Province launched on
Feb. 13 is being held up by snipers and innumerable crude bombs planted by
Taliban fighters, commanders say.
The aim of the operation, dubbed Mushtarak (Together), is to drive Taliban from
the area in the central Helmand River valley, where they have held sway with
drug traffickers for at least two years.
The Afghan government aims to re-establish sovereignty, then provide security,
clinics, schools and jobs.
Mushtarak is a test of US President Barack Obama¡¦s new counter-insurgency
strategy, aimed at winning the trust of the population and neutralizing the
Taliban.
NATO and Afghan leaders have said they hatched the assault in close cooperation
with each other so the military phase can be immediately followed by the
establishment of civil administration and services.
But Norine MacDonald, president of London-based think tank the International
Council for Security and Development, which has an office in the provincial
capital Lashkar Gah, said planners had paid little regard to civilian wellbeing.
¡§The forward planning we heard so much about did not include ensuring that the
local population would be able to leave and live elsewhere in decent conditions,
with access to food and medical care,¡¨ she said.
More than 2,800 families ¡X averaging about five members each ¡X had been
displaced before and during the fighting, said Abdul Rahman Hutaki, head of the
Human Rights and Environment Organization, an independent Afghan group.
¡§Conditions for the displaced are deteriorating and sufficient assistance is not
getting through,¡¨ he said.
Provincial authorities say 2,000 displaced families are in Lashkar Gah,
receiving help from Afghan and international charities.
But Marjah resident Ahmad Jan, speaking by telephone, said: ¡§Since I came to
Lashkar Gah, I haven¡¦t received any assistance.¡¨
Ghulam Farooq Noorzai, Helmand¡¦s director for refugees¡¦ affairs, said food and
winter clothing had been given to 1,400 families.
The 200km² target zone has been strewn with improvised explosive devices (IEDs)
¡X on roads, in fields, hanging from trees, even plastered into the walls of
homes, commanders say.
Marjah resident Abdul Ghias, 53, said by telephone the IEDs made it impossible
to move in or out of the township, adding: ¡§Most people cannot get hold of
medicine or food, and people cannot work in their farms.¡¨
NATO commanders say it could be another three weeks before the area is under
control as fighting between militants and the 15,000-strong force of US Marines,
NATO and Afghan troops is proving ¡§difficult.¡¨
In the meantime, people caught in crossfire, shot as Taliban human shields, or
injured by bombs face difficulties getting treatment.
The International Committee of the Red Cross says it has the only medical
facility in Marjah, a first aid station manned by five people.
Lashkar Gah, where there are two hospitals, is 20km away by the shortest route,
said Bijan Farnoudi, Red Cross spokesman in Kabul.
But the roads are so heavily mined, few are willing to make the journey and
alternative routes can take up to seven hours.
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