Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Children caught up in Afghan war
Children caught up in Afghan war
Dec 3, 2025 11:11 AM

  In what had become a daily ritual, Anisa Shahghasi said goodbye to her son, Nawab, with prayers on her lips and a quick wave of her hand.

  The world outside their cramped Kabul home was fraught with dangers. And like every other mother in the Afghan capital - which still witnesses regular bombings and deadly attacks - Anisa wished for her son’s safe return.

  Nawab, 17, had set off with a friend to sell scarves and bracelets near the ISAF headquarters, like he had done every day over the past six years.

  The neighborhood was one of the most heavily guarded places in Afghanistan. But that day, he wasn't protected by the high concrete walls. A boy reportedly younger than Nawab detonated a bomb, killing several people around him.

  Among those killed were Nawab and four other children. They joined an ever-growing list of child victims of Afghanistan’s unremitting war.

  "We see it every day," says Emanuele Nannini, program coordinator at the emergency hospital in Kabul.

  In a country where more than 42 per cent of the population lives on less than a dollar a day, children are often forced to venture out to earn a living. Stepping outside, they court dangers and often pay a heavy price.

  Worrisome trend

  According to UN estimates, more than 578 children were killed or wounded as a direct result of the ongoing conflict in the first six months of 2012: that works out to 4.8 cases per day.

  At the Kabul emergency hospital, 82 of the 278 patients treated in August this year were minors. Of the 82, 33 were treated for bullet wounds, 34 for stab wounds or from shelling, and another 11 for mine-related injuries.

  With 374 civilian deaths and 581 injuries, August 2012 was the second deadliest month in Afghanistan since the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, UNAMA, began recording civilian casualties.

  Like Nawab, many have fallen victims for being at the wrong place at the wrong time.

  Nawab and his young friends were particularly unlucky in being outside the Shash Darak carpet store in the vicinity of the ISAF headquarters.

  Candace Rondeaux, a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group in Afghanistan, says military installations, such as the ISAF headquarters frequented by foreigners and the wealthy, are an “enormous draw” for children desperate for money.

  They are also perhaps the most dangerous because of the unexpected nature of many of the attacks in Kabul.

  Illyas, a 15-year-old bracelet seller and a friend of Nawab, sustained three shrapnel wounds to both of his legs in the attack.

  His legs still in plaster casts, he recounts that the friends were watching cars driving by, commemorating the assassination of Ahmad Shah Massoud, a slain Mujhaideen leader, in September 11, 2001.

  Then someone joined the crowd and a loud bang followed.

  "There was an explosion. That’s all I remember,” says Ilyas, now confined to a wheelchair. “He [the bomber] was just there. I don’t even remember what he looked like”.

  'Vulnerable'

  The rush to get money from passing vehicles leaves the children susceptible to bombers who target foreigners.

  Mustafa Sahibzada, deputy director of the Support Children and Afghan Women in Need Organization (SCAWNO), says Kabul’s street children are particularly vulnerable.

  “Whenever a car passes by, especially one with foreigners, the kids rush to wash the tires or espand [wave incense] the vehicle”.

  “One minute they are washing a car, happy at the prospect of some money, and the next there’s an explosion” says Sahibzada, whose organization works to re-integrate street children into the Afghan education system.

  As in the case of the suicide bomber who killed Nawab, Afghan children are not only at the receiving end of the ceaseless violence. At times, they are the catalyst.

  For its part, UNICEF has called on “all parties to the conflict”, including the government of Hamid Karzai, to do everything possible “right away to protect the lives and basic rights of the children of Afghanistan”.

  Initial reports said the blast that killed Nawab and his friends was carried out by a suicide bomber no older than 13.

  “They say he was 13, but so many people pass by there every day. He was just another person among the crowd,” recounts Illyas.

  In February, two 10-year-olds were arrested by Afghan authorities with explosive-laden vests.

  Staying clear of violence is a challenge for the children in conflict-ridden Afghanistan. Some children even fall prey while at home.

  "It's not just in the streets. Their families, also surrounded by conflict, are living violent lives themselves," says Nannini of the Kabul emergency hospital. There are instances where children have been wounded accidentally, having found weapons in their home.

  Nawab’s mother, Anisa, has been inconsolable since the attack.

  “I sent him to work thinking he could contribute somehow. That maybe our lives would get better … but what am I to do? How do I go on without my ‘breadwinner son’” she says.

  The four to five dollars that Nawab earned each day helped the family enormously. But the high price he had to pay ultimately has left the family shattered.

  As his father, Ahmad Shah, says:" We always encouraged him to go to school...may be he could have become an accountant or a doctor."

  Nawab’s grandmother, Zia Gul, shared the father’s hopes. “He was doing odd jobs, but I wanted him to have a house of his own, one he could share with his [future] wife and family.”

  The youngster did not live long enough to fulfill his family’s expectations. Instead, he became one of the more than 13,400 civilians killed in the past five years of war -a symbol of the high cost that children often have to pay for a conflict they did not start.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Nawab Shahghasi who was killed in a suicide blast outside the ISAF headquarters in Kabul

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Ramadan in Yemen: Fasting by day, starving by night
  Fatima Salah, 58, does not sleep in the daytime as many do during the fasting month of Ramadan.   Instead, she wanders the city of Sanaa visiting neighbors and local shops, hoping to obtain enough food to feed her family at night.   "I am exhausted and thirsty because of walking, and...
How Israel has failed Palestinian victims
  A recent plea deal for an Israeli police officer who killed a Palestinian teenager has highlighted a broader policy of leniency in Israel for offences committed against Palestinians, analysts say.   "The police, the army, the investigative units, the public attorney and the judiciary are all in concert protecting each other...
Jerusalem cameras 'more dangerous than metal detectors'
  Palestinians have vowed to continue protests and confrontations with Israeli forces in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank, in rejection of new surveillance cameras installed at the gates to al-Aqsa Mosque compound.   "Above all else, this is an issue of control and power. It is as if they are...
Palestinian hunger strikers: 'They had no choice'
  On a sweltering spring afternoon, relatives and supporters of the Palestinian hunger-striking prisoners gathered at a marquee in downtown Ramallah.   The tent, one of dozens erected in solidarity with the prisoners across towns and villages in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip, stretched across one end of Clock...
Israel accused of 'killing children with impunity'
  At the Hjeiji family home in the occupied West Bank village of Qarawat Bani Zeid, classmates, friends and relatives of Fatima Hjeiji lined up to pay their respects.   One by one, the women and girls hugged Fatima's mother Dareen and offered sympathetic words.   "She was such a lovely girl. Everybody...
Palestinian baby dies from tear gas inhalation: PA
  An 18-month-old Palestinian baby has died after suffering from tear gas inhalation during clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinians nearly three months ago, according to Palestinian health officials.   Abdul Rahman Barghouti died late on Friday from asphyxiation, following more than two months of treatment, Palestinian Ministry of Health spokesman Osama...
'They killed him because he was an Arab'
  The family of a young Palestinian man fatally shot by Israeli police in Jaffa are demanding justice for what they believe was a "cold-blooded killing".   Mahdi al-Saadi, a 22-year-old Palestinian citizen of Israel, was shot in the chest and killed in the early hours of Saturday morning. Israeli police also...
How Israel is targeting Palestinian institutions
  When Israeli police showed up at the maps and survey department of the Arab Studies Society's office in Jerusalem last month, director Khalil Tufakji was surprised to receive a six-month shutdown order.   Police proceeded to confiscate computers and the main server, along with posters and maps that had hung on...
Amnesty: All sides violated international law in Mosul
  Amnesty International has said it had identified a pattern of attacks by Iraqi forces and the US-led military coalition backing them that violated international humanitarian law and may amount to war crimes.   It also said that fighters from ISIS group flagrantly violated that same law by deliberately putting civilians in...
Israel reduces Ramadan exit permits for Gaza
  By Nigel Wilson   When two buses stopped close to Bab al-Asbat in Jerusalem on the second Friday of Ramadan, the elderly passengers were quick to disembark and head straight for the Old City.   It was around 10am, more than two hours before the Friday prayer would begin, but this was...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved