Afghan Voice Agency (AVA)_Monitoring, This is nearly 60 per cent of the total number of civilian casualties (1,092 people) because of unexploded ordnance related incidents, ICRC said in the report.
ICRC said that unexploded and abandoned weapons are a very real and persisting threat to civilians returning to the homes and communities they had fled amid decades of fighting in Afghanistan.
“Though the fighting has decreased, people’s lives continue to be disrupted because efforts to clear the landmines and other unexploded weapons have not been entirely successful. This has resulted in an increase in casualties since August of 2021,” ICRC said.
Children have been particularly vulnerable to fatal or life-changing injuries as they unintentionally step on landmines or pick up unexploded ordnance (UXO) littered around the places they stay, play or do household chores, ICRC said.