KABUL, May 19: Eleven Afghans working with a US-based company in southern Afghanistan were killed in two ambushes by ‘suspected Taliban militants’, a US official said on Thursday.

Most of the victims were working for Chemonics, a US-based company engaged in irrigation projects in Afghanistan’s top poppy cultivating province of Helmand. The projects are aimed at providing opium farmers in the province with alternative livelihoods.

“It is very likely that they were employees of the same company but all of these people were not necessarily direct employees, there may have been some drivers or police killed too,” the official said.

Six Afghans were killed in an ambush in the early hours of Thursday in southern Zabul province.

They were escorting the body of one of Chemonics’s five Afghan reconstruction workers killed in a similar attack in neighbouring Helmand province a day earlier, the US official and western security sources said.

“That was our group that was travelling from Kandahar back to Kabul and they were transporting one body back to Kabul,” Susan DeCamp, spokeswoman for Chemonics, said.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

IMF’s unease
Updated 24 May, 2024

IMF’s unease

It is clear that the next phase of economic stabilisation will be very tough for most of the population.
Belated recognition
24 May, 2024

Belated recognition

WITH Wednesday’s announcement by three European states that they intend to recognise Palestine as a state later...
App for GBV survivors
24 May, 2024

App for GBV survivors

GENDER-based violence is caught between two worlds: one sees it as a crime, the other as ‘convention’. The ...
Energy inflation
Updated 23 May, 2024

Energy inflation

The widening gap between the haves and have-nots is already tearing apart Pakistan’s social fabric.
Culture of violence
23 May, 2024

Culture of violence

WHILE political differences are part of the democratic process, there can be no justification for such disagreements...
Flooding threats
23 May, 2024

Flooding threats

WITH temperatures in GB and KP forecasted to be four to six degrees higher than normal this week, the threat of...