Afghan officials say 10 young girls died in an explosion in eastern Afghanistan as they were collecting firewood Monday.
Authorities say they believe the blast came from an old landmine, one of many that are still hidden in fields and rural areas across the country after decades of war.
General John Allen, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, offered his condolences to the families, and said Afghanistan has become “one of the most heavily mined countries on Earth.”
The Afghan Education Ministry Says:
Nine of the victims were enrolled in grade school.
They were collecting firewood before heading to class.
Children typically help their families gather wood to heat their homes during the area’s harsh winters.
They were killed by an old land mine.
Allen said “the tragic and cruel fact” about landmines is that “they don’t discriminate.”
In separate violence, police say a suicide car bomber in the capital Kabul killed two Afghan workers and wounded at least a dozen other people at a compound owned by a U.S. military contractor.
The Taliban claimed responsibility, saying the contractor was involved in security. The company Contrack is involved in building aircraft runways and ammunition storage systems for military bases around Afghanistan.
R.S