UN: Over 370 Afghan Civilians Killed in Pakistan Conflict in Three Months

Victims of a strike on a drug rehab center in Kabul are burried in a mass grave on Badam Bagh Hilltop on March 26. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP/File
Victims of a strike on a drug rehab center in Kabul are burried in a mass grave on Badam Bagh Hilltop on March 26. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP/File
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UN: Over 370 Afghan Civilians Killed in Pakistan Conflict in Three Months

Victims of a strike on a drug rehab center in Kabul are burried in a mass grave on Badam Bagh Hilltop on March 26. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP/File
Victims of a strike on a drug rehab center in Kabul are burried in a mass grave on Badam Bagh Hilltop on March 26. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP/File

At least 372 Afghan civilians were killed in conflict between government forces and Pakistan in the first three months of the year, the United Nations reported on Tuesday, with more than half the deaths attributed to airstrikes on a drug rehab facility in Kabul.

Relations between Islamabad and Kabul have been fraught since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, and exploded into what Pakistan's defense minister called "open war" in February.

Islamabad accuses the Afghan Taliban government of sheltering militants behind a surge in attacks -- particularly the Pakistan Taliban, who have waged a violent campaign for years.

Afghan officials deny the charge and counter that Pakistan harbors hostile groups and does not respect its sovereignty.

"Between 1 January and 31 March 2026, UNAMA documented a total of 372 civilians killed and 397 injured as a result of cross-border armed violence" between Afghanistan's security forces and Pakistani military forces, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said.

In a written response to the report, Islamabad said 130 Pakistani civilians and security personnel were killed since the beginning of this year.

On Monday, Pakistan's foreign ministry summoned Kabul's top envoy to Islamabad, saying a suicide attack that killed 15 people, mostly police officers, at the weekend was "masterminded by terrorists residing in Afghanistan".

Long-running cross-border clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan escalated in October last year, leaving dozens dead, but after subsiding, they resumed at the end of February.

The UN mission, which has a mandate to monitor civilian casualties only in Afghanistan, said its report was based on checks with three independent sources.

The latest three-month figure is higher than any toll for the period recorded by UNAMA since 2011.

According to the report, 13 women, 46 children (31 boys and 16 girls) and 313 men were killed in Afghanistan between January 1 and March 31.

- NGO worker killed -

"The leading cause of civilian casualties was airstrikes (64 percent) with the remaining caused by indirect cross-border firing" and one "targeted killing" of an NGO worker, the UN said.

The high proportion of men was attributed to the March 16 strikes on a Kabul drug treatment hospital which admitted only male patients. At least 269 people were killed and 122 wounded.

Many bodies "could not be identified because they were reduced to dismembered body parts", while others were unrecognizable "due to extensive burns", the report said.

"The real figure may be significantly higher," the UN added.

The Taliban government reported more than 400 civilians killed in that incident.

In a written response included in the report, Pakistan insisted "no hospital, drug rehabilitation center, or civilian facility was targeted".

"Pakistan's actions were directed solely against terrorist and military infrastructure," Islamabad said.

The UN mission urged Afghan authorities to "compile a record of the missing" from the hospital strike to help their relatives find answers about their fate.

UNAMA also called on the warring parties to respect international law by refraining from targeting health facilities or from firing shells or grenades into areas populated by civilians.

The report recounted the death of a female Afghan employee of an NGO in Nuristan on March 19 during the Eid al-Fitr holiday -- even though a ceasefire had been agreed a day earlier.

As she tried to return home with her husband and three children, "Pakistani military forces began firing at their vehicle", the UN said.

They stepped out of the car to cross the river and reach a safer area when "the NGO worker was shot in her right side and fell into the water and drowned with her three-year-old son".

Since talks in early April in China, Pakistan and Afghanistan have committed to avoiding any escalation, according to Beijing.

Incidents have decreased without stopping entirely.

On April 27, seven civilians were killed and 85 wounded by shelling that hit, among other places, a university in Asadabad, according to Afghan authorities. 



Kremlin Says Preparations for Putin Visit to China are in Final Stages

FILED - 26 July 2023, Russia, Saint Petersburg: FILE PHOTO - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting at the Konstantinovsky Palace. Photo: Vladimir Smirnov/KREMLIN/dpa
FILED - 26 July 2023, Russia, Saint Petersburg: FILE PHOTO - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting at the Konstantinovsky Palace. Photo: Vladimir Smirnov/KREMLIN/dpa
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Kremlin Says Preparations for Putin Visit to China are in Final Stages

FILED - 26 July 2023, Russia, Saint Petersburg: FILE PHOTO - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting at the Konstantinovsky Palace. Photo: Vladimir Smirnov/KREMLIN/dpa
FILED - 26 July 2023, Russia, Saint Petersburg: FILE PHOTO - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting at the Konstantinovsky Palace. Photo: Vladimir Smirnov/KREMLIN/dpa

The Kremlin said on Tuesday that preparations ‌were ‌in the ‌final ⁠stages for a visit ⁠by President Vladimir Putin ⁠to ‌China.

Kremlin spokesman ‌Dmitry Peskov ‌said ‌the timing of the ‌visit would be announced ⁠in due ⁠course.

Relations between Russia and China have deepened significantly in recent years, with the two countries expanding cooperation in trade, energy, defense, and diplomacy while presenting their partnership as a counterbalance to Western influence.


Iran Chief Negotiator Says US Must Accept Proposal or Face ‘Failure’

A person rides a motorcycle over a US flag painted on a street, in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
A person rides a motorcycle over a US flag painted on a street, in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
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Iran Chief Negotiator Says US Must Accept Proposal or Face ‘Failure’

A person rides a motorcycle over a US flag painted on a street, in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
A person rides a motorcycle over a US flag painted on a street, in Tehran, Iran, May 12, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters

Iran's chief negotiator on Tuesday issued an ultimatum to the United States to accept the conditions in Tehran's 14-point proposal for peace in the Middle East war or face "failure".

The defiant message came after US President Donald Trump rejected the latest counteroffer from Iran and said that a fragile ceasefire in place since April 8 was on "life support".

But Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said Washington had to accept Tehran's "rights" if it wanted to end more than two months of conflict, as peace talks remain deadlocked after an initial round failed to produce a breakthrough last month.

"There is no alternative but to accept the rights of the Iranian people as laid out in the 14-point proposal. Any other approach will be completely inconclusive; nothing but one failure after another," said Ghalibaf in a post on X.

"The longer they drag their feet, the more American taxpayers will pay for it."

Iran has refused to back down in its war with Washington, with military officials warning they are prepared to respond to any renewed US attack.

It has choked traffic through the key Strait of Hormuz trade route, rattling global markets and giving it vital leverage, while the US has imposed its own naval blockade on Iranian ports.

Details of the latest US proposal remain limited, though media reports say it involves a one-page memorandum of understanding aimed at ending the fighting and establishing a framework for negotiations on Iran's nuclear program.

Iran's foreign ministry said its response called for ending the war on all fronts, including Lebanon, halting the US naval blockade on Iranian ports and securing the release of Iranian assets frozen abroad under longstanding sanctions.

It did not elaborate on what Iran would offer in return.

On Tuesday, the spokesman for Iran's parliamentary national security commission said lawmakers would consider the possibility of enriching uranium to weapons-grade levels if conflict resumed.

"One of Iran's options in the event of another attack could be 90 percent enrichment. We will examine it in parliament," Ebrahim Rezaei wrote in a post on X.

Tehran possesses a significant stockpile of uranium enriched to 60 percent purity, with roughly 90 percent required for a nuclear weapon.

Iran's stockpile of highly enriched uranium remains a key sticking point in negotiations with the United States, which insists the material must be transferred out of the country.

Iran has so far refused to move its enriched uranium stockpile abroad and insists on its right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy, though it has said the level of enrichment remains "negotiable".


UK’s Starmer Defies Calls to Quit, Says He Is Getting on with Governing

 11 May 2026, United Kingdom, London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer giving a speech at the Coin Street Neighbourhood Centre in Waterloo, London, as he sets out the next steps he is taking in his plan to build a stronger, fairer Britain. (James Manning/PA Wire/dpa)
11 May 2026, United Kingdom, London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer giving a speech at the Coin Street Neighbourhood Centre in Waterloo, London, as he sets out the next steps he is taking in his plan to build a stronger, fairer Britain. (James Manning/PA Wire/dpa)
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UK’s Starmer Defies Calls to Quit, Says He Is Getting on with Governing

 11 May 2026, United Kingdom, London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer giving a speech at the Coin Street Neighbourhood Centre in Waterloo, London, as he sets out the next steps he is taking in his plan to build a stronger, fairer Britain. (James Manning/PA Wire/dpa)
11 May 2026, United Kingdom, London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer giving a speech at the Coin Street Neighbourhood Centre in Waterloo, London, as he sets out the next steps he is taking in his plan to build a stronger, fairer Britain. (James Manning/PA Wire/dpa)

Prime Minister Keir Starmer defied calls to resign on Tuesday, telling ministers he would "get on with governing" despite a "destabilizing" 48 hours of growing calls to set out a timetable for his departure after an election drubbing.

At a meeting of his cabinet team of ministers, ‌Starmer, in the top ‌job for less than two years, ‌repeated ⁠that while he ⁠took responsibility for one of his Labour Party's worst election defeats, there had been no official move to trigger a leadership contest.

"The past 48 hours have been destabilizing for government and that has a real economic cost for our country and for families," Starmer told ministers, according to his Downing Street office.

"The ⁠country expects us to get on with ‌governing. That is what I ‌am doing and what we must do as a Cabinet."

British government ‌bonds rallied weakly on Starmer's comments, but remained firmly ‌in the red for the day.

His defiance was in marked contrast to the feelings of many in his Labour Party.

On Tuesday, a junior minister resigned after a handful of ministerial aides also ‌left the government. More than 80 Labour lawmakers have publicly called for him to set ⁠a resignation ⁠date so the party could install a new leader in an orderly manner.

Starmer had sought to shore up his position on Monday when he promised to act more boldly and with more urgency to tackle Britain's many problems.

He had said the country would never forgive the center-left Labour Party if it embarked on a leadership challenge, just two years after its huge parliamentary majority was supposed to bring an end to the political chaos that had gripped the country since Britain voted to leave the European Union 10 years ago.