KABUL, APR 25 -
Three Americans — a pediatrician and a father and son — were killed by
an Afghan government security officer at a hospital Thursday, the latest
in a series of attacks on foreign civilians that has rattled aid
workers, contractors and journalists.
The hospital staff performed surgery on the attacker, who had shot
himself, before he was handed over to Afghan authorities, Cure said in a
statement. However, Interior spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said the assailant
was shot by other security guards.
The attacker's motive was not clear, police said, and there was no Taliban claim of responsibility by Thursday night.
As international troops withdraw, civilian workers increasingly fear
they are considered prime targets by militants. Some are rethinking
their safety — and even if they will stay.
All three of the dead were identified as American doctors by Bektash
Torkystani, a Health Ministry spokesman. But the U.S. Embassy confirmed
only that three American citizens had been killed. Cure said a doctor
was one of three people killed.
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Among the dead was Dr. Jerry Umanos, a 57-year-old pediatrician from
Chicago, according to his mother-in-law, Angie Schuitema. The Lawndale
Christian Health Center in Chicago said Umanos worked there for more
than 16 years before moving to Afghanistan in 2005.
Health Minister Soraya Dalil said the other two dead Americans were a
father and son, who were visiting, and a U.S. nurse was wounded.
The shooting continued a deadly pattern of attacks on civilian targets in Kabul .
In January, a Taliban attack on a popular restaurant with suicide
bombers and gunmen killed more than a dozen people. In March, gunmen
slipped past security at an upscale hotel and killed several diners in
its restaurant. Two foreign journalists were killed and another wounded
in two separate attacks.
But attacks on Western civilians have not been limited to Kabul
. On April 4, an Afghan police officer shot two Associated Press
journalists working in the eastern province of Khost, killing
photographer Anja Niedringhaus and wounding veteran correspondent Kathy
Gannon.
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The hospital shooting is also the second "insider attack" by a member
of Afghan security forces targeting foreign civilians this month.
While aid groups have been targeted before, the frequency of such
attacks has disturbed a community used to the daily risk of working in
conflict zones.
"We're not seeing aid workers running for the airport, but many
organizations are taking a careful look at their security postures,"
said Graeme Smith, a senior analyst in Kabul for the International Crisis Group. "The hard reality is that the country is becoming more violent, and Kabul has not escaped this pattern."
Violence has spiked overall in Afghanistan as insurgents sought to
disrupt the April 5 presidential election and sow insecurity ahead of
the troop withdrawal, nearly 13 years after the U.S.-led invasion to
topple the Taliban's radical Islamic regime.
Afghan civilians, of course, have suffered the longest. A U.N. report
said 2,959 Afghan civilians were killed last year, up 7 percent. Most of
those deaths were caused by the insurgency, many of them by the
thousands of roadside bombs planted around the country.
Foreign workers who once moved relatively freely — if carefully — in
the capital are taking even more precautions. Instead of shopping at
bazaars, traveling in taxis and lunching in cafes, many now are on
virtual lockdown, shying away from once-popular restaurants at night.
Many aid organizations have long had a system of restricting movements
during heightened security risks, but these days that state feels nearly
constant.
The increased number of attacks raises the possibility that insurgents
have embarked on a campaign against foreign aid workers to drive them
away and undermine any help the government might get after most
international troops leave at the end of the year.
"Something rather worrying about Taliban attacks this year is that they
truly are targeting foreign civilians now," said Kate Clark, head of
the Kabul
office for the Afghanistan Analysts Network. She noted, however, that
the Taliban had not claimed responsibility for Thursday's shooting nor
for two other attacks on foreigners this year.
Complicating the picture in the hospital shooting is that it was an
"insider attack" by a member of Afghan security forces. Until recently,
such attacks mostly targeted foreign military or Afghan forces, and it
has been for years been difficult to determine whether these were
Taliban-influenced or the result of personal disputes.
After so many years of an international presence, many Afghans appear
to have shifted views on foreigners in general from celebrating them as
liberators to resenting them as de facto occupiers whose money is drying
up now that the international mission is winding down.
The hospital attacker, who has not been identified, served in the
Afghan Public Protection Force and was assigned as a guard at the
facility, District Police Chief Hafiz Khan said. The APPF is an armed
security force under the Interior Ministry that was created to protect
foreign organizations.
According to its website, the Cure International Hospital was founded
in 2005 by invitation of the Afghan Health Ministry. It sees 37,000
patients a year, specializing in child and maternity health as well as
general surgery.
It is affiliated with the Christian charity Cure International, which operates in 29 countries.
Umnos, the slain doctor, "was always working to help inner-city kids
and trying to help out any needy, poor kids anywhere," said Jeff
Schuitema, his brother-in-law.
"Our families and friends have suffered a great loss, and our hearts
are aching," said Jan Schuitema, Umanos' wife, at the family home in
Chicago. "We don't hold any ill will towards Afghanistan in general or
even the gunman who did this. We don't know what his history is."
Mark Knecht, Cure International's chief financial officer, told
reporters outside the group's headquarters in Lemoyne, Pennsylvania,
that it "remains committed to serve the people of Afghanistan."
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