Policeman guns down 3 US citizens at Kabul hospital

Agence France-Presse

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The victims of the policeman, who was assigned to protect the hospital, include a doctor and a visiting father and son

KABUL, Afghanistan – An Afghan policeman opened fire at a Kabul hospital run by a US charity on Thursday, April 24, 3 three Americans including a doctor, in the latest deadly attack targeting foreign civilians in the city.

The gunman shot himself during the incident outside the CURE International hospital and was detained by police after being treated inside, officials said, adding that the motive for the killing was not clear.

“He opened fire as the foreign nationals were entering the hospital, tragically killing 3,” Seddiq Sediqqi, spokesman for the interior ministry, told Agence France-Presse.

Health Minister Soraya Dalil said the victims included a US doctor who had worked for CURE for 7 years and an American father and son visiting the facility.

CURE identified the doctor as pediatrician Jerry Umanos and paid tribute to his work “caring for the most vulnerable members of society – children and premature infants – and helping them survive the harsh realities of childbirth in Afghanistan.”

Reports said that Umanos is a Filipino-American doctor based in Chicago.

It said that the attacker was a member of the Afghan police detail assigned to protect the hospital and that CURE was working with Afghan authorities to investigate the details surrounding the incident.

“The assailant shot himself after the attack and was taken into surgery by Jerry’s colleagues at the hospital before being transferred out of our facility into the custody of the government of Afghanistan,” said CURE president Dale Brantner.

The US embassy condemned the deaths of the 3 Americans, saying that “this act of terror deprives the citizens of Afghanistan of valuable medical expertise.”

US National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said: “Any such attack on civilians at a hospital is despicable and cowardly. We send our deepest condolences to the families of all those killed and injured.”

Kabul has been hit by a spate of attacks targeting foreign civilians this year, including a Lebanese restaurant where 21 people died, an attack on a luxury hotel and the daylight shooting of a Swedish radio journalist.

Last month Taliban militants attacked a Kabul guesthouse used by Roots of Peace, a US anti-landmine charity, killing two people including a girl.

And this month Associated Press (AP) photographer Anja Niedringhaus was shot dead by a police commander in the eastern province of Khost in an attack which also left her Canadian colleague Kathy Gannon badly wounded.

That killing came on the eve of presidential elections to choose a successor to Hamid Karzai as US-led combat troops withdraw from Afghanistan after 13 years of fighting Taliban insurgents.

Testing times as US troops exit 

CURE International is a non-profit organization founded in 1998, based in Pennsylvania and working in 29 countries including conservative Muslim Afghanistan.

It describes itself as an “unapologetically Christian organization” on its website, but says that it offers “treatment regardless of gender, religion, ethnicity, or ability to pay.”

Its hospitals and health programs specialize in treating children with conditions including clubfoot, cleft lips, burn injuries and brain diseases.

CURE International took over the hospital in west Kabul in 2005 at the invitation of the Afghan government, and treats 37,000 patients a year at the site, focusing on maternity and pediatric care.

There was no immediate comment from Taliban spokesmen after the shooting.

Preliminary results from the April 5 presidential elections are due to be released on Saturday.

After about 80% of ballots were counted, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah was ahead of his main rival Ashraf Ghani.

The incoming president will have to impose security as 51,000 NATO combat troops pull out by the end of this year, as well as strengthening an economy reliant on declining aid money.

Eight candidates ran in the election, with polling day hailed as a success by Afghan officials and foreign allies.

Voters turned out in force and the Taliban failed to launch a major attack despite threats to disrupt the vote. – Rappler.com

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