Published: 18:25, January 17, 2021 | Updated: 04:53, June 5, 2023
Police: 2 female Supreme Court judges killed in Afghanistan
By Xinhua

Residents and security personnel stand at the site following gunmen shot dead two Afghan women judges working for the Supreme Court, in Kabul on January 17, 2021.

KABUL - Unidentified gunmen killed two female judges from Afghanistan’s Supreme Court on Sunday morning, police said, adding to a wave of assassinations in Kabul and other cities while government and Taliban representatives have been holding peace talks in Qatar.

The two judges, who have not yet been named, were killed and their driver wounded, in an attack at around 8:30 am, police said, adding the case was being investigated by security forces.

The two judges, who have not yet been named, were killed and their driver wounded, in an attack at around 8:30 am, police said, adding the case was being investigated by security forces

A spokesman for the Taliban said its fighters were not involved.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani issued a statement condemning attacks on civilians by the Taliban and other militant groups.

Ghani said “terror, horror and crime” was not a solution to Afghanistan’s problem and beseeched the Taliban to accept “a permanent ceasefire”.

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Government officials, journalists, and activists have been targeted in recent months, stoking fear particularly in the capital Kabul.

On Tuesday, two female army officers died and two female officers and a driver wounded in a similar incident in northern Balkh province.

The Taliban has denied involvement in some of the attacks, but has said its fighters would continue to “eliminate” important government figures, though not journalists or civil society members.

Rising violence has complicated US-brokered peace talks taking place in Doha as Washington withdraws troops.

Sources on both sides say negotiations are only likely to make substantive progress once US President-elect Joe Biden takes office and makes his Afghan policy known.

READ MORE: Afghan rivals to resume talks as civilian killings sow suspicion

The number of US troops in Afghanistan has been reduced to 2,500, the lowest level of American forces there since 2001, according to the Pentagon on Friday.


With Xinhua inputs