Bodies Still Missing After Strike On Kabul Rehab Center, Says Taliban

Taliban authorities held a group funeral on Thursday for victims of a Pakistani airstrike on a drug treatment center in Kabul, with dozens still unaccounted for.

Taliban authorities held a group funeral on Thursday for victims of a Pakistani airstrike on a drug treatment center in Kabul, with dozens still unaccounted for.
Sharafat Zaman, spokesman for the Taliban’s public health ministry, said the total death toll from the attack had reached 411, with 263 others injured.
He added that dozens of families have approached Taliban authorities searching for the bodies of relatives, but many remain missing.
The Taliban have buried dozens of victims in mass graves in Sarai Shamali in two stages.
The United Nations has confirmed 143 deaths in the attack.
Pakistani warplanes struck at least nine targets in Kabul and Nangarhar on the night of March 16. The Omid drug treatment center in eastern Kabul caught fire following the strike.
Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, described the incident as a precision operation, saying terrorist facilities and support infrastructure were targeted.
Reports indicate that Taliban military facilities were located near the treatment center.
Pakistan has been accused of failing to observe the principle of proportionality in the strike. International humanitarian law requires parties to a conflict to adhere to proportionality in their attacks.