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Afghanistan: One year after the massacre in a maternity ward

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Key facts about the attack on Kabul’s Dasht-e-Barchi hospital remain uncertain

One year ago, on May 12, 2020, there was a horrific attack on the maternity ward of Kabul’s Dasht-e-Barchi hospital, a facility supported by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). According to official sources, 24 people were killed—including MSF midwife Maryam Noorzad, 16 mothers, and two children. On June 15, MSF announced its decision to withdraw from the hospital. In parallel, MSF also carried out an internal fact-finding exercise. Dr. Isabelle Defourny, MSF director of operations, explains what we discovered and some of the lessons learned.

One year later, what do you recall about the attack on the Dasht-e-Barchi maternity ward?

I recall the first days, our progressive understanding of how this massacre had been perpetrated: attackers had deliberately, and methodically, killed mothers and pregnant women, in their beds, one after the other. Such a horrible attack on a maternity ward has no precedent, either in Afghanistan or in MSF’s 50-year history. Never would we have thought that such violence could be unleashed on women at the moment when they are the most vulnerable, when giving birth. There is unbearable symbolic meaning in this act of violence.

Then followed days and weeks of intense activity, in which we tried our best to provide support—including mental health care—to the wounded, to the families of the victims, and to our staff.

Some weeks later, we had to make the difficult choice to withdraw from Dasht-e-Barchi. We knew we would leave behind huge needs. For many women in the neighborhood, our maternity ward was a much-needed resource: 16,000 deliveries took place there in 2019 alone. But we couldn’t continue our activities after what happened.

Why did MSF run a fact-finding exercise?

On the one hand, it’s part of our standard practice following such severe security events to describe as precisely as we can the chronology and description of the attack, and also to analyze the elements which allowed such an event to take place, and what could have been done to avoid it. It allows us to re-evaluate the environment and our positioning in a given context, how security risks are assessed and managed. This exercise didn’t aim to review our decision to leave Dasht-e-Barchi, but was intended to be useful for the other existing MSF activities in Afghanistan.

On the other hand, we feel it’s important, and a sort of duty towards the victims, but also to the survivors and our staff in Afghanistan and beyond, to try and understand what we can about what happened. This is why, even though we knew beforehand that we couldn’t obtain all the answers to our questions, it was important and necessary to perform this exercise.

How was the fact-finding exercise conducted?

Interviews were done with MSF staff and other witnesses present on site or in areas surrounding the maternity ward, as well as with relevant external stakeholders involved at the national and international level. In total, 38 witnesses and 45 external stakeholders and experts were interviewed by MSF. We also reviewed material and factual elements, as well as publicly available elements such as statements in the media and on social media.

What did this fact-finding exercise establish?

First, it allowed us to gather and check some elements, which proved complicated during the first weeks following the attack, and to confirm some information. A total of 24 people were killed, according to official sources, including one of our midwives, Maryam; 16 mothers; and two children, ages 7 and 8. Six MSF staff, one newborn, and one caretaker were also wounded in the attack.

This inquiry also confirmed that existing security protocols limited the number of casualties among MSF staff and patients. For instance, more than 90 people were able to take refuge in the maternity ward’s safe rooms.

However, for some of the key questions—notably the identity of the perpetrators of this massacre, and their motivations—no solid conclusion or certainty came out of this exercise.

Do you know more about the perpetrators and their motives?

No one has claimed responsibility for this attack. Immediately afterward, Afghan authorities publicly blamed the Taliban—or Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan—which refuted and condemned the accusation. In the media, representatives of foreign governments accused the Islamic State -Khorasan Province (IS-KP). However, no evidence was made public to support those claims. Since then, MSF has only received oral information that an Afghan [government] investigation on the attack is ongoing.

Our fact-finding process didn’t allow us to determine with certainty the identity of the perpetrators of the attack and their motives. However the most likely hypothesis is that the attack was committed by at least two members of the IS-KP armed group. Some sources mentioned support from other armed groups, which our inquiry could not confirm or [rule out].

Even if we don’t know who was responsible, the fact-finding exercise suggested that reasons for this attack might relate to a form of retaliation vis-à-vis Afghan authorities. According to this hypothesis, pregnant women would have been targeted because, one week before this attack, three women, including two pregnant women, had been killed during a military operation run by Afghan military forces against IS-KP; or because of the situation of women and children allegedly supporting IS-KP and being held under arrest by Afghan authorities.

However, this doesn’t exclude the possibility that women and pregnant women were targeted as members of the Hazara community. This attack is one of a long series of attacks in recent years against this [ethnic] minority, particularly in the Dasht-e-Barchi neighborhood [of Kabul].

Was MSF targeted?

Our fact-finding exercise gave no indication that MSF, as an institution, was directly targeted. However, we can’t exclude that the presence of MSF in this maternity ward may have played a role in the choice of this target.

In any case, the first targets of this attack were pregnant women and women in childbirth in a maternity ward which we ran. We know that the attackers directly headed to the maternity and killed the pregnant women and women in childbirth who were present there. Two children who had come in for routine vaccination and another caretaker were also shot dead in the attack. Health care staff were killed and injured in the attack.

If MSF was not directly targeted, why would you not resume activities in the Dasht-e-Barchi maternity ward?

We can’t work in an environment where patients and medical staff are targeted, and where we can’t prevent such a massacre from happening again. This attack clearly targeted pregnant women in a maternity ward run by MSF. The fact-finding exercise confirmed that none of the different parties with whom we have relations in Afghanistan gave us specific alerts about it.

What does this mean for MSF's presence in Afghanistan?

Our will to continue working in Afghanistan is motivated by the dire medical needs of the Afghan population. This is particularly true in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, and at a time when the 20-year-long international military presence comes to an end and internal political dynamics are shifting. But our work can only continue if minimum conditions of safety are ensured for our patients and staff.

When MSF returned to Afghanistan 12 years ago—after having withdrawn in 2004 following the killing of five of our colleagues—we knew it was one of the most dangerous countries to work in. At that time, our analysis was that it was possible to craft a safe working space by renewing our engagement with all the different parties involved [in the conflict].

Since then, after the attack on our hospital in Kunduz [in 2015], and the one on the Dasht-e-Barchi maternity ward [in 2020], we have to admit that this wasn’t enough. In these two attacks, 66 people were killed—by far the highest number of casualties in our programs around the world over the last six years. Our organization cannot accept the idea of integrating the loss of our staff or of the patients we treat. We maintain our freedom to withdraw and stop our activities when we think that the risk of such severe attacks being repeated is too great.

Although security and political dynamics are different from one area to another, globally our presence in the country today remains constrained and limited. We continue our work by intervening only in areas where we feel that we can build a solid stand, by constantly reviewing the context and security incidents, by reducing the exposure of our staff, particularly in Kabul, and by reinforcing our engagement with all local parties that will speak with us.

*MSF has worked in Afghanistan since 1980 and today runs five projects in five provinces: Helmand, Herat, Kandahar, Khost, and Kunduz. In 2020, MSF teams provided 112,453 emergency room consultations, assisted 37,898 deliveries, and undertook 5,669 major surgical interventions. MSF provides medical care free of charge. It relies solely on private funding for its work in Afghanistan and does not accept money from any government. *