Afghanistan: UN envoy urges unbiased inquiry into fatal Kunduz hospital air strike
New York, Oct 6 (IBNS): Nicholas Haysom, the United Nations Special Representative for Afghanistan, reiterated on Monday the need for an impartial investigation into the deadly air strike on the Mdecins sans Frontires (MSF) hospital in Kunduz, which resulted in the deaths and injuries of medical personnel, patients and other civilians this past Saturday.
In an interview with UN Radio, he said that the UN has been emphasizing the need to ensure the incident – which reportedly left more than 20 people dead and was strongly condemned by a host of senior UN officials, including Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon – is investigated properly.
“We issued a series of statements which I think, collectively, are very powerful indication of our concern over an attack on a medical facility [which is] clearly protected under international law,” continued, Haysom, noting that apart from his own statements, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, had also issued a “very strong call for an independent and impartial inquiry.”
MSF has been operating the only hospital in Kunduz, which is in the northeast of Afghanistan, under extremely trying conditions. Following Saturday’s attacks, the organization announced that it is pulling out of the city.
As for the current situation in Kunduz, Haysom explained that the air strikes had further deteriorated the humanitarian conditions. Moreover, he added, there is a severe shortage of water and power in many parts of the city.
He said, “We all are conscious and concerned about the overall humanitarian situation. People have been without food. Today some shops opened but the cost of food escalated dramatically."
He went on to say the situation improved marginally today with security forces gaining more control of Kunduz. “The current situation has improved. The security forces seem to be in control of the large parts of the city now. There is still sporadic fighting on the outskirts,” he explained.
Haysom noted that Afghanistan is more firmly fixed on what is happening throughout the northeast than merely the awful attack on the Kunduz hospital.
A statement issued on Sunday by the UN human rights office noted that according to MSF, pro-Government forces had been informed of the precise location of the medical facilities.
According to the Office of the High Commissioner (OHCHR), a United States spokesperson has reportedly been quoted saying US planes were carrying out airstrikes at around the time the hospital was hit.
The UN human rights chief said it was essential to ensure any inquiry was independent, impartial, transparent and effective. “This deeply shocking event should be promptly, thoroughly and independently investigated and the results should be made public," he said.
Top Headlines
-
News
Major aviation boost for Kashmir: Cabinet clears development of a new Civil Enclave at Srinagar International Airport
February 24, 2026
-
News
India urges all nationals to leave Iran 'by available means' as US-Iran tension grows
February 23, 2026
-
News
Ind.AI: Sovereignty, jobs, energy and the What If?
February 20, 2026
-
News
From car diplomacy to global strategy: Modi, Macron upgrade IndiaFrance ties
February 17, 2026
-
News
Seva Teerth: PM Modi inaugurates new PMO, announces these key decisions on first day
February 13, 2026
-
News
Hero of Operation Sindoor: IAF vice chief hails Rafale ahead of mega 114-jet deal
February 11, 2026
-
News
'Govt surrendered before Trump, sold Bharat Mata: Rahul Gandhi attacks Centre over IndiaUS trade deal
February 11, 2026
-
News
Painful times in my marriage: Melinda Gates reacts to Bill Gates being named in Epstein Files
February 05, 2026
-
News
Perverse act of self-immolation: Shashi Tharoor slams Washington Post after son Ishaans layoff
February 05, 2026
-
News
Is India moving away from the Dollar? Strategic shift in foreign reserves signals a new era
February 03, 2026




