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An alleged airstrike targeting a hospital in Afghanistan has sparked significant concern, not only over the devastating event itself but also due to what many are criticizing as a tepid response from the international community.
According to reports from Afghanistan’s Taliban-led government, the attack on the Omid Hospital in Kabul resulted in over 400 fatalities and left hundreds more wounded. This facility is a key drug rehabilitation center in the region. Tragically, the violence has also claimed the lives of civilians, including children, as cross-border tensions with Pakistan continue to escalate, as reported by The Associated Press.
At this time, these casualty figures have yet to be independently verified, adding to the complexity and urgency of the situation.
The airstrike occurs amidst a rapidly intensifying military confrontation between Pakistan and Afghanistan, which has seen a marked increase in hostilities over the last three weeks.

Cross-border airstrikes and skirmishes have now spread across numerous provinces. Pakistan has indicated that their military actions are aimed at dismantling bases operated by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a group acknowledged by the U.S. as a terrorist organization and held responsible for various attacks within Pakistan. Conversely, the Taliban government has accused Pakistan of breaching Afghanistan’s sovereignty, further fueling the conflict.
Cross-border airstrikes and clashes have expanded across multiple provinces, with Pakistan targeting what it says are bases of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a militant group responsible for attacks inside Pakistan and designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. The Taliban government has accused Islamabad of violating Afghanistan’s sovereignty.
At a United Nations briefing Wednesday, a U.N. spokesperson said the conflict has now entered its third week, with widespread civilian impact. More than 115,000 people have been displaced, more than 300 shelters damaged or destroyed, and at least 25 health facilities closed or disrupted due to the fighting, according to U.N. humanitarian agencies.
Pakistan has denied targeting a hospital, saying the operation struck militant infrastructure.
“Since the beginning of this counterterrorism campaign, Pakistan has sought to defend and protect the people of Pakistan … by targeting terrorists and terrorist infrastructure that are incubated and nurtured by the Afghan Taliban,” the prime minister’s spokesperson Mosharraf Zaidi told Fox News Digital.

Red Crescent volunteers carry the body of a victim who died in what the Taliban said was a Pakistani air strike on a drug rehabilitation hospital, in Kabul, Afghanistan, March 17, 2026. (Sayed Hassib/Reuters)
Zaidi said the strike targeted weapons and ammunition at Camp Phoenix in Kabulm Afghanistan, and insisted, “There are no civilian hospitals in Camp Phoenix,” adding that reports of a rehabilitation facility being hit may be due to “secondary explosions” from stored weapons.
The United Nations on Wednesday, two days after the attack, condemned the reported strike, with Secretary-General António Guterres, through a spokesperson, “strongly condemning” an airstrike that “reportedly resulted in the death (and) injury of civilians at a hospital,” and calling for an independent investigation.
Still, some analysts say the response does not match the scale of the incident.
“U.N. officials swiftly condemned U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran’s regime as unlawful ‘aggression’ … Yet Pakistan’s airstrike on Kabul’s Omid Hospital — killing over 400 civilians — has drawn only a belated ‘strong condemnation’ … and standard pleas for ‘de-escalation’,” Executive Director of UN Watch Hillel Neuer told Fox News Digital.

Afghan Taliban fighters patrol near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in Spin Boldak, Kandahar Province, following exchanges of fire between Pakistani and Afghan forces. (Reuters/Stringer/File Photo)
“This restrained response — no personal outrage from Guterres, no emergency session naming Pakistan, and no equivalent chorus from U.N. rapporteurs, or agencies like WHO, U.N. Women, and UNICEF — reveals rank hypocrisy,” he said. “When hundreds of vulnerable Afghans die in a hospital, the U.N. offers measured words. Yet when the U.S. or Israel can be blamed — justifiably or not — the condemnation is immediate and overwhelming. When some victims matter far more than others, the U.N. reveals its cynical political agenda. This double standard doesn’t uphold human rights, it erodes them.”
Australian human rights lawyer Arsen Ostrovsky echoed that criticism in a post on X, calling the strike “an absolute massacre,” while noting what he described as a lack of global outrage: “World outrage? Zero. Could barely muster p17 in the newspaper here.”