An employee of the United Nations’ migration agency was among 15 people killed in an attack in Afghanistan’s eastern city of Jalalabad, the UN said on Wednesday.
Tuesday’s assault on the department of refugee and returnee affairs was the latest in a series of attacks in recent months that have killed and wounded dozens of people.
The 22 year-old employee of the International Organisation for Migration who was killed had lost her husband to a bomb in Kabul three years ago.
“They left a six-year-old orphan, while the wife was one of thousands of Afghans who form the backbone of the daily work of the UN in the country,” it said in a statement.
A staffer of the International Rescue Committee humanitarian group was also killed.
Government officials said no fewer than 15 people were killed in the attack during an emergency meeting to discuss humanitarian needs, but the toll could rise as investigators sift the rubble.
Sohrab Qaderi, a member of the local provincial council, said the final figure could exceed 20, going by his contacts with families who were missing relatives who had been present during the attack.
Tadamichi Yamamoto, the UN’s official in Afghanistan, condemned the “abhorrent” targeting of civilians, and the UN called for the perpetrators to be brought to justice.