KABUL, Nov. 5, 2009

UN Moves Afghan Staff Over Security Fears

About Half of 1,100 Staffers in Afghanistan Will be Shifted, Many Out of Country, for Weeks After Deadly Attack

  • Play CBS Video Video U.N. Facility Attack in Kabul

    Over a dozen people have died after three Taliban militants launched a coordinated assault on a United Nations compound in Afghanistan. CBS News' Mandy Clark reports from Kabul.

    • An United Nations staff member holds a floral wreath as a coffin containing a body of a UN worker is covered with the UN flag during a ceremony to transfer the remains of staff members who were killed when gunmen attacked a guest house used by U.N. staff 6-days ago, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Nov. 3, 2009.

      An United Nations staff member holds a floral wreath as a coffin containing a body of a UN worker is covered with the UN flag during a ceremony to transfer the remains of staff members who were killed when gunmen attacked a guest house used by U.N. staff 6-days ago, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Nov. 3, 2009.  (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

    • Afghan police officers in Kabul run towards a building housing United Nations staffers, the site of an attack by Taliban militants Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009. Eight people died in the gunfight.

      Afghan police officers in Kabul run towards a building housing United Nations staffers, the site of an attack by Taliban militants Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009. Eight people died in the gunfight.  (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

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  • Photo Essay Afghan U.N. Attack

    Taliban militants attack a guest house used by U.N. staff in the Afghan capital.

  • Special Report Afghanistan

    The latest news and analysis on the war in Afghanistan and the debate in Washington over its future.

(AP)  The United Nations said Thursday that it is temporarily relocating more than half its staff in Afghanistan following last week's deadly Taliban attack against U.N. workers.

The U.N. mission is still reeling from a pre-dawn assault on a guesthouse in the capital last week that left five U.N. staffers dead. The Kabul attack was the most direct targeting of U.N. employees during the organization's decades of work in the country.

Some 600 nonessential staffers will be moved for four to five weeks to more secure locations in and outside of Afghanistan while the body works to find safer permanent housing, spokesman Aleem Siddique said.

CBSNews.com Special Report: Afghanistan

The majority of the U.N.'s 1,100 international staff in Afghanistan live the capital, spread out among more than 90 guesthouses.

The plan is to consolidate those living arrangements so staff can be better protected, Siddique said. He stressed this was not a pullout or a scale-down in operations. About 80 percent of the U.N.'s staff in Afghanistan are Afghan citizens.

"We've been here for over half a century and we're not about to go any time soon," Siddique said.

In the Oct. 28 attack, gunmen wearing suicide vests stormed a private guesthouse where dozens of U.N. staffers lived, killing five U.N. workers and three Afghans. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the assault, saying they intentionally targeted U.N. employees working on the recent presidential election.

Much U.N. work in Afghanistan has been put on hold since the attack and employees have been given the option to take leave while officials consider how to better protect employees.

The move comes on the heels of a U.N. decision to suspend much of its work in the volatile northwest of neighboring Pakistan because of increasingly targeted attacks.

Though the U.N. insists it is committed to the region, its actions show how much security has degraded in the two countries and raise questions about the future of the U.N. in the area.

In Iraq, a series of attacks on U.N. workers led the world body to shut down operations in 2003 for years.

© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment
by quapawsix November 5, 2009 11:32 PM EST
The UN is a joke just like the league of nations after the first World War was. It's time for the UN to $hit or get off the pot.
Reply to this comment
by finkfurst November 6, 2009 3:50 AM EST
quapawsix - What you really mean is that the UN should do what America wants it to............... right?
by dontknowitall November 5, 2009 7:22 AM EST
Typical UN move. Avoid everything until the United States and our allies take the burden off of their hands. Then shift the blame and cry and demand and still do nothing. Unless, beyond useless.
Reply to this comment
by finkfurst November 5, 2009 7:28 AM EST
What?????? UN aid workers were there helping people FOR DECADES before you invaded! Now you've made it too unsafe for them to stay. That is EXACTLY what happened in Iraq too.

dontknowitall? That's the understatement of the century!
by 1notrub11 November 5, 2009 7:48 AM EST
So finkfurst, what you mean is that as long as the UN does not participate in election activity (that is what they were attacked for, correct?), they can stay and do so safely.
But I thought the Afghan peoples were interested in holding an election. If not, why do they show up to the polls in very large numbers? Sounds to me more like the issue was brought on by the Taliban and not by the presence of anyone else.
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