UN: More children dying in Afghan violence

Afghan army soldier Ali Raza, 30, searches for land mines with a metal detector during an IED (improvised explosive device) defusing training exercise in Jalalabad, east of Kabul, Afghanistan. The number of children killed and wounded in Afghanistan’s war jumped by 34 percent in 2013 as the Taliban intensified armed attacks across the country and continued to lay thousands of roadside bombs, according to a U.N. report Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014.

KABUL, Afghanistan — The number of children killed and wounded in Afghanistan’s war jumped by 34 percent last year as the Taliban stepped up attacks across the country and continued to lay thousands of roadside bombs, the United Nations said Saturday.

Overall civilian casualties were up by 14 percent, reversing 2012’s downward trend and making 2013 one of the deadliest years of the 12-year war for civilians, the U.N. Assistance Mission for Afghanistan said in a report.