SECURITY — March 23, 2026
Amnesty International Raises Concerns Over Pakistani Airstrike on Kabul Drug Rehabilitation Center
Amnesty International has raised serious concerns over a Pakistani airstrike on the 'Omid' drug rehabilitation center in east Kabul on March 16, 2026, citing potential violations of international humanitarian law and significant civilian casualties. The organization called for an independent investigation by Pakistani authorities.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by Ariana News and RTA — 2 min read

Pakistani fighter jets struck the 'Omid' drug rehabilitation center, formerly part of Camp Phoenix, in east Kabul on the night of March 16, 2026. The attack was one of several carried out on parts of the city that night.
Amu TV reports at least 200 people were killed and dozens wounded at the center, most of them civilians and patients.
Amnesty International expressed serious concerns that the strike likely violated international humanitarian law by failing to adequately protect civilians. Isabelle Lassée, the organization's deputy regional director, stated that while the total number of casualties has not been independently verified, the attack caused a significant number of deaths and injuries among civilians, at least around hundreds.
Lassée noted that the site has operated as a drug rehabilitation center since 2016. She said the Pakistani army should have taken all possible precautionary measures to protect civilians and civilian objects, and conducted a proportionality assessment, even if an ammunition depot was present inside the camp.
"Any reasonable assessment and intelligence gathering would have concluded that this camp had a high presence of civilians," Lassée said.
Amnesty called on Pakistani officials to explain the intelligence and verification measures used, and to conduct an independent, impartial and timely investigation into the incident and civilian casualties, then publicize the results to ensure accountability. The organization urged all parties to adhere to international humanitarian law and protect civilians and infrastructure, including medical centers.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
Multiple independent Afghan outlets (Amu TV, Ariana News, RTA) corroborate Amnesty International's on-record statement raising concerns over a Pakistani airstrike on the Omid drug rehabilitation center in Kabul on March 16, 2026, including Amu TV's report of at least 200 killed; the verifiable fact of Amnesty's statement and the incident's occurrence is confirmed across sources.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Amu TV: 'serious concerns regarding international humanitarian law'; 'scale of mortality and destruction raises serious concerns about proportionality'; 'should have taken all possible precautionary measures' - these phrases from Amnesty's statement mix advocacy with reporting, using loaded terms like 'serious concerns' and prescriptive 'should have' to frame Pakistan's actions critically.
Independent web corroboration
A separate web search returned 8 matching reports. A selection:
As part of “Operation Ghazab Lil Haq”, Pakistan carried out airstrikes on 16 March in Kabul and Nangarhar. The strikes hit a camp used as drug rehabilitation centre known as Omid, which was established in 2016 on the site of Camp Phoenix, a former US and NATO military base on the outskirts of Kabul.
As part of “Operation Ghazab Lil Haq”, Pakistan carried out airstrikes on March 16 in Kabul and Nangarhar. The strikes hit a camp used as drug rehabilitation center known as Omid, which was established in 2016 on the site of Camp Phoenix, a former US and NATO military base on the outskirts of Kabul.
As part of “Operation Ghazab Lil Haq”, Pakistan carried out airstrikes on 16 March in Kabul and Nangarhar. The strikes hit a camp used as drug rehabilitation centre known as Omid, which was established in 2016 on the site of Camp Phoenix, a former US and NATO military base on the outskirts of Kabul.
- Amnesty: Airstrike on Kabul Rehabilitation Centre Sparks Humanitarian Concerns - Shia Wavesshiawaves.com
An airstrike by Pakistan on 16 March hit a drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul, raising serious concerns under international humanitarian law
Across the newsrooms
Filed by 3 outlets
Amu TV
Originating
Framed
Framed
Ariana News
Reported straight
Reported straight
RTA
Framed
Framed
Filed under
Security — Kabul, Omid Center, Amnesty International, Pakistan, Isabelle Lassée
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