On the night of March 16, 2026, a devastating airstrike targeted the Omid Addiction Treatment Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, leaving at least 408 people dead and 265 injured. India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) “unequivocally” condemned the act as “barbaric” and “unconscionable,” noting that the attack occurred during the holy month of Ramzan.
In a sharp rebuttal, Pakistan’s Foreign Office dismissed India’s stance as “blatant hypocrisy,” claiming the facility was an arms depot for militant groups. This exchange underscores a dangerous escalation in regional tensions, with both nations trading accusations over sovereignty and the sponsorship of terrorism.
Devastation At The Omid Rehab Centre
The Omid Hospital, a 2,000-bed facility repurposed from a former military base to treat thousands of patients, was reduced to a “scene of total destruction” following the 9 PM strike.
Witnesses and medical staff reported that patients had just finished dinner and were at congregational prayer when the jets hit three different parts of the compound, causing the roof of a 180-foot-long building to collapse.
MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal slammed Pakistan’s justification for the strike, stating, “Pakistan is now trying to dress up a massacre as a military operation.” He further emphasised that there is “no faith, no law, and no morality” that can justify the deliberate targeting of a hospital and its vulnerable patients.
A Growing ‘Open War’ At The Border
This incident is the deadliest event in a conflict that has been spiralling since late February 2026, leading to the displacement of over 40,000 people. Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokesperson, Tahir Andrabi, rejected India’s statement as “misleading and unwarranted,” accusing New Delhi of being a “spoiler” that sponsors terrorism from Afghan soil.
While Pakistan maintains it “precisely targeted” terrorist infrastructure at the nearby Camp Phoenix, Afghan authorities and UN representatives have pointed to the massive civilian toll at the hospital. This diplomatic row follows months of Pakistan alleging that the Taliban regime provides sanctuary to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a charge Kabul continues to deny while warning that the “time for diplomacy is over.”
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we believe that the sanctity of a healthcare facility must be absolute, regardless of the geopolitical tensions surrounding it. To bomb a hospital a place of healing and refuge is a profound failure of humanity that no strategic objective can excuse.
We stand in solidarity with the families in Kabul who are currently burying their loved ones in mass graves, and we urge both nations to replace the rhetoric of “open war” with a commitment to civilian safety and regional harmony.
In a world already fractured by conflict, choosing empathy and dialogue over airstrikes is not just a moral necessity; it is the only path toward a sustainable and peaceful future for all.
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