Suicide bombers hit Afghan cities, Kabul attack foiled

Taliban spokesman claims responsibility for attacks in Puli Alam and Jalalabad but denies involvement in Kabul attack.


Afp February 24, 2013
Afghan Security forces block the road near the side of an incident in Kabul February 24, 2013. PHOTO: AFP

KABUL: Two Taliban suicide bombers killed three members of Afghan security forces on Sunday, but a third attack in Kabul's diplomatic enclave was foiled when police shot dead the would-be assailant, officials said.

The attacker in Kabul was armed with a suicide vest and his SUV was full of explosives, but police opened fire when he tried to penetrate deeper into the capital's diplomatic enclave of Wazir Akbar Khan, the officials said.

In the day's first attack, a suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden car into a spy agency facility in the town of Jalalabad, 150 kilometres (90 miles) east of Kabul.

It was followed by a similar attack on a police base in Puli Alam, 70 kilometres south of the capital, officials said.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahed claimed responsibility for the attacks in Puli Alam and Jalalabad, but denied that the militant group was involved in the foiled attack in Kabul.

Authorities had earlier said that two would-be suicide bombers were killed in Kabul. But city police chief Mohammad Ayoub Salangi said only one attacker was involved, dismissing local reports that a second bomber had managed to escape.

"We have intelligence about this. The bomber was shot dead and his car bomb is defused. It's over now," Salangi told AFP.

The same construction site was overrun by insurgents as part of a coordinated attack in Kabul and several other provinces in April 2012.

Fifty one people, 36 of them insurgents, were killed in those attacks, which besides Kabul hit several other cities.

The Taliban are the main group behind suicide bombings in Afghanistan in a long-running insurgency aimed at toppling the Western-backed government in Kabul.

In Jalalabad, police spokesman Hazrat Hussain Mashriqiwal said the bomber rammed his sedan car into the gates of the walled compound of a National Directorate of Security branch and detonated his bombs.

"There was a suicide car bombing in the intelligence facility in city district two. Two intelligence workers were martyred and three others were wounded," Mashriqiwal said.

Police in Puli Alam, the capital of Logar province, said the attack there hit the gates of a police base along the highway leading to Kabul and killed one police officer.

Logar police chief Abdul Saboor Nasrati said the bombing was carried out in a van and caused "a massive explosion" that broke glass and caused damage to nearby homes.

The Taliban have waged an 11-year insurgency against the Kabul government since being ousted from power in a US-led invasion in 2001.

The United States and NATO have around 100,000 troops in Afghanistan, but the vast majority of them will leave next year, with Afghan forces progressively taking over.

COMMENTS (1)

kHaN | 11 years ago | Reply

It's quite mysterious that the Taliban, over the past few months, have been focusing on targeting the Afghan government installments and security forces rather than the NATO/ISAF. The question arises that if the Taliban have been in a covert ceasefire agreement with Americans? This also fades the hopes that Taliban might quit insurgency after the ISAF leaves in 2014 leaving no reason to the Taliban to fight for the 'liberation of Afghanistan'.

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