Afghan police men carry the body of suicide bomber wrapped
in a carpet inside governor's compound in Parwan provincial
capital of Charikar, 50km north of Kabul, Afghanistan. (AP
Photo/ Ahmad Jamshid)
Six suicide bombers have attacked a governor's security
meeting in one of Afghanistan's most secure provinces, killing
22 people and driving home the point that the Taliban is able
to strike at will virtually anywhere in the country.
The governor of Parwan, a relatively peaceful eastern
province just 50km north of Kabul, survived. He said he
picked up an assault rifle and shot at least one of the
attackers dead from the waiting room of his office.
Two other insurgents detonated their vests, causing most of
the deaths and burning part of the governor's offices.
Several cars were wrecked by shrapnel and bullets. Broken
glass and body parts littered a charred lawn.
The bold daylight assault in Charikar follows a similar
attack by suicide bombers at a major Kabul hotel in June, and
the downing of a U.S. helicopter full of U.S. special
operations troops only 60km away from Kabul. The attacks in
and close to the capital raise more questions about
Afghanistan's ability to defend itself as the U.S.-led
coalition hands more of the country over to its struggling
forces.
Police said Sunday's assault began outside the front gate,
where a car bomber set off an explosion that smashed through
a wall of the compound, allowing five other insurgents toting
assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers to
enter. The attack interrupted a provincial security meeting
attended by Parwan Gov. Abdul Basir Salangi, his police
chief, intelligence director, a local army commander and at
least two NATO advisers.
All the attackers wore suicide vests, and at least three of
them were dressed as police officers, police said. Two
attackers made it across a courtyard and detonated their
vests inside the governor's headquarters building, but three
others were killed before they could enter, police said.
Salangi told The Associated Press that he and his aides fired
at insurgents from his offices. He claimed to have killed one
of the attackers.
"I had an AK-47. I shot him from the window of my waiting
room," said Salangi, who was formerly the police chief of
Kabul and a rebel fighter during the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan in the 1980s. He said it was the second time in
the past month he was targeted by an assassination attempt.
Provincial Police Chief Gen. Sher Ahmad Maladani also took
part in the gunbattle, which he said lasted for approximately
one hour.
"The last attacker was killed by police when he was only
about 15m away from me," said Maladani. The bomber was killed
before he could detonate his explosives.
Sixteen of the dead were civilian Afghan government employees
and six were policemen, according to the Afghan Interior
Ministry. At least 37 other people were injured.
The U.S.-led coalition plans to send 10,000 troops home by
the end of the year and is considering whether to move forces
from Taliban heartlands in the south to reinforce troops
fighting insurgents in the east.
Southern provinces like Kandahar and Helmand are the
Taliban's traditional stronghold, while the east is a base of
operations for many Pakistani-based Taliban and international
terrorist affiliates like al-Qaeda and the Haqqani network.
Afghanistan's eastern border with Pakistan is also a common
thoroughfare for insurgents attempting to strike Kabul,
although Parwan is considered to be one of the country's most
secure areas.
The tactics used by the bombers in Parwan were similar to
those used in the June attack on the Intercontinental Hotel,
which was stormed by nine insurgents armed with bomb vests,
rifles and rocket launchers on the eve of a major conference
on Afghan governance. They killed at least 12 people and held
off NATO and Afghan forces for five hours, until
U.S.-launched helicopter airstrikes killed the last
insurgents hiding on the roof.
Both attacks, along with the August 1 downing of a Chinook
helicopter in neighbouring Wardak province, underscore how
the war is encroaching upon the nation's capital.
The Parwan attack is also another example of the Taliban's
determination to strike the Afghan government by attacking
government installations, ambushing its armed forces and
attempting to assassinate its officials.
In May, a suicide bomber attacked the compound of the
governor of Afghanistan's northern Takhar province, killing a
general, a regional police commander in the north and the
provincial police chief. Takhar's governor, Abdul Jabar
Taqwa, was injured in the attack.
In Kandahar alone, assassins in recent months have killed the
provincial police chief, the province's top cleric, the mayor
of the provincial capital and Ahmad Wali Karzai, the powerful
half-brother of the Afghan president.
Meanwhile, NATO announced that three service members were
killed on Sunday in two separate improvised bomb attacks. The
international coalition did not release any further details
about the deaths.
The French Defense Ministry said one of its soldiers was
killed Sunday by isolated fire during an operation in the
northeast province of Kapisa.
The four deaths bring to 385 the number of coalition service
members killed in Afghanistan this year. Sixty-two of them
were killed this month.
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