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Suicide bombers

October 31, 2011

Taliban insurgents have attacked a US charity in Kandahar, killing four Afghans, just days after the deadliest attack ever on foreign forces, which killed 17 people in Kabul.

https://p.dw.com/p/Rtyn
An Afghan police officer stands guard at a checkpoint next to the site of a suicide bombing in Kandahar
Afghanistan has witnessed several deadly attacks in recent weeksImage: AP

In the latest suicide attack in Afghanistan, an attacker detonated a vehicle outside the offices of US-based International Relief and Development (IRD) before two others entered the compound and fired on security forces. Police and government officials have confirmed four people have been killed, including an Afghan policeman, and several others wounded.

The two insurgents were subsequently shot dead in the exchange of fire with Afghan forces, Kandahar police chief Abdul Razzaq said. The UN office buildings have suffered extensive damage following the bombing.

Afghan security men stand near the site of the suicide bombing in Kabul
Saturday's suicide bombing killed 17 peopleImage: dapd

The Taliban has accepted responsibility for the attack, saying that its group members were targeting the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in Kandahar, the largest city in southern Afghanistan.

Dan McNorton, United Nations spokesman, said that all international employees working for the UNHCR have been accounted for, he said, adding that the UN was trying to make sure that all its employees were safe.

String of deadly attacks

Kandahar is the birthplace of the Taliban movement, which has been waging a bloody battle for a return to power since it was ousted by the US-led invasion in late 2001 following the September 11 attacks in the US.

The attack comes two days after Taliban militia rammed into a NATO convoy in Kabul, killing 13 troops and civilian employees of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Kabul. Among those killed in the deadliest ground attack against the international coalition in the last ten years of war in Afghanistan, included American, British, Canadian and Afghan citizens.

Afghan policemen and foreign soldiers salute during the hand over control for security in Bamiyan, west of Kabul
Several areas in Afghanistan have already been transferred to Afghan forcesImage: dapd

Senior government officials from Afghanistan will meet with neighboring and Western allies later this week in Istanbul to discuss regional security.

Foreign combat troops are scheduled to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014, yet there is widespread skepticism over the ability of the Afghan army and police to secure the country, where the number of violent attacks is on the rise.

Agencies: Reuters, AFP, AP (mg)
Editor: Sarah Berning