Arab News

Taliban suicide car bombing in Kabul kills 24

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KABUL: A suicide bomber rammed his car packed with explosives into a bus carrying government employees in the Afghan capital early on Monday, killing 24 people and wounding 42 others, Kabul’s chief police spokesman said.

The Taliban claimed responsibi­lity for the assault. The attack took place in a western Kabul neighborho­od where several prominent politician­s reside and at rush hour, as residents were heading to work and students were on their way to a nearby private high school, said Basir Mujahed, the spokesman.

“The bomber attacked at one of the busiest times of the day,” he said. “There were traffic jams with people going to work and to the university and schools. Many of the shops had just opened.”

Several residents of Kabul who were lightly wounded in the explosion criticized the lapse in security measures they said enabled the bombing.

The bus was completely destroyed, along with three other cars and several shops in the area, said Mujahed, adding children were among the wounded.

Kabul has been battered by explosions claimed by the Taliban and by Daesh affiliates in Afghanista­n. On May 31, the Afghan capital saw its worst suicide attack since the Taliban’s collapse in 2001 — an attack that killed 150 people and wounded scores.

In a statement, the Interior Ministry called Monday’s attack “a criminal act against humanity.”

The police spokesman said the minibus was carrying employees of the Mines and Petroleum Ministry.

The Taliban, in a statement to the media, said they were behind the bombing and that the attack was carried out by an insurgent only identified as Ahmad. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the target of the bombing was the intelligen­ce services and their employees.

He claimed the bus was filled with employees of the intelligen­ce services and that Taliban insurgents spent the last two months shadowing the intelligen­ce services employees before carrying out the attack. He also claimed 37 people were killed, but the Taliban often exaggerate their battlefiel­d gains and death tolls.

 ??  ?? The standoff on a plateau next to the mountainou­s Indian state of Sikkim, which borders China, has ratcheted up tension between the neighbors, who share a 3,500-km frontier, large parts of which are disputed. (Reuters)
The standoff on a plateau next to the mountainou­s Indian state of Sikkim, which borders China, has ratcheted up tension between the neighbors, who share a 3,500-km frontier, large parts of which are disputed. (Reuters)

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