Arab News

Daesh suicide bomber attacks Iraqi Embassy in Kabul

Saudi Arabia condemns terror assault

- SIRAJ WAHAB

The four-hour firefight ended after Afghan security forces said they had killed all the attackers.

Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish said two Afghan employees of the Iraqi Embassy were killed in the attack and three police were injured, the Associated Press (AP) reported.

As the attack unfolded there were conflictin­g reports of casualties, with a witness saying he saw the bodies of at least two policemen lying on the road outside the embassy soon after the attack began.

The Iraqi chargé d’affaires was rescued from the embassy premises and was whisked away to the Egyptian Embassy, Reuters reported the Iraqi Foreign Ministry in Baghdad as saying.

In its claim of responsibi­lity, Daesh said only two of its fighters were involved, not four as Afghan officials said. The group added that its fighters had killed seven guards.

Najib Danish told AP that all the embassy staffers were safe but that the building had suffered extensive damage, with windows broken and several rooms badly burned.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack and said it was the government’s responsibi­lity to protect internatio­nal missions.

The Saudi Cabinet expressed the Kingdom’s strong condemnati­on of the terror attack.

Shaukat Piracha, a Pakistanba­sed TV anchor and regional affairs expert, said large territorie­s in Afghanista­n, especially in the countrysid­e, remain out of bounds for the Afghan government.

“These vast, ungoverned and unmonitore­d areas provide safe havens and sanctuarie­s for terrorists to thrive and plot attacks,” said Piracha. “These are the same people who also launch attacks against Pakistan.”

He said Daesh has become a serious concern and threat “not just for Afghanista­n, but all countries in the region.”

He added: “The Daesh leadership will not travel from Iraq or Syria to Afghanista­n. These are local Afghan groups that have splintered from other terror groups and are influenced by Daesh propaganda.”

The Iraqi Embassy is located in a part of Kabul known as Shahr-eNow, which lies outside the heavily fortified Green Zone that contains most foreign embassies and diplomatic missions.

Daesh has been expanding its presence in eastern Afghanista­n, and has claimed responsibi­lity for several devastatin­g attacks in Kabul.

First emerging in 2015, the group’s local affiliate, “Islamic State Khorasan Province,” overran large parts of eastern Nangarhar and Kunar provinces near the Pakistan border, where it engaged in a turf war with the Taliban.

JEDDAH: Daesh on Monday attacked the Iraqi Embassy in the Afghan capital

Kabul. A suicide bomber blew himself up outside the gates, followed by three gunmen who stormed the building. There were two or three more large explosions.

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