SCORES DEAD IN TWIN ATTACKS ON AFGHAN POLICE AND TROOPS
▶ Security installations becoming an increasingly frequent target of Taliban atrocities
At least 71 people were killed and possibly hundreds wounded in two separate suicide and gun attacks on police and soldiers in Afghanistan yesterday.
The Taliban claimed the more deadly of the two assaults, a co-ordinated attack on police in the south-east city of Gardez in Paktia province.
That assault killed 41 people and injured 158, according to the interior ministry, and left hospital officials calling for blood donations. There were desperate scenes as relatives queued for news of loved ones after the hours-long battle.
A separate ambush blamed on the Taliban in the neighbouring province of Ghazni killed 25 security officials and five civilians with 10 wounded, the interior ministry said.
Afghanistan’s army and police, on the front line against the Taliban since foreign combat forces pulled back in December 2014, have suffered shocking casualties over the past year, while their ranks are beset by corruption and desertion.
“The hospital is overwhelmed and we call on people to donate blood,” said Shir Mohammad Karimi, deputy health director in Gardez, who put the number of wounded there at more than 200.
Doctors and nurses rushed to attend to the wounded women, children and police filling the corridors where some bodies also lay. Outside, university students queued to donate blood.
The attack in Gardez began when two suicide bombers driving an explosives-laden lorry and a Humvee detonated them near the training centre, which is close to the Paktia police headquarters.
The blasts flattened a building and enabled gunmen to force their way inside the compound, according to officials.
“Most of the victims are civilians who had come to the police headquarters to get their passports and national IDs,” the Paktia governor’s office said.
A university student who was in class at the time said he heard “a big boom” that shook the building.
“As we were trying to find our way [out of the building] I heard a second blast and then the dust and dirt covered us in the class. Several of my classmates were wounded by broken glass,” Noor Ahmad said.
The battle between the attackers, armed with guns and suicide vests, and security forces lasted about five hours before it ended with all five militants killed, officials said.
The attack in Ghazni, about 100 kilometres west of Gardez, followed a similar pattern involving insurgents detonating an explosives-laden Humvee near a police headquarters before storming the building, said Haref Noori, the Ghazni governor’s spokesman. “Dozens of Taliban” were killed in the attack, Ghazni police chief Mohammad Zaman said.
Afghan president Ashraf Ghani condemned the attacks and praised the “bravery and sacrifice” of security forces.
The assaults are the latest in a series on security installations, including one on a military hospital in Kabul in March, which killed up to 100 people, and an attack on a base in Mazar-i-Sharif that killed 144 people.
They came a day after fourway talks between Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States and China were held in Oman with the aim of ending the Taliban’s 16-year insurgency.
Paktia province borders Pakistan’s tribal areas where the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network has a presence.
Yesterday’s attack in Gardez began hours after a US drone strike in Pakistan’s Kurram tribal district – part of which borders Paktia – killed at least 26 Haqqani militants, officials said. A senior commander in the Afghan Taliban said the attack was in retaliation for the US aerial assault, the deadliest targeting militants in the Pakistani tribal region this year.
On Monday, the US carried out strikes in the Jaji Maidan district of Paktia “under counter-terror authorities”, said US forces spokesman Capt Tom Gresback.
In Kurram last week, the Pakistani military rescued a US-Canadian family who had been abducted in Afghanistan in 2012. US president Donald Trump said they were being held by the Haqqani network.
The group is known for its frequent use of suicide bombers and have also been accused of assassinating top Afghan officials and holding kidnapped westerners for ransom.
These include the recently rescued hostages Canadian Joshua Boyle, his American wife Caitlan Coleman, and their three children, all born in captivity, as well as US soldier Bowe Bergdahl who was released in 2014.
Afghanistan’s army and police have suffered shocking casualties over the past year while their ranks are beset by graft