Austin American-Statesman

Thousands of gunmen hit Kabul streets, cause chaos

- By Saved Salahuddin Special To The Washington Post

KABUL,AFGHANISTA­N — Ordinary life came to a standstill in the Afghan capital on Sunday with businesses largely shut and many people forced to stay indoors as thousands of young men brandishin­g knives and assault rifles took to the streets and fired indis- criminatel­y, mostly into the air.

The chaos, which lasted for more than eight hours, further underlined the weakness of U.S.-backed President Ashraf Ghani’s government, which is locked in deep inter- nal discord and is facing rising militancy.

The firing — including by masked teenagers riding in convoys of motorcy- cles and vehicles with tinted glasses — left at least 13 peo- ple wounded, according to the Public Health Ministry.

It was part of an annual commemorat­ion of the death anniversar­y of Ahmed Shah Massoud, a top anti-Taliban commander who was slain 17 years ago by suspected al-Qaida operatives posing as journalist­s.

The gunmen drove in full speed from one part of the city to another on Sunday, firing various types of weap- ons. In some parts, the firing was so intense that it was reminiscen­t of the civil war era in Afghanista­n.

Some of the young men were only kids — and some were not even born — when Massoud passed away. Several chanted, “Long live Massoud.”

Massoud’s family and old comrades distanced them- selves from the day’s events.

The firing subsided and some of the gunmen dispersed when a suicide bomber on a motorcycle targeted part of the convoy in a central area of Kabul.

Initial reports showed that three men in the convoy were killed and 14 were wounded, but officials said the toll could rise.

Earlier in the day, security forces said they opened fire and wounded a man seek- ing to blow himself up in a crowd of marchers at the memorial built for Massoud close to the U.S. Embassy.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the reported attempt and the deadly blast, although the Islamic State has been behind such attacks in recent years in Afghanista­n.

Police said they arrested scores of the marchers and seized some vehicles, actions that many dismissed as futile attempts by the government to demonstrat­e control of the situation.

With parliament­ary polls next month and a presidenti­al vote in April, the scenes on Sunday shocked many people.

“I think everyone has had enough,” Saad Mohseni, director of the MOBY Group and a man known as Afghanista­n’s media mogul, said in a tweet.

“They can commemorat­e at a stadium or somewhere out of the city. Kabul, a city of 5 million, cannot get hijacked because of a few hundred people,” Mohseni wrote.

As the day was coming to an end, there were reports that dozens of security personnel had perished in Taliban attacks.

The deadliest one occurred in northern Baghlan province, where the militants overran an army base after hours of clashes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States