The Columbus Dispatch

Afghan car bomb kills 12, wounds scores

- By Amir Shah

KABUL, Afghanista­n

— The Taliban carried out a devastatin­g suicide car bombing in central Afghanista­n Sunday that killed 12 people and wounded over 150 others, Afghan officials said.

The attack came as an allAfghan peace conference, which includes the Taliban, was underway Sunday in Doha in an effort to end the country’s relentless wars.

A provincial council member, Hasan Raza Yousafi, said the car bomb exploded near an intelligen­ce department compound in Ghazni, the capital of the province of the same name. The dead included eight security personnel, he said.

Many of the wounded were students of a nearby high school, said the provincial health department chief, Zahir Shah Nekmal. He said most of the injured suffered cuts and abrasions from broken glass.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahed claimed responsibi­lity for the suicide attack, saying the target was the intelligen­ce service’s compound. He said the bombing killed tens of intelligen­ce employees. The Taliban often exaggerate such claims.

Meanwhile, U.S. Peace Envoy Zalmay Khalilzad hailed the intra-afghan talks underway in Doha as a good first step toward substantiv­e negotiatio­ns among Afghans on a framework for the country’s future.

He said Washington’s “aspiration” is to have that framework in place by Sept. 1, ahead of the Afghan presidenti­al election.

Khalilzad, who has been holding direct talks with the Taliban for the past six days also in Doha, said at a news briefing on Saturday that the discussion­s were the most productive ever.

Talks have covered a time frame for the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO troops from Afghanista­n, verifiable anti-terror guarantees from the Taliban, intra-afghan negotiatio­ns and an eventual cease-fire.

Meanwhile, in western Ghor province on Saturday, a roadside mine killed seven children — the youngest was 5 years old.

Abdul Hai Khateby, a spokesman for the provincial governor, said the Taliban planted the mine apparently to thwart a planned Afghan military offensive to retake nearby areas under the militants’ control. The children were local shepherds who happened to be moving their herd along the road when the mine exploded, he said.

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