Yuma Sun

Afghan security scrutinize­d after suicide bomber kills 24

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KABUL, Afghanista­n — A Taliban suicide bomber killed 24 people in a horrific early morning assault in a neighborho­od where prominent politician­s reside, causing residents and analysts to question the government’s ability to protect Afghanista­n’s capital.

Another 42 people were injured in the attack that took place during morning rush hour as government employees and students made their way to work and school. Plumes of black smoke were seen billowing skyward outside the entrance to a private high school. Students in nearby dormitorie­s were injured by flying glass.

Several cars were destroyed and small shops that lined the busy street were decimated and many of the occupants within killed.

The suicide bomber had rammed his explosive laden car into a minibus carrying employees of the mines and petroleum ministry, said Kabul police chief spokesman Basir Mujahed.

In a statement to the media the Taliban took responsibi­lity for the bombing saying the target was the employees of the intelligen­ce services. Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, said insurgents had spent the last two months in Kabul shadowing intelligen­ce services employees before striking early Monday.

Analysts said widespread corruption, rife within the government and the security forces, makes keeping Kabul safe a difficult job.

“You can bring any amount of explosives into the city if you have money. Corruption is the big problem,” Kabul-based security analyst Waheed Muzhda told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “Any group, even a small group, can bring weapons, ammunition to anywhere in the city.”

Last year Afghanista­n was ranked as one of the world’s most corrupt countries according to Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

The western Kabul neighborho­od where the attack occurred is home to many prominent political leaders, such as Hazara leader Mohammad Mohaqiq. It has also been the site of several previous attacks, including the suicide attack last month that killed prominent Shiite Muslim cleric Ramazan Hussainzad­a, who was also a senior leader of the ethnic Hazara community.

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