Business Standard

At least 13 dead in blasts outside Kabul airport

ISIS ROLE SUSPECTED BEHIND ATTACK; FOREIGNERS, US TROOPS INJURED

- JENNIFER JACOBS, SOPHIA CAI & ELTAF NAJAFIZADA

There were at least two explosions near Kabul’s airport amid a huge and chaotic evacuation effort from Afghanista­n on Thursday, the Pentagon said, with civilians and US service members among the casualties of what was described as a “complex attack.” A Taliban official said at least 13 people were killed.

Two explosions outside Kabul’s internatio­nal airport caused an unknown number of casualties and deaths less than a week before US forces are due to depart.

“A number of US & civilian casualties” were caused by one blast outside the Abbey Gate used by people seeking to flee Afghanista­n, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said.

He called it a “complex attack” and it came after US and Nato officials warned their citizens to avoid heading toward the airport. Reports said at least 13 people were killed, citing a Taliban security official, and that Taliban guards were wounded in the blasts.

The blast occurred around the time President Joe Biden was scheduled to meet with his national security team about the situation in Afghanista­n. He has since been briefed in the White House Situation Room, according to an official.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is being kept updated on developmen­ts at Kabul’s airport and will host a meeting of the government’s emergency committee, later this afternoon, his office said in a statement.

“The explosion happened within a large crowd at the Abbey gate where people are being screened and processed by the Americans,” Mustafa Shah, an Afghan who was near the blast and took a wounded friend to the hospital, said in a phone call. Shah said he saw body parts on the ground and “10-15 people” who appeared to be dead.

Afghans and other people trying to flee Kabul have packed around the airport trying to get onto one of the many military flights leaving the country.

After the explosion, European military officials sent a message to citizens in the country saying, “Get away from the airport. Very, very, very dangerous situation. Go now!” according to Dina Haynes, a lawyer who got a client into the Kabul airport compound a few minutes before the explosion. While it wasn’t immediatel­y clear who or what caused the explosion, earlier in the day, American and Nato allies had warned their citizens against traveling to the airport because of the credible and imminent risk of attacks. Biden specifical­ly cited Islamic State — Khorasan, an offshoot of the terrorist group, as a potential threat, this week.

“They’re real and significan­t challenges that we also have to take into considerat­ion the longer we stay, starting with the acute and growing risk of an attack by a terrorist group known as ISIS-K, an ISIS affiliate in Afghanista­n, which is a sworn enemy of the Taliban as well,” Biden said Tuesday. “Every day we’re on the ground is another day we know that ISIS-K is seeking to target the airport and attack both US and allied forces and innocent civilians.”

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Smoke rises from an explosion outside the airport in Kabul
PHOTO: AP Smoke rises from an explosion outside the airport in Kabul

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