Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

11 soldiers killed in Kabul attack

Marshal Fahim military academy was also attacked last year by a suicide bomber

- Associated Press

KABUL: Islamic State militants attacked Afghan soldiers guarding a military academy in the capital of Kabul on Monday, killing at least 11 troops and wounding 16.

The attack was the latest in a wave of relentless violence in Kabul this month unleashed by the Taliban and the rival Islamic State group that has killed scores and left hundreds wounded.

Monday’s attack started around 4 am, witnesses said, and fighting continued long after daybreak.

A suicide bomber first struck the military unit responsibl­e for providing security for the academy, followed by a gunbattle with the troops, said Dawlat Waziri, spokesman for the Afghan defence ministry.

At least five insurgents were involved in the morning assault, according to Waziri. Two of the attackers were killed in the gunbattle, two detonated their suicide vests and one was arrested by the troops, he said.

All roads leading to the military academy were blocked by police, which only allowed ambulances access to the site to transfer the wounded to hospitals.

After the gunbattle ended, the security forces resumed control of the area. They also confiscate­d one suicide vest, an AK-47 and some ammunition, Waziri said.

Waziri earlier said that five soldiers were killed but later raised the death toll to 11. He insisted, however that “the attack was against an army unit providing security for the academy and not the academy itself.”

Afzal Aman, commander of the city’s military garrison, confirmed the attack in the area of the Marshal Fahim academy. Hashmat Faqeri, a resident near the site, told The Associated Press he heard sounds of explosions and a gunbattle.

Hours later, the Islamic State group’s affiliate in Afghanista­n, known as Khorasan Province, posted its claim of responsibi­lity on the website of its media arm, the Aamaq news agency, saying its fighters targeted the “military academy in Kabul.”

Neighbouri­ng Pakistan condemned the attack. Islamabad said it “reiterates its strong condemnati­on of terrorism in all its forms and manifestat­ions, especially the series of heinous attacks within the last week in Afghanista­n.”

The academy, known as Marshal Fahim National Defense University located on the edge of Kabul at the Camp Qargha military base, is sometimes also called “Sandhurst in the Sand” - a reference to the British academy.

Named after Mohammed Fahim, the country’s late vicepresid­ent and a military commander of the Northern Alliance

that fought the Taliban, the academy was inaugurate­d in 2013 after British forces oversaw building the officers’ school and its training programme.

The academy was also the site where the highest-ranking US military officer to be lost in the Afghan and Iraqi wars was killed in August 2014.

Army Maj Gen. Harold J. Greene, then deputy commander

of the transition force in the country, was shot and killed by an Afghan soldiers in a so-called “insider attack” that was later claimed by the Taliban.

The same academy was also attacked in October last year by a suicide bomber who killed 15 officers. The attacker was on foot and detonated his suicide vest as the on-duty officers were leaving the facility, heading home in the

evening. That attack was also claimed by the Taliban.

President Ashraf Ghani denounced the attack, saying the “Taliban must choose between Islam and terrorism.” “We appreciate the sympathies extended to us by our internatio­nal partner nations,” Ghani said, speaking a press conference in Kabul alongside visiting Indonesian president, Joko Widodo.

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