Irish Daily Mail

Taliban killers disguised as troops during Afghan attack

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DOZENS of Afghan soldiers were killed or wounded yesterday when Taliban gunmen disguised in Afghan army uniform talked their way past checkpoint­s and attacked a military base, officials said.

The horror unfolded at a major headquarte­rs in northern Afghanista­n often used by foreign military advisers. A US official in Washington put the toll at more than 50 killed and wounded.

The attack was launched near a mosque on the base in Mazar-i-Sharif, the capital of Balkh province, as soldiers were leaving Friday prayers, according to army spokesman Nasratulla­h Jamshidi.

Six attackers in two military vehicles told guards at the gates that they were carrying wounded soldiers and urgently needed to enter, he said.

After killing at least eight soldiers and wounding 11 others with rocket-propelled grenades and guns, one attacker was killed and the other five arrested, Mr Jamshidi said. Another Afghan official, speaking on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak publicly, said more than 20 soldiers had been killed and 50 wounded.

The Western-backed Afghan government is locked in a prolonged war with Taliban insurgents and other militant groups.

A number of German and other foreign soldiers are based in Mazar-i-Sharif, including about 70 who advise the corps headquarte­rs as part of a Nato-led multinatio­nal mission to advise and train the Afghan security forces.

‘To our knowledge, no Germans were affected. Nor were any other soldiers in the multinatio­nal force harmed,’ said a spokesman for the German Operations Command. The statement was echoed by American officials.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the attackers had set off an explosion, allowing suicide bombers with small arms to breach the base’s defences. ‘Our fighters have inflicted heavy casualties on the Afghan army stationed there,’ he said.

The base is the headquarte­rs for the Afghan National Army’s 209th Corps, responsibl­e for much of northern Afghanista­n, including Kunduz province where there has been heavy fighting.

The Nato command in Kabul called the attack ‘murderous and reprehensi­ble’.

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