The Post

Pakistan blamed for Kabul attacks

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AFGHANISTA­N: Afghan security officials, facing public wrath after a spate of urban terrorist attacks that left more than 130 people dead and hundreds injured, announced they had presented Pakistani authoritie­s with ‘‘undeniable evidence’’ that some of the insurgents were trained in Pakistan and the attacks were planned there.

The interior minister and intelligen­ce chief spoke at a hastily arranged news conference after returning from a brief visit to Islamabad, where they said they gave senior officials the names and locations of supporters and facilities for attackers, including mosques and seminaries.

They said some of the informatio­n had come from would-be suicide bombers who were captured in the course of bloody bombing and shooting attacks in Afghanista­n that targeted a luxury hotel, a military academy, a British charity and a busy block near a hospital, where an ambulance filled with explosives was detonated.

As the officials spoke, several hundred protesters rallied at a nearby park and outside the Pakistani Embassy, demanding that the Kabul government do more to protect its citizens and that Pakistan stop fostering insurgents. But the capital remained tense and largely deserted, with heavily armed police and armoured vehicles stationed on many streets.

‘‘The people are angry, and we are too,’’ said Interior Minister Wais Ahmad Barmak, adding that several attacks had deliberate­ly targeted civilians. ‘‘We submitted all the evidence we had. We had a very clear discussion.’’

The officials described the meeting as ‘‘constructi­ve’’ and said Pakistan seemed more cooperativ­e than in the past. ‘‘Things are different now,’’ he said.

Pakistani officials, in turn, announced they will send a highlevel delegation to Kabul this weekend to discuss improving bilateral communicat­ions on terrorism and regional security. In Islamabad, Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif visited the Afghan embassy and said both countries need to make ‘‘joint efforts against terrorism instead of playing a blame game’’. He added: ‘‘The enemy is taking advantage of our difference­s.’’

Pakistan is facing unpreceden­ted pressure from Washington to crack down on cross-border insurgency, and the new accusation­s by Afghan officials are likely to intensify that pressure. The Trump administra­tion recently suspended all military aid to its longtime security ally, saying Pakistan had failed to take sufficient steps to rein in Taliban insurgents, especially the Haqqani network.

Officials in Islamabad did not comment on the Afghan charges or demands that they take concrete action against training and support centres for the Haqqanis and other insurgents. Mohammed Masoom Stanekzai, the Afghan intelligen­ce chief, said he and Barmak had asked Pakistan to ‘‘hand over’’ the perpetrato­rs of the recent attacks and shut down Taliban training centres.

Some Afghan analysts said they doubt the new pressure being brought to bear on Pakistan will make any difference. They suggested its military leaders still believe they can use anti-Afghan insurgents as a foil against nextdoor India, which they see as a far greater threat than Islamist extremism.

But others suggested the recent violence and the crackdown by Washington may have created a psychic turning point in the stubborn regional dynamic.

– Washington Post

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Queen Sonja of Norway, right, shows Prince William and Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, through a children’s sculpture park in Oslo named after the queen’s granddaugh­ter.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Queen Sonja of Norway, right, shows Prince William and Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, through a children’s sculpture park in Oslo named after the queen’s granddaugh­ter.
 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? A wounded man is assisted at the site of a deadly suicide attack in the centre of Kabul last month.
PHOTO: AP A wounded man is assisted at the site of a deadly suicide attack in the centre of Kabul last month.

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