Arab News

At least 35 killed at wedding party near Afghan army raid

US defense official says the operation was aimed against Al-Qaeda fighters

- Reuters Kabul

At least 35 civilians attending a wedding party were killed and 13 people wounded by explosions and gunfire during a raid by Afghan government forces on a nearby militant hideout, two officials in southern Helmand province said on Monday.

The officials said the house being used by the Taliban to train suicide bombers was located adjacent to the bride’s home that came under fire during Sunday night’s attack. A senior Afghan Defense Ministry official said the raid was against “a foreign terrorist group actively engaged in terrorist attacks.” “During the operation, a large warehouse of the terrorists’

DEADLY ATTACK

supplies and equipment was also demolished,” the official said. A second Afghan Defense Ministry official said a foreign militant detonated a suicide vest that killed him and others around him, including a woman.

“The compound was being used to train men and women who were willing to become suicide bombers, we raided it. We are aware that civilians were injured in the attack,” he said.

Attaullah Afghan, a member of the Helmand provincial council member, said 35 civilians people attending the wedding party near to the attack site in the Khaksar area of Musa Qala district were killed and 13 were injured.

A second provincial council member, Abdul Majid Akhundzada­h, said 40 people, all civilians, were killed. The Defense Ministry said the Taliban hideout was also used by foreign nationals working for the hard-line Islamist group.

“As a result of a joint operation in Musa Qala district of Helmand, 22 Taliban members were killed and 14 others arrested,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that five Pakistanis and one Bangladesh­i national were among those arrested.

Bombing, air strikes and ground clashes between the US-backed Afghan forces and hard-line Islamist groups have intensifie­d following the collapse of the US-Taliban talks and ahead of the presidenti­al polls next week.

A senior US defense official in Afghanista­n said the operation was aimed against Al-Qaeda fighters but did not give any details about civilian casualties.

The US in 2001 sent forces to Afghanista­n to oust Taliban leaders after they refused to hand over members of the Al-Qaeda militant group behind the Sept. 11 attacks. Since then, the US forces have supported the Afghan forces in war against the Al-Qaeda, Taliban and Islamic State militant groups that recruit Afghans and foreigners who mount attacks against the Westernbac­ked Afghan government and foreign forces.

 ?? AFP ?? Afghan villagers carry a dead body on a stretcher outside a hospital following an airstrike in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province, on Monday.
AFP Afghan villagers carry a dead body on a stretcher outside a hospital following an airstrike in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province, on Monday.

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