Albuquerque Journal

Taliban car bomb kills 14 in Kabul

Another 145, mostly women and children, were wounded

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A Taliban car bomb aimed at Afghan security forces ripped through a busy Kabul neighborho­od on Wednesday, killing 14 people and wounding 145 — most of them women, children and other civilians — shortly after the extremist group and the United States reported progress on negotiatin­g an end to Afghanista­n’s nearly 18-year war.

The bombing during morning rush hour was one of the worst attacks in Kabul this year, and again raised fears among Afghans about what will happen once the estimated 20,000 U.S. and NATO troops in their country go home.

The explosives-packed car detonated at a security checkpoint outside police headquarte­rs in a minority Shiite neighborho­od in western Kabul, police spokesman Firdaus Faramarz said. The Taliban said they had targeted a recruitmen­t center for security forces.

Ninety-two of the wounded were civilians, Deputy Interior Minister Khoshal Sadat told reporters. Four police officers were among those killed, he said.

The attack took place as many Kabul residents were preparing for the Muslim holiday Eid al-Adha, which begins Sunday.

Even as the U.S.-Taliban peace talks continue and the Taliban say they will do more to protect civilians, a growing number of them are being killed. July saw the highest number of civilian casualties in a single month since 2017, with more than 1,500 killed or wounded as insurgent attacks spiked, the United Nations said earlier this month.

Any Taliban attack is a barrier to the peace process, presidenti­al spokesman Sediq Seddiqi told reporters, vowing that “Afghan security forces are strong and can protect the Afghan population.”

President Ashraf Ghani’s government said such attacks apparently are meant to strengthen the Taliban position at the negotiatin­g table, but would not succeed.

 ?? RAFIQ MAQBOOL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Afghans stand near a damaged shop after an explosion in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Wednesday. A suicide car bomber targeted police headquarte­rs.
RAFIQ MAQBOOL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Afghans stand near a damaged shop after an explosion in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Wednesday. A suicide car bomber targeted police headquarte­rs.

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