Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ISIS hits Kabul military hospital

Attack kills 25 people, including soldiers, Taliban fighters

- THOMAS GIBBONS-NEFF, SAMI SAHAK AND TAIMOOR SHAH

At least 25 people were killed and more than a dozen were wounded in an attack on a military hospital in the Afghan capital of Kabul on Tuesday, according to local officials, with gunfire and explosions echoing throughout the city into the afternoon.

The attack, which included armed gunmen and at least one suicide bomber, targeted the 400-bed Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan military hospital in one of Kabul’s more affluent neighborho­ods, where both wounded soldiers who fought for the former government and Taliban fighters were being treated.

Zabihullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said the attack was carried out by several members of the Islamic State, including a suicide bomber who detonated his explosives at the gate to the hospital.

A car full of explosives outside the hospital also exploded, wounding dozens, and several Taliban fighters were killed and wounded in the ensuing gunbattle, Mujahid said.

One of those fallen fighters was Mawlawi Hamdullah Rahmani, an important commander responsibl­e for the Taliban’s Kabul corps and one of the first Talibs to enter the presidenti­al palace after the government collapsed in August, said Wahidullah Hashimi, a Taliban government official.

One doctor at the hospital, who declined to be named out of fear for his safety, said the gunmen had entered a ward filled with wounded Taliban fighters and shot them in their beds.

Another doctor who was hiding in the hospital said he could still hear gunfire in the building early Tuesday afternoon. Another person inside said the attackers had entered several floors and opened fire on anyone they saw, adding that some doctors and nurses had locked themselves on the third floor.

Though the Islamic State has yet to claim responsibi­lity, there has been an increase in attacks by the group across Afghanista­n since the fall of the Western-backed government in August and the Taliban takeover of the country. The terrorist group has taken advantage of the Taliban’s difficulty in securing urban centers.

A shopkeeper outside the hospital, who declined to be named, said the initial blasts had been 10 minutes apart, and there were a lot of people on the ground. He was wounded in the back, he said.

This complex attack is likely the first of its kind for the Taliban to contend with: armed actors and a suicide bomber entering a large building full of civilians. The Western-backed government dealt with such incidents by deploying commandos, who were almost always supported by NATO special operations forces.

The Taliban, known for carrying out these types of attacks during the past 20 years as insurgents, have little support or experience when it comes to dealing with such an event on their own.

Qari Saeed Khosty, a spokesman for the Ministry of Interior, confirmed on Twitter that there had been at least one explosion at the hospital and that Taliban forces were responding to the attack.

Islamic State suicide bombings in Kabul, the northern city of Kunduz and Afghanista­n’s second-largest city, Kandahar, have killed at least 90 people and wounded hundreds over the past several weeks.

The Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan military hospital has been attacked repeatedly in past years, by both the Islamic State and the Taliban.

 ?? (AP/Ahmad Halabisaz) ?? A Taliban fighter orders people away after an explosion and armed attack Tuesday at the entrance of a military hospital in Kabul.
(AP/Ahmad Halabisaz) A Taliban fighter orders people away after an explosion and armed attack Tuesday at the entrance of a military hospital in Kabul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States