Los Angeles Times

Attack on Kabul hotel a warning, the Taliban says

A lone gunman kills 14 in a spot frequented by foreigners in the Afghan capital.

- By Ali M. Latifi and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali @latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali Special correspond­ent Latifi reported from Kabul and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — As his conversati­ons with three foreign associates came to an end, Zaher Moein excused himself from the table and headed toward a concert in another hall of Kabul’s Park Palace hotel and guesthouse.

Moein, 30, had stopped in the hotel’s courtyard to bask in the cool spring air for a few moments when he heard an explosion. He was immediatel­y directed to a nearby bunker on the hotel grounds, where he would spend the next three hours alone in darkness.

“I couldn’t even see the door handle to lock it, so I ran to the farthest end, hoping no one would find me,” he said.

From inside he heard sporadic gunfire and the shouts of other guests, victims of an attack by a gunman who officials said Thursday killed at least 14 people: an American, eight other foreigners and five Afghans. The gunman held several people hostage Wednesday night and engaged in a standoff with Afghan security forces that lasted nearly seven hours.

It was the latest assault by Taliban insurgents on a Kabul locale frequented by foreigners. The Park Palace, which is surrounded by blast walls and guarded by private security, is a guesthouse commonly used by foreigners based in Kabul, including aid workers, consultant­s and journalist­s.

Although Westerners have used the hotel, the staff said it had recently been more popular with Indians and Pakistanis.

Ahmad Zia Massoud, a special advisor to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, said the attack was aimed at the Indian ambassador to Kabul, Amar Sinha, who the assailant mistakenly believed was on the premises.

But the Taliban said it had sent a lone man armed with an automatic rifle and explosives to target a performanc­e by Altaf Hussain, a well-known Afghan singer.

The assault was a warning to nations that back the Afghan government, a Taliban spokesman said. “Occupying forces should realize that they are not safe from our attacks under any cover or in any location.”

The U.N. mission in Afghanista­n said it had documented a record number of civilian casualties — nearly 1,000 killed and 2,000 injured — over the first four months of the year, a 16% increase from the same period in 2014.

“These deliberate attacks on civilians are atrocities,” said Georgette Gagnon, the U.N. mission’s human rights director. “Taliban statements on avoiding civilian casualties ring hollow when we set them against the latest killings.”

U.S. Embassy officials confirmed that an American was among the dead, but did not offer details.

The three foreigners Moein was meeting — a Kazakh national, her Italian husband and a Briton — were killed. The five Afghan victims had not been identified. Two Pakistanis were reported among the dead.

Many Afghans wondered how one man could make it through several rounds of security checks, hold dozens hostage and engage in a long standoff with police. Some theorized that he had previously been inside the building and may even have been staying in the hotel.

Other high-profile hotels and restaurant­s in Kabul began ramping up security. By late afternoon Thursday, cars full of luggage and personal effects were exiting from the Park Palace’s gates.

 ?? Ahmad Massoud Zuma Press ?? FREED HOSTAGES walk away from the Kabul guesthouse after being rescued by security forces. The gunman waged a standoff that lasted nearly seven hours.
Ahmad Massoud Zuma Press FREED HOSTAGES walk away from the Kabul guesthouse after being rescued by security forces. The gunman waged a standoff that lasted nearly seven hours.

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