Los Angeles Times

Militants kill more than 30 at Afghan hospital

Islamic State says it carried out the attack at a Kabul military facility, a war crime.

- By Sultan Faizy and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Faizy reported from Kabul and Times staff writer Bengali from Yangon, Myanmar.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Gunmen wearing white coats to disguise themselves as health workers stormed the main military hospital in Kabul on Wednesday, opening fire in patient wards and killing more than 30 people, officials said.

A suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance while three attackers burst inside Sardar Mohammed Daoud Khan military hospital and raced to the second and third floors.

Afghan commandos fatally shot one attacker, but two others crouched under stairs and fired back in a gun battle that lasted hours before they too were killed.

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the brazen assault, the latest in a series of deadly attacks that have displayed the militant group’s ability to strike political and military targets in Afghanista­n and Pakistan.

Defense Ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri said more than 30 people had been killed and dozens wounded.

The attack was met with condemnati­on across the world, from the State Department to human rights organizati­ons and the Afghan presidenti­al palace. Targeting medical facilities is a war crime under internatio­nal law.

Hamidullah Mohib, Afghanista­n’s ambassador to Washington, called the attack “an abhorrent new low.”

“Dressing in disguise to shoot at the sick and wounded is a cowardly, wicked act,” Mohib said in a statement. “These are forces of evil the world must work together to defeat.”

Even as the group is under pressure in Iraq and Syria, Islamic State loyalists in South Asia are fast becoming the deadliest militant force in the region. Last month the group claimed responsibi­lity for a blast that killed more than 70 people at a Sufi shrine in Pakistan, and Afghan officials blamed the group for killing six Red Cross workers and kidnapping two others, who remain unaccounte­d for.

“Today’s attack on the Kabul national military hospital is an unspeakabl­e crime,” Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., commander of U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on forces in Afghanista­n, said in a statement.

The U.S. military last year increased its use of airstrikes in parts of eastern Afghanista­n that were Islamic State hotbeds, but the militant group has proved its resilience. Security experts and Afghan officials say the group includes a high number of militants from neighborin­g Pakistan.

The Sunni Muslim militant group has attacked a wide array of targets, including civilians, religious minorities, human rights workers and government facilities.

Named for a former Afghan prime minister, the 400-bed military hospital in Kabul’s diplomatic quarter treats military casualties from across the country. In 2011, a Taliban suicide bombing at the hospital killed six people and wounded more than two dozen.

On Wednesday, hospital staff member Abdul Qadir was changing into scrubs before a busy shift that was to include about seven surgeries. He was about to enter the operating theater when the attack began.

“I heard gunshots and a guy with a gun wearing a white uniform fired at me,” he said.

He saw a co-worker shot dead and watched the attacker enter a patient room and begin shooting, he said.

In a statement, Islamic State’s Amaq news agency called the assailants inghemasiy­oun, an Arabic term meaning “those who immerse themselves,” a phrase the group has used in Iraq and Syria to describe members of a special unit trained to fight to the death.

It was believed to be the first time the group has used the term to describe fighters in Afghanista­n or Pakistan, perhaps indicating the regional affiliate’s increasing sophistica­tion.

‘Dressing in disguise to shoot at the sick and wounded is a cowardly, wicked act. These are forces of evil the world must work together to defeat.’ — Hamidullah Mohib, Afghan ambassador to the U.S.

 ?? Shah Marai AFP/Getty Images ?? AFGHAN POLICE arrive at the Kabul military hospital where a suicide bomber blew himself up in the lobby and other Islamic State attackers ran inside and began shooting. Afghan commandos eventually killed them.
Shah Marai AFP/Getty Images AFGHAN POLICE arrive at the Kabul military hospital where a suicide bomber blew himself up in the lobby and other Islamic State attackers ran inside and began shooting. Afghan commandos eventually killed them.
 ?? Rahmat Gul Associated Press ?? SOME PEOPLE break down after the deadly attack on Sardar Mohammed Daoud Khan military hospital, where gunmen entered rooms and shot patients.
Rahmat Gul Associated Press SOME PEOPLE break down after the deadly attack on Sardar Mohammed Daoud Khan military hospital, where gunmen entered rooms and shot patients.

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