Nine Taleban suicide ‘bombers’ target Afghan govt compound Provincial council member dead

KABUL, May 5, (AP): Taleban suicide bombers disguised as police attacked a government compound Wednesday in southwestern Afghanistan in an assault that left 13 people dead, including a provincial council member and all nine attackers, authorities said. Eight of the bombers blew themselves up and police shot the ninth, President Hamid Karzai’s office said. The Taleban claimed responsibility for the attack, which came as the provincial council was meeting in Zaranj, the capital of Nimroz province. The militant group said the council was trying to turn Afghans against the militants. Insurgents have carried out coordinated suicide attacks on government and aid installations in the past to strike a blow against Nato and Afghan attempts to counter the insurgency. This summer, a US-led military operation will try to clear the southern city of Kandahar of Taleban fighters in what will be a critical test of the war.

Many insurgents fled to Nimroz province, which is farther west and along the border Iran, earlier this year when troops conducted an offensive to rout the Taleban from neighboring Helmand province. Nimroz is also a major trafficking route for Afghanistan’s huge opium trade. In Wednesday’s hourlong attack, nine suicide bombers wearing Afghan National Police uniforms tried to infiltrate the provincial governor’s compound, where the Nimroz council was meeting, said provincial police chief Gen. Abdul Jabar Pardeli. Police became suspicious and fired on them, Pardeli said. The suicide bombers then began to blow themselves up or fire back, prompting blasts and gunbattles. A female provincial council member was among the dead, according to provincial Gov. Gulam Dastagar Azad.

Two police officers and a civilian also died, and 10 police were wounded, authorities said. Sadeq Chakhansori, a member of the Afghan parliament who was in Nimroz for a meeting, identified the dead council member as Gul Maki Wakhali. Police also found a car packed with explosives near the compound, which houses a court, the governor’s offices and a guest house, Azad said. The Interior Ministry said the car bomb was defused before it could explode. The Taleban carried out the attack because the council was trying to persuade Afghans to turn against the insurgents, said Taleban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi. He said the council included “friends of Nato,” and that “any friend of the enemy is an enemy.” In other violence, the Interior Ministry reported three explosions Wednesday that targeted the vehicles of private development companies in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Zabul. The ministry said one person was killed and 11 were wounded in the blasts.


The top official at the UN’s refugee agency said Wednesday that security in Afghanistan has deteriorated in recent months to the extent that foreign staff are unable to travel to half of the country.
The agency has to rely on local staff or Afghan partner organizations to reach tens of thousands of refugees it is trying to aid, said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres.
“There was a worsening security situation in the recent past,” he told reporters in Geneva. “Access of our international staff to the territory is now limited to about 50 percent.”
Kandahar has seen deadly insurgent violence in weeks, prompting the UN to scale down operations there. The looming Nato operation and the ongoing crime and insecurity have rattled the region where the Taleban were formed and still have considerable support.

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