Pages

Sunday, May 17, 2015

killed 14 people, most of them foreigners


The attack took place close to the area used by military vehicles and targeted a European police training mission vehicle.
Two Afghan teenage girls, described as bystanders, died in the blast, while at least 18 people were injured.
The Taliban said it carried out the attack in a statement emailed to media.
The attack is the second major incident in Kabul within a week. A Taliban gun attack on a hotel in the city on Thursday killed 14 people, most of them foreigners.

At least eight women and three children were among the wounded in Sunday's attack, Kabul police said, in addition to three members of the European mission, known as Eupol.
A spokeswoman for the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) said: "We can confirm that a British national was tragically killed in a terrorist attack in Kabul this morning. We stand ready to provide consular assistance to the family."
The FCO did not provide further details.

While not the targets, civilians bore the brunt of Sunday's attack
Injured people had to be carried away from the scene of Sunday's attack


The suicide blast damaged three cars outside the airport
The powerful bomb sent up a plume of smoke, which cleared to show a scene of carnage, the BBC's David Loyn in Kabul reports.
Rescuers struggled to carry wounded civilians from the scene in the confused aftermath of the bombing, and a doctor at a nearby hospital dealing with the wounded was reported to have found some of his own relatives among them.
A spokesman for the interior ministry, Najib Danish, told reporters that one foreign military vehicle and two civilian vehicles were damaged in the attack.
The bombing on Sunday comes two weeks after the first exploratory peace talks between the Taliban and a group of negotiators including representatives of the government.
Our correspondent says that it is clear that while talking peace, some elements in the Taliban are keeping up the pressure.


No comments:

Post a Comment