Death toll in suicide attack near
Kabul jumps to 12
The death toll from a suicide
bombing targeting a security forces convoy outside Kabul early Tuesday jumped
to 12, officials said, with eight civilians killed in the latest
Taliban-claimed attack near the Afghan capital.
The car bomb follows a wave of
deadly violence against Afghan forces across a year in which insurgents have
inflicted record-high casualties on security personnel in the war-torn country.
“Twelve people including four
members of the security forces were killed,” ministry of interior deputy
spokesman Nasrat Rahimi told AFP.
Kabul police confirmed the
casualties, adding that women and children were among the dead.
The blast took place in Paghman
district west of Kabul as the convoy was returning from an overnight operation,
interior ministry spokesman Najib Danish told AFP.
The ministry of interior and a
seperate security official requesting anonymity confirmed the assailant had
used a car bomb to target the convoy.
Afghan security forces, beset by
killings and desertions, have been struggling to beat back insurgents from Islamic
State as well as the Taliban since US-led NATO mostly left them on their own
three years ago.
In November President Ashraf Ghani
said nearly 30,000 Afghan soldiers and police officers have been killed since
2015 — a figure far higher than anything previously acknowledged.
Earlier this month, Lieutenant
General Kenneth McKenzie — who has been nominated to lead the US military’s
Central Command — said the death rate among Afghan forces will no longer be
sustainable unless urgent measures are taken to address recruiting and training
issues.
The early morning attack in Kabul
came just hours after an overnight assault on a checkpoint in Arghistan
district of southern Kandahar province by Taliban fighters killed at least
eight Afghan police officers according to the provincial media office.
“The fighting lasted several hours,
11 Taliban were also killed,” the office added.
The uptick in violence comes as
Washington continues to press for a negotiated end to the 17-year conflict.
US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad — who is
currently canvassing the region to build support for potential peace talks —
expressed hopes that a deal to end the war could be struck before the Afghan
presidential election scheduled for April.
At an international conference on
Afghanistan in Geneva last month, Ghani also said a 12-person Afghan
negotiating team has been prepared for peace talks.
But the Taliban, who have previously
insisted they will only speak with US officials, rejected Ghani’s overtures,
calling the government in Kabul “impotent” and a “waste of time”.
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