Suicide attack kills four in Afghan city, wounds 34
Thu, January 26 2012 23:48 | 510 Views
Kabul (ANTARA News/AFP) - A suicide car bomber attacked a NATO convoy in the southern Afghan city of Lashkar Gah on Thursday, killing at least four civilians and wounding 34 others including three foreigners, an official said.
The bomber hit a provincial reconstruction team (PRT) convoy near the education department in what is the provincial capital of Helmand, a focus of attacks by Taliban insurgents.
"A suicide attacker detonated his Toyota sedan vehicle loaded
with explosives on an armoured vehicle," Daoud Ahmadi, the spokesman for
the Helmand governor, told AFP.
"As a result, four people are killed and 34 others wounded."
A child was among the dead and the wounded included several
women and children, he said, while 17 private vehicles were destroyed by
the force of the blast.
Three Westerners, two men and a woman who were inside an
armoured vehicle with the PRT, were lightly wounded, he said. Their
nationality has not been announced.
British and Danish troops with NATO`s 130,000 strong
International Security Assistance force operate in Helmand, where the
PRT has both military and civilian staff working to help the Afghan
government develop the province.
Just over a week ago on January 18, two attacks in the province killed 17 people and wounded more than 20 others.
A suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed 10 civilians and two
policemen in the first attack at a bazaar, while an intelligence
official was among the dead in a second blast caused by a mine, which
was claimed by the Taliban.
A day later a suicide bomber killed at least seven people and
wounded eight in an attack at Kandahar international airport in
neighbouring Kandahar province.
In that attack also, ISAF armoured vehicles were the target but there were no NATO casualties.
The latest deaths come as both sides have made moves towards
peace talks, with the Taliban, toppled in late 2001 in a US-led
invasion, announcing plans to open a political office in Qatar.
But the Islamic hardliners said this did not mean they had
surrendered in the war against coalition forces, only that they would
use their political wing alongside their military to achieve their aims.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility by the Taliban
for the Lashkar Gah attack, which was condemned by President Hamid
Karzai as "inhuman and un-Islamic".
The United Nations said the number of civilians killed in
violence in Afghanistan rose by 15 percent in the first six months of
last year to 1,462, with insurgents blamed for 80 percent of the
killings. (*) Editor: B Kunto Wibisono
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