Business Standard

33 killed, 200 wounded in Afghan Taliban attack

The number of attackers was six, all equipped with suicide vests and light arms, according to the security forces

kabul, blast

A truck loaded with explosives went off in downtown Kabul

IANS Kabul

Twin suicide bombings and gunfire on a police training centre in Afghanistan's eastern province of Paktia on Tuesday killed at least 33 people including the provincial police chief and wounded over 200 others, officials said.

The dead also included training centre members, police personnel and civilians. The toll may rise as the condition of some of the injured was said to be critical, Khaama Press reported.

The attack, claimed by the Taliban, took place in Gardez city, 100 km south of Kabul and the capital of Paktia province that borders Pakistan.

The number of attackers was six, all equipped with suicide vests and light arms, according to the security forces.

 

The provincial police chief who died was identified as Toryalai Abdyani.

The attack began around 9.30 a.m. when a suicide bomber detonated himself outside a police barrack and followed it up with a car bomb, a spokesperson for Paktia Governor Abdullah Hasrat told Efe news agency.

The deafening explosion was followed by gunfire as the militants stormed the police centre and the security personnel fought back.

The number of militants killed remained unknown.

The Interior Ministry said the area was now under the control of security forces and that two of the attackers were killed by the security forces.

In June, six Taliban fighters had attacked the same barracks, killing 11 people and wounding 20.

Over the last two-and-a-half years, the Afghan government has been losing ground to an aggressive Taliban and now controls only 57 per cent of the country, according to the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR).

SIGAR data also shows that between January and November 2016, at least 6,785 Afghan security personnel were killed and 11,777 wounded, coinciding with an escalation in the conflict.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Oct 17 2017 | 6:08 PM IST

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