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Afghans say Pakistanis behind mosque attack

The Afghan intelligence service blamed militants from Lashkar-e-Jhangvi for the attack

APPTI Kabul
Afghanistan blamed a Pakistani militant group for an early morning shootout today at a Shiite Muslim mosque in Kabul, while also criticising alleged anti-Afghan elements in Pakistan's intelligence apparatus.
 
The statement from Afghanistan's intelligence service is hardly the first time authorities here have criticised Pakistan which denies any role in fostering violence in its neighbour but it could deepen animosity between the two countries as both grapple with the drawdown of US-led foreign forces.
 
The shootout occurred around 4:30 am in the western part of the Afghan capital as worshippers gathered for morning prayers, authorities said.
 
Afghanistan's intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security, said two heavily armed Pakistani militants entered the mosque with the aim of killing the people there, but that Afghan security forces managed to gun them down.
 
 
The intelligence service alleged that the militants belonged to Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni Muslim extremist group based in Pakistan behind past violence here.
 
Area police official Hafizullah, who like many Afghans goes by one name, said the suspected militants had been under surveillance, allowing for the quick response by security forces.
 
A video distributed by the intelligence service showed the bloodied bodies of the alleged militants, who wore police uniforms, but the Afghans did not say how they had determined the identities or origins of the alleged attackers.
 
The men were armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles and other weapons, some of which also were shown on the video.
 
In its initial statement, the service said three bystanders were wounded, but Hafizullah disputed that account, and the intelligence service's later statement did not mention any wounded.
 
It did, however, criticise Pakistan's intelligence service, which has a history of links to militant groups.
 
"The enemies of the prosperity and stability of the people of Afghanistan include circles inside Pakistan's intelligence service and the Punjabis," the statement said.
 
Punjab is Pakistan's most powerful and populous province, and it is home to some of its most vicious militant groups, including Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.
 
Islamabad often has been accused of fostering violence in Afghanistan so as to keep it a weak neighbour and a buffer against archrival India.
 
Pakistani officials could not immediately be reached for comment today, but they have in the past denied such allegations.

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First Published: Sep 05 2013 | 5:46 PM IST

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