Afghan authorities were warned about lax security at entrances to Kabul's highly fortified diplomatic zone before a suicide bomber struck this week, sources said today.
The attacker evaded the first security checkpoint on Street 14 in the heart of the capital on Tuesday before blowing himself up inside the "Green Zone", killing at least five people and wounding dozens.
It was the first attack targeting the heavily protected area that is home to many embassies and international organisations since a massive truck bomb detonated on May 31, killing or wounding hundreds.
More From This Section
But Afghan authorities had been told that loose security checks at Street 14 posed a threat to those living and working inside the Green Zone, four Western and Afghan diplomatic and security sources told AFP.
Twice "we made it clear (to the National Security Council) that we have a problem with Street 14 -- there is no proper checkpoint because there is no barrier, just a bunch of policemen," a Western embassy official said.
He said another concern was the ability to avoid the first checkpoint by accessing Street 14 through a mosque and a park. The interior ministry said Wednesday that was apparently how the attacker got inside the Green Zone.
"It has been a group effort for a period of time (to warn Afghan authorities)," said a security expert working for a Western embassy, noting careless inspections of vehicles and pedestrians.
"That one (checkpoint) was a worry because it comes towards the British and Canadian embassies."
While security along the perimeter of the Green Zone has improved since the truck blast outside the German embassy five months ago, with more personnel stationed at checkpoints, it remained "porous", the expert said.
"This morning nothing had changed at this checkpoint -- they are sticking to the same procedure," another Western security source told AFP.
"This is like a huge highway in the middle of the Green Zone and besides that a big pedestrian way for all the people working there."
Defence ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri defended the security arrangements, saying "many attacks are thwarted every day".
"Let's remember there are five or six million people living in Kabul and it is impossible to search everyone," he told reporters.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content