Suicide attack targets NATO convoy in Afghanistan, 2 dead

World Today

An Afghan woman cries out at the site of a suicide attack on a NATO convoy in Kabul, Afghanistan, Tuesday, June 30, 2015. It comes a week after an audacious attack on the nation’s parliament, which highlighted the ability of insurgents, who have been fighting to overthrow the Kabul government for almost 14 years, to enter the highly fortified capital to stage deadly attacks. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)

The Taliban launched a suicide car bomb attack on a NATO military convoy in Afghanistan’s capital on Tuesday, killing two people and wounding 26 others, including two U.S. soldiers, officials said.

The blast sent a huge plume of black smoke over the city and scattered glass and metal across the main highway to Kabul’s airport.

Kabul deputy police chief Sayed Gulagha said a suicide bomber struck the convoy with a vehicle packed with explosives. Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said two Afghan civilians were killed and at least 24 wounded, some critically.

A spokeswoman for NATO’s Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan, U.S. Army Capt. Susan Harrington, said two American soldiers sustained minor injuries in the attack.

The Taliban sent a text message to The Associated Press claiming responsibility for the bombing, the latest in a series of attacks in recent months targeting foreign convoys, hotels and residences used by foreigners in the capital, Kabul.

At least two of the convoy’s armored vehicles were badly damaged in the explosion, which happened less than a kilometer (half a mile) from the American Embassy. Embassy spokeswoman Heather Eaton said all personnel were accounted for.

Witnesses said the attack happened during early afternoon prayers, and that people who rushed out of a nearby mosque had turned on the foreign soldiers and journalists, throwing stones at them.

The attack took place during the afternoon rush hour, when roads were choked with employees returning home. The work day has been shortened for the holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk.

“I saw a Toyota Corolla target the convoy of foreign forces,” eyewitness Ahmad Farhad said. “I saw two to three damaged vehicles, and wounded victims were everywhere, and there was no one to help them.”

Last week the Taliban launched an audacious attack on parliament. Security forces managed to fend off the attack, and no lawmakers were wounded, but the assault highlighted the ability of the insurgents to penetrate the heavily guarded capital.

Also on Tuesday, Afghanistan signed an extension to a long-running U.N. police support program that will transfer some $900 million to the government over the next 18 months.

The Law and Order Trust Fund for Afghanistan, set up in 2002, has been plagued by accusations of waste and corruption. The Interior Ministry’s spokesman, Najib Danish, said Tuesday’s deal sets benchmarks for reviews every six months.

The agreement with the U.N. Development Program will channel approximately $843 million to pay the salaries of more than 150,000 police officers, and $38 million for broader security and justice reform.

Police are particularly vulnerable in the fight against insurgents, and are suffering a spike in casualties as they are often the target of Taliban attacks on flimsy checkpoints in remote districts.

A suicide attack on the police headquarters of southern Helmand province early Tuesday killed three people and wounded more than 50, including policemen, police spokesman Farid Hamad Obaid said. Omar Zawak, spokesman for the governor of Helmand province, said most of the wounded were women and children.

In the eastern Paktya province, three people were killed and one wounded on Tuesday when their vehicle hit a roadside bomb, provincial police chief Zalmai Oryakhel said.

Story by the Associated Press.