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12 killed in Kabul attack near Spanish embassy

Published on Dec 14, 2015

By EMN

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IANS KABUL, DECEMBER 12 At least 12 people were killed on Saturday during an Afghan Taliban`s attack on a guest house near Spanish embassy in Kabul, sources said. The killed included two Spanish citizens, one Afghan civilian, five police personnel and four attackers, Xinhua reported. “Around 6.00 p.m. (local time) on Friday, one terrorist detonated a car bomb at the entrance of a guest house in Shairpoor locality, enabling three other attackers to enter the building,” Xinhua quoted the Afghan Interior Ministry as saying on Saturday. “Police force arrived at the site shortly after the attack, and launched a counter-offensive against the terrorists,” the ministry said. A total of 12 guests trapped in the building were rescued by the police, the report said. “The clash ended around 5.30 a.m. on Saturday. As a result of the terrorist attack, four police personnel were killed and seven civilians sustained injuries while four attackers were killed,” according to the statement. The powerful blast, which sent a thick plume of smoke into the sky, was followed by multiple explosions through the night along with sporadic bursts of gunfire. Security men near the embassy ducked from gunshots as they hauled away a limp body and two wounded men through the dark to a waiting ambulance -- one bleeding from the head, the other a policeman with a gunshot wound to his leg -- an AFP photographer saw. Afghan officials said the last of the four assailants was killed in the early hours of Saturday. The attack follows a deadly 27-hour Taliban siege of Kandahar airport this week as the militants ramp up attacks despite the onset of the harsh winter season, when the fighting usually calms down. The Taliban also claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack, saying the target was a foreign guest house. The Spanish embassy was earlier reported to be the target of the attack, but Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy clarified that the assault was nearby and not on the compound. “It was an attack against some guesthouses very near the embassy,” Rajoy said, adding that all embassy staff had been evacuated as Afghan special forces cordoned off the area in Sherpur district in central Kabul. The wealthy enclave of Sherpur is home to several foreign NGOs and the residences of senior government officials, including controversial former warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum, Afghanistan’s first vice-president. ‘Expecting talks is foolishness’ The attack comes just days after president Ghani’s high-profile visit to Pakistan, where he shored up international support to restart peace talks with the Taliban. As Ghani held talks in Islamabad on Wednesday, at least 50 people were killed in a long Taliban siege of Kandahar airport, the largest military installation in southern Afghanistan. Eleven suicide attackers breached the high-security complex, which also houses a joint Nato-Afghan base, taking families hostage and triggering firefights with soldiers. As the country grappled with the aftermath, Afghanistan’s spy chief on Thursday quit his post, laying bare disagreements with Ghani over his diplomatic outreach to Pakistan, long blamed for nurturing the Taliban. The resignation of Rahmatullah Nabil on Thursday highlighted the domestic backlash Ghani faces over his attempts to repair strained relations with Islamabad. The president has staked considerable political capital in advocating bonhomie with Afghanistan’s neighbour. Ghani shrugged off Nabil’s criticism on Friday, saying Pakistan had promised to go after Taliban factions that refuse to stand down. “Without positive support from Pakistan, won’t the war in Afghanistan keep dragging on?” Ghani asked a press conference on Friday. “The time has come for different Taliban factions to choose peace... the talks will start in the coming weeks.” But the Taliban rebuffed his remarks. “The mujahideen are making rapid military gains, capturing territory and destroying enemy centres,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid wrote on Twitter. “Expecting us to surrender and come for talks is foolishness.”