Five dead, dozens wounded in attack on Afghan police base
An hours-long attack on an Afghan police special
forces base involving car bombs and an intense firefight killed five policemen
and wounded dozens of people, officials said Tuesday, as violence continued to
surge in the war-weary country.
Three suicide bombers detonated their
explosives-loaded vehicles targeting the base in the city of Khost near the
Pakistan border, Khost police chief Ghulam Daud Tarakhil told AFP, before other
gunmen tried to storm the compound.
One suicide bomber detonated his vehicle at the
gates of the base early in the morning, while two others blew up their vehicles
later during the gun battle between security forces and gunmen, he said.
A fierce firefight that lasted for almost nine hours
between the militants and security forces ended with the killing of seven other
militants, Tarakhil said.
Afghanistan's interior ministry spokesman Tariq
Arian confirmed that the gun battle had now ended.
The assault left five policemen dead and wounded 33
other people, including nine civilians, Tarakhil added.
No group has so far claimed responsibility for the
attack.
Khost, a restive province, is home to active Taliban
insurgents and also Al-Qaeda fighters, officials say.
Further north, three civilians were killed and 10
others were wounded in a separate attack Tuesday when a "sticky bomb"
attached to a car exploded near Kabul airport, police spokesman Ferdaws Faramuz
said in a statement.
Violence has raged across Afghanistan in recent
weeks even as the Taliban and Afghan government remain engaged in peace talks
to end the country's long-running conflict.
Afghan and US officials have repeatedly warned that
the rising bloodshed is threatening the talks being held in Qatar since last month.
The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
(UNAMA) said in a report released on Tuesday that the number of civilians
killed and wounded has failed to slow since the start of peace talks on
September 12.
"The peace talks will need some time to help
deliver peace," UNAMA chief Deborah Lyons said in the report.
"But all parties can immediately prioritise
discussions and take urgent, and frankly overdue, additional steps to stem the
terrible harm to civilians."
UNAMA, however, said that the overall civilian
casualty figure had dropped by around 30 percent in the first nine months of
2020 compared to the corresponding period last year.
The first nine months of this year saw 2,177
civilians killed and 3,822 wounded, the report said.
The majority of the civilian casualties, about 58
percent, were caused by "anti-government elements" including the
Taliban and Islamic State group, it said.
Afghan security forces were responsible for 23
percent of all civilian casualties, many killed in air strikes and ground
engagements.



