Kabul attack: nearly 100 injured in Taliban bombing, say officials

A car bomb exploded on Wednesday outside a police
station in the Afghan capital, Kabul, wounding at least 95 people, government
officials said. The Taliban claimed responsibility for what it said was a
suicide attack.
There has been no let-up in violence in Afghanistan,
despite the Taliban and the US appearing to be close to reaching a historic
pact for American troops to withdraw, in exchange for a Taliban pledge the
country would not be used as a base from which to plot terrorist attacks.
The blast, in the west of the city during the
morning rush hour, sent clouds of grey smoke billowing into the sky.
The Taliban said a “recruitment centre” had been
attacked by one of their suicide bombers. “A large number of soldiers and
police were killed or wounded,” the Taliban said in a statement.
The bomb went off when a vehicle was stopped at a
checkpoint outside the police station, said the interior ministry spokesman,
Nasrat Rahimi.
A health ministry spokesman said 95 wounded people
had been taken to hospitals. Most were civilians, including women and children,
he said.
Separately, security forces conducted raids in
several parts of Kabul overnight and destroyed a major militant hideout, the
main security service said.