PDA

View Full Version : Another Day, Another Bombing in Afghanistan




James Madison
08-14-2012, 06:18 PM
Oh, the selective outrage of the American public. Freaking out over someone who shoots up a theatre when such attrocities occur daily thanks to U.S. foreign policy and our dear leaders.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/afghanistan-official-says-pakistani-border-shelling-has-killed-1-afghan-guard-sparked-battle/2012/08/14/b1b08d92-e5ff-11e1-9739-eef99c5fb285_story.html

KABUL, Afghanistan — Police say a motorcycle bomb outside a crowded bazaar in northern Afghanistan has killed at least 10 people, including several children.

The blast brought the death toll to at least 46 in a bloody day for Afghanistan, after as many as 14 suicide bombers were involved in attacks in a southwestern city.

District police chief Hamid Agha says the motorcycle bomber struck in the early evening in the northern province of Kunduz as shoppers were rushing home for the meal ending the daily fast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. He said five children were among the dead and at least 25 people were wounded.

The police chief of southwestern province of Nimroz said the death toll in the earlier multiple suicide attacks there has risen to 36.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

James Madison
08-15-2012, 06:04 PM
Update.

Suicide bombers have launched multiple attacks in a remote corner of southwestern Afghanistan near the Iranian border, killing policemen and shoppers buying food to break their daily Ramadan fast.

A market bombing in northern Afghanistan brought the overall toll to 46 in the deadliest day for civilians this year.

There were no claims of responsibility, but the attacks on opposite ends of the country - the provinces of Nimroz in the southwest and Kunduz in the north - came as Taliban insurgents and their allies step up attacks while international troops hand over security responsibility to Afghan forces. NATO plans to withdraw most of its troops by the end of 2014.

There have been relatively few insurgent attacks in Nimroz over the past year. Tuesday's bombings took place in the provincial capital, Zaranj, where three men wearing suicide vests detonated their explosives in different neighbourhoods, provincial police chief Musa Rasouli said. At least 25 civilians and 11 police were killed, he said.

Authorities said the casualties would have been far higher had they not learned of the plot beforehand. Police killed two would-be attackers on Monday night and captured another three on Tuesday morning. Three more militants attacked the governor's compound but were killed by security forces before they could detonate their suicide vests.

One of the bombings took place at mid-afternoon outside a hospital near a busy market packed with shoppers buying sweets for the feast that marks the end of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month, this weekend. Another bombing struck outside the state television building, and the third hit an intersection in front of another bazaar.

In Kunduz province in northern Afghanistan, police said a motorcycle bomb outside a crowded bazaar in Archi district killed at least 10 people, including five children, and wounded at least 25 others, according to Hamid Agha, the police chief for Archi district.

The bomb exploded in the early evening as shoppers were rushing home for the meal ending their Ramadan fast, he said.

Altogether, 35 civilians were killed in the attacks in the two provinces, making Tuesday the deadliest day for Afghan civilians this year.

"What we saw today were further acts of intentional mass murder," said General John Allen, the top commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan. "By targeting innocent civilians in populated areas, the insurgents have again shown they will kill non-combatants without hesitation to advance their backward-looking plans for Afghanistan."

The UN reported last week that civilian deaths were lower in the first six months of 2012 than in the first half of 2011, but that an onslaught of summer attacks from insurgents were threatening to reverse that trend. In all, 1145 civilians were killed in Afghanistan between January and June of this year, according to the UN report.