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Bombs
targeting Afghan lawmakers kill 100
KABUL (Afghanistan)—Two bombs targeted a group of lawmakers in northern
Afghanistan on Tuesday, killing at least 100 people, including five
members of parliament, in the deadliest attack in the country since the
fall of the Taliban in 2001, officials said. The bombs exploded outside
a sugar factory in the northern province of Baghlan as the lawmakers
were about to enter. The twin blasts struck children, elders and
government officials who had gathered to greet the visiting delegation
of 18 lawmakers from the lower house, officials said.
At least 100 people were killed, said a government minister who asked
not to be identified because he was releasing information not yet made
official. At least five members of parliament were among those killed,
he said. Shukria Barakzai, a lawmaker, said 18 of the 249 lower house
parliamentarians had traveled to Baghlan province, and that 13 were dead
or “in danger.” Baghlan lies about 95 miles north of Kabul.
If the death toll is confirmed, the attack would be the deadliest in
Afghanistan since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. Taliban bombers have
killed regional governors in the past, but never have militants killed
so many high-ranking officials in one attack. In June, a bomb tore
through a bus carrying police instructors in Kabul, killing 35 people.
Kamin Khan, a police official, said people “everywhere” were dead and
wounded, including police, children, lawmakers and officials from the
Department of Agriculture.
Among the lawmakers killed was Sayed Mustafa Kazimi, a former Afghan
commerce minister and a powerful member of the Northern Alliance, said
the lawmaker’s secretary, Ahmadi, who gave only one name. Kazimi also
served as the spokesman of the largest opposition group in Afghanistan,
the National Front. The northern Afghan region where the blast happened
is known for tensions between the mainly ethnic Tajik government
leadership and remnants of the militant group Hezb-i-Islami, whose
fugitive leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, an ethnic Pashtun, is allied to
Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida but has denied organizational links.
Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary did not confirm the deaths of
any parliamentarians, saying several had been taken to the hospital. He
said the lawmakers were part of parliament’s economic commission. He
said the government was trying to tally all the wounded and dead at the
different hospitals.
He blamed the attack on the “enemy of Afghanistan, the enemy of the
people of Afghanistan,” a term commonly used here to refer to Taliban
militants but that could also include other terrorist groups like al-Qaida.
In central Afghanistan, 60 Taliban militants on motorbikes and pickup
trucks overran a district center, firing on the town from a mountain
outlook, pushing out the police and cutting off the town’s main road,
the provinvial governor said Tuesday.
The Kajran district, in Day Kundi province, is the third overrun by
militants in the last week. Day Kundi’s governor, Sultan Ali Uruzgani,
said police retreated late Monday when 60 Taliban on motorbikes and
trucks stormed the town.—Agencies
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