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Tuesday April 15, 2025

30 killed in Afghan attacks

KHOST: At least 30 people have died in three separate attacks in Afghanistan.Eighteen people were killed and six wounded Sunday in a suicide car bomb attack near a military base in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Khost, where Afghan and foreign soldiers are stationed, authorities said.The bomber detonated the explosives at

By our correspondents
July 13, 2015
KHOST: At least 30 people have died in three separate attacks in Afghanistan.Eighteen people were killed and six wounded Sunday in a suicide car bomb attack near a military base in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Khost, where Afghan and foreign soldiers are stationed, authorities said.
The bomber detonated the explosives at a military roadblock near the entrance to Camp Chapman, said Faizullah Ghairat, the Khost city police chief. Authorities were unable to specify the victims’ identities or say if troops were among the casualties.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the Taliban have often targeted Afghan and foreign troops. “We counted 18 dead and six wounded,” said a doctor at a hospital in the city.
Ghairat put the toll at 25 dead and 16 wounded.Foreign troops including US soldiers are stationed at Camp Champan alongside Afghan soldiers.A statement from the Nato mission in Afghanistan said it was “aware” of the blast, but did not elaborate.
Meanwhile, at least 12 civilians were killed in twin roadside bomb blasts in Afghanistan, officials said Sunday, blaming the attacks on the Taliban.A roadside bomb ripped through a passenger van on Saturday in Tagab district of Kapisa, an often restive province in the mountains east of the Afghan capital Kabul, killing 10 civilians and wounding six others, provincial officials said.
“A civilian van travelling from Kabul to Alasay district of Kapisa hit a roadside bomb planted by the Taliban,” Qais Qaderi, a spokesman for the provincial governor, told AFP.“Ten civilians, all men, were killed. Three children and three women were wounded,” he said.
Abdul Karim Fayeq, the provincial police chief, confirmed the incident and blamed the Taliban for the blast.No one has claimed responsibility for the attack but roadside bombs have been the Taliban’s weapon of choice in their war against foreign and Afghan security forces, now in its 14th year.
The bombs also increasingly

kill and wound civilians.Mohammad Hussain Sanjari, head of the provincial council of Kapisa, said the wounded civilians were taken to a local hospital for treatment.
In another incident, at least two civilians were killed and four civilians and two police were wounded when a police vehicle hit a roadside bomb in Kunduz city on Sunday, provincial police spokesman Sayed Sarwar Husseini told AFP.
The insurgents launched a countrywide offensive in late April, stepping up attacks on government and foreign targets in what is expected to be the bloodiest fighting season in a decade.The Taliban, who promised to “safeguard” civilian lives during their offensive, are known to distance themselves from attacks that result in high civilian casualties.
The surge in insurgent attacks has taken a heavy toll on ordinary Afghans, according to the UN mission in Afghanistan.Almost 1,000 civilians were killed during the first four months of this year, a sharp jump from the same period last year, the UN said.