Advertisement

34 killed in separate suicide bombings in Afghanistan, officials say

Armored vehicles are lined up, and Afghan soldiers carry weapons at the site of a suicide bombing.
Afghan soldiers arrive at the site of a suicide bombing in eastern Ghazni province on Sunday.
(Rahmatullah Nikzad / Associated Press)
Share via

At least 34 people were killed on Sunday in two separate suicide bombings in Afghanistan that targeted a military base and a provincial chief, officials said.

There were no immediate claims of responsibility for the attacks, which took place as Afghan government representatives and the Taliban hold face-to-face talks in Qatar for the first time to end the country’s decades-long war.

In the eastern province of Ghazni, 31 soldiers were killed and 24 others wounded when the attacker drove a military Humvee full of explosives onto an army commando base before detonating the car bomb, according to an official in Afghanistan’s National Security Council, who requested anonymity because he was not permitted to speak directly to the media.

Advertisement

The provincial health department chief, Zahir Shah Nikmal, also confirmed the casualty figures from the attack.

Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry released a statement claiming 10 soldiers were killed and nine wounded. The ministry also offered a different account of what happened than the official at the National Security Council, saying the vehicle exploded near the army base after security forces opened fire on the car. It was not immediately clear why there was a discrepancy.

President Trump’s plan to abandon Afghanistan — again — risks turning a disaster into a catastrophe.

Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian said a suicide bombing took place, though he did not provide further details.

Advertisement

The soldiers stationed at the base were responsible for conducting night raids, providing support to the army and police forces under siege, and taking part in large-scale operations against the Taliban and the militant group Islamic State in eastern and southern Afghanistan.

The base is in a desert region, about three miles outside the city of Ghazni. Parts of the base and a nearby police building were partially destroyed by the powerful explosion. Windows were also blown out in nearby buildings elsewhere in the city.

In southern Afghanistan, another suicide car bomber targeted the convoy of a provincial council chief in Zabol, killing at least three people and wounding 21 others, including children, according to provincial spokesman Gul Islam Sial.

Advertisement

The provincial council chief, Attajan Haqbayat, survived the attack on Sunday with minor injuries, though one of his bodyguards was among those killed, said provincial police spokesman Hikmatullah Kochai.

There has been a sharp rise in violence this year and a surge of attacks by the Taliban against Afghanistan’s beleaguered security forces since the start of peace talks in September. There have also been deadly attacks this month claimed by Islamic State militants in Afghanistan, including a horrific attack on Kabul University that killed 22 people, most of them students.

The U.S., meanwhile, plans to withdraw an estimated 2,500 troops before the middle of January, leaving about 2,000 soldiers in Afghanistan as part of America’s longest war. Afghan officials, however, have expressed concerns that a rapid reduction in American troops could strengthen the negotiating hand of the Taliban.

The United States has been pressing in recent weeks for a reduction in violence, while the Afghan government has been demanding a cease-fire. The Taliban has refused, saying a cease-fire will be part of negotiations, though the group has held to its promise to not attack U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization troops.

Advertisement