Suicide attack hits NATO, kills 21

Suicide attack hits NATO, kills 21

GARDEZ, Afghanistan - Agence France-Presse
Suicide attack hits NATO, kills 21

AFP photo

A suicide bomber on a motorbike rammed an Afghan-NATO patrol in the town of Khost today, killing 21 people, including three NATO soldiers, officials said.
 
Another 37 people were wounded in the blast in the eastern town close to the border with Pakistan, where Taliban and other Islamist insurgents fighting US-led troops have strongholds, hospital officials said.

It was the second major attack on NATO in Khost in three weeks. The government blamed "enemies of Afghanistan", a phrase commonly used by officials to refer to the Taliban.
 
The bombing will only heighten fears about security as NATO prepares to hand responsibility to Afghan forces and recall the vast majority of its 130,000 combat troops by the end of 2014.
 
The Taliban, leading a 10-year insurgency against the Western-backed government, have begun their annual fighting season with a series of attacks that forced US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to admit that violence was rising.
 
Interior ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said Wednesday's blast targeted a combined Afghan and coalition patrol passing through Khost, one of the most troubled parts of Afghanistan.
 
Khost shares a porous border with Pakistan's tribal belt, which lies outside government control, and where US officials say the Taliban and Al-Qaeda have carved out bases for operations in Afghanistan.
 
The Haqqani network, a militant group close to Al-Qaeda and blamed for some of the most daring insurgent attacks in Afghanistan, is particularly active in the province.
 
Amir Padsha, the director of Khost city hospital, said the bodies of three police officers and eight civilians, along with 17 wounded were brought in.
 
Babri Gul, the head of the Babri Gul private hospital in Khost, said he had received six bodies, including four members of the same family, and 20 wounded.
 
On June 1, a suicide truck bomber targeted a US-run base in an incident that killed up to 15 people. US media reported that more than 100 American troops were treated for injuries after that blast.
 
The US embassy in Kabul released a statement confirming that three members of the US-led NATO mission and an Afghan interpreter were killed. An ISAF official told AFP the three personnel were soldiers.
 
Afghan police and interior ministry officials confirmed that the four dead announced by the Americans were in addition to the 17 Afghan bodies taken to local hospitals.
 
In southern Afghanistan, a roadside bomb attack killed at least six civilians, including women and children travelling on a tractor in Puli Alam, the capital of Logar province, deputy provincial police chief Rahis Khan Sadiq told AFP.
 
"Four children and two women were killed and four others were wounded," he said.
 
On Tuesday, Taliban suicide attackers struck two Afghan-NATO facilities in the southern province of Kandahar - the birthplace of the extremist movement and the heartland of its insurgency.
 
The Taliban have waged a bloody fight against Karzai's administration since they were ousted from power in a US-led invasion in 2001.
 
For the past five years the number of civilians killed in the war has risen steadily, reaching a record 3,021 in 2011 - the vast majority caused by insurgents, according to UN figures.
 
The US-led NATO force is also responsible for hundreds of civilian casualties every year, mostly in air strikes aimed at insurgents in Afghan villages.