Kabul reels after
deadly truck bombing
Kabul was reeling Thursday from its deadliest attack since 2001, with anguished residents burying their dead as authorities cleared away mangled wreckage and public anger mounted over the government's failure to protect citizens in the heart of the capital.
Kabul was reeling Thursday from its deadliest attack since 2001, with anguished residents burying their dead as authorities cleared away mangled wreckage and public anger mounted over the government's failure to protect citizens in the heart of the capital.
No group has so far claimed Wednesday's
attack, launched from a sewage tanker packed with explosives, which tore a
massive crater in the ground and killed at least 90 people, mainly civilians,
while wounding hundreds.
Angry citizens demanded answers from the
government over the perceived intelligence failure leading to the assault,
which underscores spiralling insecurity in Afghanistan. "For how long will
we have to tolerate this bloodshed in our country?" a sobbing resident
asked on local Tolo News. "I have lost my brother in the blast and the
government is constantly failing to provide us with security."
The brazen attack during the holy month of
Ramadan highlighted the ability of militants to strike even in the capital's
most secure district, home to the presidential palace and foreign embassies
that are enveloped in a maze of concrete blast walls.
Authorities swept off debris and shards of
glass littered across the streets, and cleared away the charred carcasses of
blown-up vehicles, as shocked residents prepared for funeral ceremonies. With
more than 400 people wounded, the injured spilled over into hospital hallways
as huge crowds gathered outside waiting for news of their loved ones or
searching for still missing relatives.
Health officials warned some victims may
never be identified as their bodies were torn into pieces or burned beyond
recognition. Global outrage swelled over the massive blast, the deadliest
single attack in Kabul since the Taliban were toppled from power in a 2001
US-led invasion.
US President Donald Trump told his Afghan
counterpart Ashraf Ghani in a phone call that the timing of the attack during
Ramadan underscores "the barbaric nature of the terrorists who are enemies
of all civilised peoples".
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
expressed his "abhorrence" at the strike. The lights at the Eiffel
Tower were switched off on Wednesday night to honour the scores of victims. The
monument's lights had already been turned off on Tuesday after suicide blasts
in Baghdad killed at least 42.
- Kabul deadly for civilians -
Afghanistan's intelligence agency has
blamed the Taliban-allied Haqqani Network for Wednesday's attack. The Taliban
-- currently in the midst of their annual "spring offensive" --
denied they were involved. The insurgent group rarely claims responsibility for
attacks that kill large numbers of civilians.
The Islamic State group has had no such
compunctions, claiming responsibility for several deadly bombings in the Afghan
capital, but so far has not issued a claim in Wednesday's blast.
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The explosion, which Kabul residents
compared to an earthquake, damaged several embassies in the area, which houses
diplomatic and government buildings and is replete with check points and armed
security guards.
At least 11 Afghan guards working for the
US embassy were among those killed and 11 American citizens working as
contractors in Kabul were among the wounded, US officials have said. Germany
said an Afghan guard had been killed at its embassy, which was "in the
immediate vicinity" of the attack, while several other countries also
reported damage to their missions.
Frequent mass casualty attacks made the
city the deadliest place in Afghanistan for civilians in the first quarter of
2017, according to the United Nations.
Afghan troops backed by US and NATO forces
have been struggling t beat back the insurgents, and the White House is
considering sending thousands more soldiers to break the deadlock in the battle
against the Taliban.
US troops in Afghanistan number about
8,400 now and there are another 5,000 from NATO allies. They mainly serve in an
advisory capacity -- very different from the US presence of more than 100,000
six years ago.
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