Gunmen attack Afghan government building, kill 6

Author: 
 RAHIM FAIEZ and JON GAMBRELL | AP
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2011-05-22 16:38

Taleban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in Khost province in a text message to The Associated Press. The attack came a day after a Taleban suicide bomber slipped inside the capital’s main military hospital and killed at least six Afghan medical students — worrying reminders of militants’ ability to infiltrate locations thought to be secure.
In Sunday’s attack, four men armed with assault rifles and wearing explosives drove shortly before dawn into a compound that houses the provincial traffic department on the edge of Khost city, provincial Police Chief Gen. Abdul Hakim Ishaqzai said. Security forces stopped the men, who were wearing uniforms of the Afghan border police, only after becoming suspicious of the civilian station wagon they drove, he said.
Guards opened fire on the attackers, but the men were able to occupy the upper floor of the building, Ishaqzai said.
The attackers shot at Afghan security forces from their vantage point as a fire raged through the structure. AP Television News video showed US soldiers surrounding an outer wall and shouting orders as Afghan troops rushed toward the building, which was engulfed by smoke.
Two of the attackers detonated their bomb vests during the fighting, with one bomber killing two Afghan soldiers, said Gen. Raz Mohammad Oryakhail, the army commander for Khost province. Security forces shot the other two attackers to death.
Three police officers and a gardener working at the site were also killed in the attack, Ishaqzai said. Five police officers, one soldier and one civilian were wounded.
Soldiers defused more explosives found inside the attackers’ station wagon.
The police chief said the Taleban attackers could have been stopped before taking the building had a guard’s assault rifle not jammed. The US provided Afghan police with some of the Hungarian-made AMD-65 rifles, which have been criticized for their poor performance.
Meanwhile, US forces in southern Afghanistan shot a governor’s spokesman in the foot Sunday as he arrived to work.
Spokesman Zalmai Ayubi said US forces shot him as he arrived at the gate of the Kandahar governor’s office for no reason. Ayubi leaned on a cane as he spoke with reporters, his left foot bandaged.
In a statement to the AP, NATO forces confirmed the shooting, saying Ayubi had struggled with a guard as he “attempted to physically bypass security” at the office.
“In the ensuing altercation, the US soldier’s rifle was discharged, hitting the spokesman in the foot,” NATO said.
A roadside bomb exploded Sunday in the southern province of Zabul, killing two people and wounding five others, the Afghan Interior Ministry said. Another roadside bomb exploded overnight in Kandahar city, killing one police officer and wounding three others, police said.
Taleban fighters remain able to get into fortified areas despite an expansion of checkpoints and security cordons by Afghan and NATO forces. Security agency uniforms also remain available for sale at shops across the country.
President Hamid Karzai’s office said security agencies had “arrested a number of people” on suspicion of taking part in Saturday’s hospital bombing in Kabul. It gave no details.
The effectiveness of the Taleban’s campaign will in part determine the size of President Barack Obama’s planned drawdown of American troops in July.
NATO has committed itself to handing over control of security to Afghans by 2014.
Also Sunday, the Afghan government submitted its proposal for a strategic partnership agreement to US officials, the president’s office said. The compact, which has been in negotiations for months, aims to create a formal framework for the massive US presence in the country. There currently is no bilateral agreement governing the US
military and civilian campaigns in Afghanistan.
Karzai has previously pledged to put strict conditions on the US going forward, including rules for the conduct of soldiers, minimum funding levels and development priorities.
Waheed Omar, a spokesman for Karzai, declined to provide specifics on the draft.
“Our position is that whatever comes out of this strategic partnership agreement, it has to be binding,” Omar said.

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