Premium
This is an archive article published on August 8, 2015

Kabul terror attack: NATO member, two insurgents among dozens dead in Afghan capital

Military jets and helicopters flew over the city centre until the early hours of Saturday morning as security forces locked down the area around the attacks.

kabul, kabul blast, Kabul bomb blast, Afghanistan bomb blast, kabul police academy, kabul military compound blast, kabul suicide bombing, kabul bombing, afghanistan blast, taliban, kabul police academy blast, kabul police attack, kabul police attack, kabul police academy attack, afghanistan police, afghanistan police academy blast, afghanistan taliban, taliban afghanistan, taliban afghanistan police afghanistan police taliban, kabul news, afghanistan news, taliban news, world news An Afghan police officer walks at the site of a car bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Source: AP)

One member of Afghanistan’s NATO force and two insurgents were killed in an overnight battle at a base used by special forces in Kabul, authorities said on Saturday, after a series of attacks hit the city, killing dozens and wounding hundreds.

READ: Kabul blasts: Two explosions kill 35, challenge President Ashraf Ghani’s peace plan

The attacks, which included a massive truck bomb in a heavily populated civilian area and a suicide attack on a police academy, were some of the most serious in months and the first in Kabul since the Taliban named a new leader last week.

[related-post]

Story continues below this ad

Military jets and helicopters flew over the city centre until the early hours of Saturday morning as security forces locked down the area around the attacks.

Colonel Brian Tribus, director of public affairs for NATO’s Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan, said authorities were still gathering information about the attack on the Camp Integrity facility, near Kabul airport.

“One Resolute Support service member and two insurgent attackers were killed,” he said in a statement, which gave no further details.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing that killed dozens of cadets at the police academy but no claim was made for the other attacks.

Story continues below this ad

One Western security source said on Friday that insurgents attacked Camp Integrity with a car bomb and then fighters followed up with gunfire.

The Afghan war between the Western-backed government and the Taliban has intensified since the NATO combat mission ended last year and most foreign troops were withdrawn.

Kabul has frequently been targeted by the Taliban and other insurgent groups seeking to destabilize the fragile government of President Ashraf Ghani although the scale of Friday’s attacks was unusually large.

The attacks dashed any hopes of rapid progress in peace talks following last week’s appointment of Mullah Akhtar Mansour as leader of the Taliban, who pledged to continue the insurgency which has killed and wounded thousands this year.

Story continues below this ad

Mansour took over as leader after the movement’s reclusive founder, Mullah Mohammad Omar, was revealed to have died two years ago.

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement