Suicide bomber kills 14 at Afghan province council

World News
20-05-2013 | 07:19
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Suicide bomber kills 14 at Afghan province council
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Suicide bomber kills 14 at Afghan province council
      
A suicide bomber struck outside a provincial council headquarters in northern Afghanistan on Monday, killing the council chief and at least 13 others, authorities said. The Taliban insurgency quickly claimed responsibility.                

Seeking to weaken the Afghan government, Taliban insurgents have been carrying out attacks and assassinations intended to intimidate both officials and civilians ahead of next year's withdrawal of most international troops.                

Baghlan provincial council leader Mohammad Rasoul Mohseni was entering the compound in the morning when the bomber ran up on foot and detonated his explosives in the provincial capital of Pul-e-Khumri, said Baghlan chief of police Asadullah Sherzad.             

He said 14 people were killed, including Mohseni, and 11 were wounded.                

Mohammad Zahier Ghanizada, a member of parliament from Baghlan, confirmed the council chief's death and added that Mohseni had previously received multiple death threats.                

Also killed in the attack were six police bodyguards and seven civilians, Sherzad said.                

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed in a text message to journalists that an insurgent operative carried out the targeted bombing.
             
For his part, Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the bombing Monday.                  

"Such attacks are against all human rights and the principles of Islam," Karzai said in a statement.  "Perpetrators of such attacks are enemies of the Afghan nation and the puppets of foreigners."                 

Both Karzai and the U.S. have sought peace talks with the Taliban and other insurgent factions in preparation for most foreign troops leaving next year after more than 12 years of war, but the efforts have borne little fruit. The Taliban seek to re-establish the strict interpretation of Islamic law they imposed for five years before being ousted in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion over its sheltering of al-Qaida's terrorist leadership.           


AP     
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