by Yu Zhixiao
KABUL, Sept. 10 (Xinhua) -- A suicide bombing killed Hakim Tanewall,
governor of the eastern Paktia province of Afghanistan, and his two bodyguards
on Sunday, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry told Xinhua.
The spokesman, Yusuf Stanizai, said the incident happened at around 1:00
p.m. (0830 GMT) when an attacker belted with explosives rushed to the car
carrying Tanewall.
Three other bodyguards were injured in the attack, which occurred before
the governor's office in Gardez city, the capital of Paktia province, he added.
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Hakim Taniwaal, governor of Paktia province, cuts
the ribbon during the grand opening of the Sadet Khail School, April 16,
2005, in Ahmad Aba, Afghanistan.(File Photo) Photo Gallery
>>> |
Tanewall is the first Afghan governor killed in an attack after the Taliban
regime collapsed in late 2001, according to Afghan officials.
The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.
Mohammad Hanif, a purported Taliban spokesman, told Xinhua by telephone
from an unknown location that a Taliban fighter named Ghulam Khan, who is from
Paktia province, had carried out the blast.
Hanif said the explosion killed Tanewall, his nephew and another
unidentified man, and injured eight others.
Monday is the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New
York, which touched off the U.S.-led Afghan War toppling the former Taliban
regime.
Taliban insurgents have frequently carried out attacks in this already
volatile country before the anniversary.
A suicide car bombing killed 15 people including two U.S. soldiers just
outside the U.S. Embassy in Kabul on Friday. The Taliban said one of its
fighters launched the blast.
Other senior Afghan officials killed in recent years are Mirwais Sadiq and
Abdul Rahman, both of whom were minister for aviation and tourism.
Sadiq was killed in an ambush by gunmen in the western Herat province in
March 2004, while his predecessor Rahman was beaten to death in Kabul
International Airport in February 2002 by a number of "pilgrims," who some
believed were his political rivals.
Meanwhile, in southern Afghanistan, 94 insurgents were killed in Kandahar
province from late Saturday to early Sunday, the NATO-led International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) said.
The rebels were killed in Operation Medusa, which was launched Sept. 2 by
around 2,000 ISAF and Afghan troops to wipe out militants in Panjwai and Zhari
districts.
The operation is the largest one against Taliban militants since ISAF took
command in southern Afghanistan from the U.S.-led coalition forces on July 31.
Over 430 Taliban militants have been killed and at least 80 others captured
in the operation, according to ISAF, while a senior Taliban commander has denied
the casualties, saying only a dozen of militants have lost their lives.
Afghanistan is suffering from a rise of Taliban-linked violence this year,
during which more than 2,300 people, mostly Taliban militants, have been killed.
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