Central/S. Asia
Suicide attacks claim Afghan lives

Two separate suicide attacks in Afghanistan have killed at least six people, sources say.
The bulk of Monday's casualties came in an attack outside the gates of the US-led airbase where copies of the Quran were burned, with at least five Afghans killed, according to officials.
The target of the bombing was a vehicle belonging to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) near the Bagram base, in the northern province of Parwan.
"A suicide attacker came out of a truck and blew up his vest outside Bagram airfield [at a gate used by supply vehicles]," Abdul Basir Salangi, Parwan governor, told the AFP news agency.
Kabir Ahmad Rahil, the chief of Bagram district, said there could be foreign casualties.
Captian Justin Brockhoff, a NATO spokesman, said there were no reports of coalition fatalities, and the base itself was not breached by the explosion.
"Coalition officials are gathering details at this time, and more information may be released as appropriate," he said.
Rahil said the attacker was on foot when he blew himself up next to a vehicle in a small NATO convoy near the airbase.
At least four more civilians were wounded in the attack.
In a text message to the media, Zabiullah Mujahid, a purported Taliban spokesman, claimed the attack was "in retaliation for the Quran burning", that sent thousands of Afghans into the streets two weeks ago.
On one of their two official Twitter accounts, the Taliban confirmed the attack was "in revenge for the desecration of the Muslim holy book and other religious books by the Americans in the base".
The group, known to exaggerate casualty figures, claimed 12 "invaders" were killed in the Bagram attack by a resident of the eastern province of Logar.
The demonstrations following reports of burnt Quran copies at the Bagram airbase, which the US said were unintentional, led to protests in several of the nation's 34 provinces and killed at least 30, including American soldiers shot by their Afghan colleagues.
Earlier on Monday, a suicide blast in the eastern province of Nangarghar killed a member of the Afghan security forces and left another 12, including eight civilians, wounded.
Ahmad Zia Abduzai, the provincial spokesman, told Afghan media that the attack in Jalalabad, eastern Afghanistan's second largest city, targeted a police checkpoint near the Nangarhar governor's office.
"unfortunately, up to now twelve people were wounded and one martyred (the Afghan soldier)" he said.
No groups have as yet taken credit for the blast.
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Other articles in Central/S. Asia
Bollywood star gets more time to surrender 17 April 2013
US drone destroys 'Taliban base' in Pakistan 17 April 2013
Deadly blast hits Pakistan election rally 16 April 2013
Pakistan court bars Musharraf from elections 16 April 2013
Anger over public apathy after India accident 16 April 2013
Musharraf skips hearing in treason trial 15 April 2013
Gunmen torch Sri Lankan newspaper equipment 13 April 2013
Bomb explodes on bus in northwest Pakistan 13 April 2013
Bangladesh newspaper editor arrested in raid 11 April 2013
Pakistan election candidate killed 11 April 2013
Featured_Author
Opinion
|
65 Years of Palestinian Nakba |
| Elias Akleh | |
|
Women of the Wall |
| Uri Avnery | |
|
Alan Hart and What It Takes to Struggle On |
| Lawrence Davidson | |
|
The UN, Integrated Systems & American Intransigence To Accountability |
| Clive Hambidge | |
|
On Political Precondition |
| Richard Falk | |
|
LGBTQ exclusion of anti-capitalism |
| Soheil Asefi | |
|
Russia Catches CIA Spy Red-Handed |
| Stephen Lendman | |
|
Abolish the IRS -- And the Income Tax with It |
| Sheldon Richman | |
|
Francis A. Boyle, Destroying Libya and World Order |
| Ludwig Watzal | |
|
'Daddy, what is a Drone?' |
| William A. Cook | |
|
The collapse of journalism and the journalism of collapse |
| Robert Jensen | |













