KABUL, Nov 09, (AFP) - A suicide bomber walked into the offices of the Kabul police
chief on Sunday and detonated his explosives, killing a senior aide in an
attack that highlighted poor security procedures in the Afghan capital.Kabul
police chief Zahir Zahir told AFP that the attacker had penetrated the force's
heavily-guarded headquarters by wearing a police uniform.
"I'm fine, but one of my best officers,
my chief of staff Yassin Khan, was killed and six were wounded," Zahir
said, speaking just an hour after the explosion rocked central Kabul."It
was a suicide bomber with police uniform on. As he was stopped trying to enter
my room, he detonated his explosives.
"We are investigating how he entered the
police headquarters."The Taliban claimed responsibility for the
attack."This morning at around 9:00 am, a martyrdom attack was carried out
against the enemy which killed a lot of them," Zabiullah Mujahid, a
Taliban spokesman, said on his Twitter account.
"The attack was carried out by Maulawi
Yaya Badakhshani inside Kabul police HQ while foreign advisors and police were
meeting.
"There were no immediate reports of
foreign casualties, and the Taliban often exaggerate death tolls after
attacks.Kabul is regularly hit by Taliban bombings, with the military, police
and government officials among those targeted despite heightening security with
multiple checkpoints, guard posts and armed convoys.
In the last major blast, four Afghan soldiers
were killed and around a dozen people -- including six civilians -- wounded
when a roadside bomb planted by the Taliban exploded on October 21.That blast
was a remote-controlled bomb targeting an Afghan army bus.Afghan soldiers and
police have taken on the lead role in thwarting the Taliban, but national
stability could be at risk as US-led NATO troops pull out.
This year alone more than 4,600 Afghan
soldiers and police have been killed in fighting, according to recent US
figures.US-led NATO troops end their 13-year combat mission in Afghanistan next
month, with about 12,500 soldiers due to stay on into next year on a training
and support mission.
President Ashraf Ghani, who came to power in
September, has said that Afghan forces are ready to impose security.This summer
the Taliban launched several offensives during a prolonged political deadlock
in Kabul as Ghani and his rival Abdullah Abdullah both claimed to have won the
fraud-mired presidential election.
The two men eventually signed a power-sharing
agreement, with Abdullah appointed to the new position of "chief
executive".NATO troop numbers peaked at 130,000 in 2010, but now stand at
less than 34,000.
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