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Explosions, gunbattles in Afghanistan’s Kandahar | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, (Reuters) – Four explosions hit the centre of Afghanistan’s southern city of Kandahar after nightfall on Saturday, and a shootout between police and militants followed, a Reuters reporter in Kandahar said.

Officials said the biggest attack was aimed at the prison in the city, at the centre of the Taliban’s heartland and the next major target for NATO forces this year.

Reuters reporter Ismail Sameem said the first explosion was near the police chief’s compound and the second near the residence of President Hamid Karzai’s half-brother Ahmad Wali Karzai, who is the head of Kandahar’s provincial council.

Ahmad Wali Karzai, who was in the capital Kabul, said the biggest explosion was a suicide strike at Kandahar’s prison, where he believed insurgents were trying to release prisoners. “The main target was the prison. The prison is very well guarded,” he told Reuters. “We don’t know about the casualties. It was a very big explosion. It was a huge explosion.”

Taliban insurgents stormed the prison on the outskirts of the city in 2008, freeing around 1,000 prisoners, including 400 Taliban fighters.

Two of the other blasts took place near the provincial council building, including one about 200 metres from his own home, and another struck near the police chief’s headquarters, Ahmad Wali Karzai said. He said the other blasts appeared to be diversions designed to draw police away from the main attack on the prison.

Sameem said police at the scene of the first blast were shooting. Windows in nearby buildings were shattered.

A police source in Kabul said four suicide bombers had attacked Kandahar and had also fired rockets into the prison.

Afghan police and Afghan special forces were deployed, and there had been an exchange of gunfire, the police source said.

Kandahar, Afghanistan’s second city, has been the scene of numerous Taliban attacks. U.S.-led forces plan to launch an operation this year to take back the city and surrounding areas, which have increasingly been under the insurgents’ control.

Kandahar was the spiritual homeland of the Taliban when the strict Islamists ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s, and the U.S. and NATO commander, General Stanley McChrystal, considers it the main geographical target of the Taliban leadership.

It is also the home town of the Karzai family.

The bulk of 30,000 additional combat forces ordered to Afghanistan by U.S. President Barack Obama at the end of last year are expected to be deployed in Kandahar as part of a major operation over the next few months. Thousands of Canadian troops also patrol the city.