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Attacks in southern Afghanistan kill at least 18 | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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An Afghan man receives treatment at a hospital after a suicide bomb explosion in Kandahar province, southwest of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday, August 31, 2013. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)


An Afghan man receives treatment at a hospital after a suicide bomb explosion in Kandahar province, southwest of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday, August 31, 2013. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)

An Afghan man receives treatment at a hospital after a suicide bomb explosion in Kandahar province, southwest of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday, August 31, 2013. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)

Kandahar, Afghanistan, AP—A suicide bomber detonated his explosives near a police checkpoint and a bank in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, one of two attacks in the heartland of the insurgency that killed 18 people over 24 hours. Separately, a NATO service member was killed by insurgents in the country’s east, according to a military statement.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for any of the attacks, but Afghan President Hamid Karzai blamed the bombings on the Taliban. The militants have escalated their activity as US-led foreign forces reduce their presence in the country and are in the final phase of handing over responsibility for security to Afghan troops.

Karzai said the militants should stop taking orders from foreigners—a veiled reference to Pakistan, whose intelligence services are alleged to be in league with the Afghan Taliban. The president said the security transition is nearly complete and the militants were desperate to derail it.

“Taliban leaders and commanders must understand that with such crimes they will achieve nothing, but only be hated and disgust the people and God,” Karzai said in a statement. “They must be accountable for the Muslim nation of Afghanistan.”
Javed Faisal, a spokesman for the provincial governor, initially said the suicide bomber was in a car that was being searched by police, but later said new information indicated the bomber had been on foot. Along with the branch building of the New Kabul Bank, several small shops and vehicles were damaged.

Witness Shah Wali had just stepped out of a taxi to go to the bank when the attacker struck. “I saw a man and a vehicle on the road, and while I was fixing my shoelaces I heard a loud explosion. I don’t know if it was the vehicle which exploded or the man standing there,” Wali said.

Faisal said at least six people died—four of them civilians, one police officer and one private security guard. Another 24 people were wounded, most of them civilians.

Taliban spokesmen did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The militant group is especially strong in southern Afghanistan, which is dominated by the ethnic Pashtun community whose members form the bulk of the insurgency in the country.
Another 12 people were killed in an ambush involving a roadside bomb in Sangin district in Helmand province, also in the south, on Friday evening, said Omer Zwak, a spokesman for the provincial governor. Sangin is the scene of an ongoing operation by Afghan forces against the Taliban.

Zwak said 11 men and one woman died in the attack, and that the vehicle also was hit by several rounds of gunfire. Such attacks typically target security forces, but, in this case, “the victims are all civilians and had no link with the government,” Zwak said.

Afghan and coalition officials have warned that the Taliban would intensify the tempo of their attacks following the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, as they try to take advantage of the two or three months left of good weather before the harsh Afghan winter sets in. The traditional fighting period lasts from March until the end of October.

The NATO service member died in “a direct fire attack by enemy forces in eastern Afghanistan” on Saturday, according to a statement from the military alliance. The statement did not give any further details on the person killed. Mostly U.S. troops operate in eastern Afghanistan.

There are currently about 100,000 troops from 48 countries in Afghanistan with the US-led International Security Assistance Force, 60,000 of them American. By the end of this year, the NATO force will be halved, and all foreign combat troops are expected to be gone by the end of next year.

Because of the drawdown, much is riding on the abilities of the fledgling Afghan security forces, which now number about 352,000.