NATO base in Afghanistan hit by suicide bombers

Loading

Alleged Taliban fighters struck Afghan and NATO bases in the restive province of Kandahar on Tuesday, after a coalition soldier was killed by attackers in police uniforms, officials said.

Seven suicide attackers stormed a joint Afghan-NATO base in Shah Wali Kot district at around 3:30am, sparking a 30-minute gun battle that left all the insurgents dead, Kandahar governor spokesman Jawed Faisal said.
NATO’s US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said the attackers breached the outer perimeter of the base, but said no coalition soldiers were killed in the incident.

Hours later, four gunmen wearing police uniforms struck a police and NATO base in Kandahar city, triggering a fight in which three officers and all the attackers were killed, provincial police chief General Abdul Raziq told AFP.

Police witnesses said the attackers were sporting all the uniform and equipment a regular officer would have, and were led into the base by a police captain, who fled afterwards. Two other officers were arrested over the attack.

Tuesday’s attacks came a day after men wearing Afghan police uniforms opened fire on NATO soldiers in Kandahar, killing one before fleeing.

The attack brought to 23 the number of Western troops killed in 17 so-called “green-on-blue” incidents in the war-torn country so far this year.

“The International Security Assistance Force confirms that three individuals in Afghan police uniforms turned their weapons against coalition service members in southern Afghanistan yesterday, killing one ISAF service member,” the alliance said in a statement.

A police official in Zhary district said the dead soldier was American, but there was no immediate confirmation of this.

ISAF gave no further details of the incident or the soldiers’ nationalities, though the majority of coalition forces in Kandahar are American.

An increasing number of Afghan troops have turned their weapons against NATO soldiers occupying their country.

Some of the assaults are claimed by the Taliban, who say they have infiltrated the ranks of Afghan security forces, but many are attributed to cultural differences and antagonism between the allied forces.

NATO forces have committed a number of atrocities this year, increasing resentment to their rule.

In January, photos of US soldiers urinating on dead Afghans sparked fury, while in March a US soldier massacred 17 Afghan civilians.

NATO has around 130,000 soldiers in the country, but they are due to pull out of the country in 2014.

The Western coalition is to hand security to local forces by mid-2013 and will play a support role up to the final withdrawal by the end of 2014.


Related Articles

The Turkish military is attacking Kurdish civilians in Kobane

Loading

the Turkish military crossed the border and attacked the civilians with tear gas, water cannons and bullets. *Until now 41 civilians have been injured and one 19 year old man was killed

SAS and MI6 officers released by Libya’s rebel commanders

Loading

The group’s capture is a major embarrassment to the British government and could potentially undermine the rebels’ claims that the

Entrevista a Michael Hardt

Loading

“El factor más importante que une estas experiencias es el rechazo de la representación política y la demanda de democracia

No comments

Write a comment
No Comments Yet! You can be first to comment this post!

Write a Comment