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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Suicide bomber kills 20 people in Afghanistan

 January 14, 2010, 8:13 AM EST

Associated Press writer Noor Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report.

KABUL (AP) --

NATO says the death toll from a suicide bombing in a busy market district in central Afghanistan has risen to 20.

A district police chief says the attacker apparently was targeting a regular meeting of NATO and local officials and tribal elders that was happening near the blast.

Omar Khan says he was at the meeting when the blast occurred but the building was heavily guarded and it would have been hard for the bomber to enter. NATO spokesman Lt. Nico Melendez in Kabul says he had no indication of a NATO connection to the blast.

Thursday's attack occurred in the town of Dihrawud, in Uruzgan province, as the area was packed with shoppers and vendors gathered for the weekly bazaar.

Police say three children were among the dead.

KABUL (AP) -

A suicide bomber blew himself up in a busy market district Thursday in central Afghanistan, killing at least 16 people and wounding more than a dozen, provincial officials said.

The attack occurred in the town of Dihrawud, in Uruzgan province, as the area was packed with shoppers and vendors gathered for the weekly bazaar.

Provincial Gov. Asadullah Hamdan said 16 people were killed and 13 wounded in the blast.

Police chief Gen. Juma Gul Himat said those killed included three children. Several shops were destroyed.

Uruzgan is a mostly Pashtun province that saw major fighting in 2007. It also was the scene of a June 2002 incident in which U.S. aircraft mistakenly attacked a wedding party, killing more than 30 people.

The attack came a day after the U.N. released a report showing that the number of Afghan civilians killed in war-related violence was at its highest level last year, and suicide bombings and other attacks blamed on insurgents were the leading cause of death.

Another suicide bomber targeted a police patrol Thursday in the southern town of Musa Qala, killing an Afghan national police officer and wounding four civilians, according to officials.

Provincial spokesman Daoud Ahmadi said the bomber was on foot but NATO said the attacker was in an explosives-laden vehicle.

The discrepancy couldn't immediately be reconciled.

Musa Qala is in the province of Helmand, which is expected to be a major focus for NATO forces as they step up efforts to rout the Taliban.

Underscoring the dangers, police also said Thursday that four would-be suicide bombers were killed in a premature explosion the night before near the city of Kandahar.

The suspects were traveling from the Panjway district to Kandahar when the blast occurred about 8 p.m. Wednesday, deputy provincial police chief Fazel Ahmad Sharzad said.

He said the men were planning an attack in Kandahar but explosives in the car detonated before they reached the city. He didn't say what the target may have been.

The U.N. report said that more than half the 2,412 civilian deaths last year were the result of suicide bombings and other attacks despite an order by Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar to avoid endangering noncombatants.

The attacks typically target government or international forces but civilians have increasingly been caught in the middle.

---

Suicide attack kills 16, wounds 13 in S. Afghanistan

    KABUL, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) --

A suicide attacker blew himself up in Uruzgan province south of Afghanistan Thursday killing 16 people including the attacker and injuring 13 others.

    "A man tied explosive device in his body blew himself up in a crowded market in Deh Rawad district this afternoon leaving himself and 15 other people dead and 13 others injured," Juma Gul Humat, the provincial police chief, told Xinhua.

    Humat said all the victims are civilians.

    There are three children among those killed in the blast and two other children are among those sustained injuries, said the official.

    He added that there were no police or army personnel on the spot when the blast hit the market.

    After the bombing, Afghan and NATO-led troops cordoned off the area and have taken the injured to hospital, the police official said.

    Taliban fighters have stepped up their activities mostly in the form of suicide and roadside bombings as a car bombing shocked Kandahar, the birthplace of Taliban outfit, Wednesday night and a roadside bomb injured five persons in the neighboring Helmand province Thursday morning.

Editor: Zhang Xiang

 




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