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Taliban claim Kabul bombing as Afghan forces defend besieged cities

Afghan security personnel inspect the site a day after a car bomb explosion near the wreckage in Kabul on Wednesday. - AFP
Afghan security personnel inspect the site a day after a car bomb explosion near the wreckage in Kabul on Wednesday. - AFP
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The bomb-and-gun attack on Defence Minister Bismillah Mohammadi on Tuesday was one of the biggest in Kabul for months, bringing violence to the capital


KABUL: The Taliban on Wednesday claimed responsibility for a huge bomb attack in Kabul targeting the defence minister, as the insurgents fought for control of a string of besieged cities across the country.


The bomb-and-gun attack on Defence Minister Bismillah Mohammadi on Tuesday was one of the biggest in Kabul for months, bringing violence to the capital after intense fighting in the south and west of the country.


The Afghan and US militaries have carried out air strikes against the insurgents to push them back, and the Taliban said the Kabul attack was a response to that.


"The attack is the beginning of the retaliatory operations against the circles and leaders of the Kabul administration who are ordering attacks and the bombing of different parts of the country," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement on social media.


It represents a major escalation by the Taliban, who have largely refrained from large-scale attacks in the capital in recent years after starting talks with the United States on troop withdrawal.


The first bomb exploded in the centre of Kabul, sending a thick plume of smoke into the sky, AFP correspondents reported.


Less than two hours later, there was another loud blast followed by smaller explosions and rapid gunfire, also near the high-security Green Zone that houses several embassies, including the US mission.


The minister was safe and Afghan forces repelled the attackers, but at least eight people were killed, according to interior ministry spokesman Mirwais Stanikzai.


Mohammadi later said it was a suicide car bomb attack targeting his house.


A security source said several attackers stormed a lawmaker's house after setting off the car bomb and shot at the residence of the minister from there.


Security forces had cordoned off the scene of the attack on Wednesday as troops inspected the buildings and cars damaged by the blasts.


Rubble covered the area while there were bloodstains on some of the floors.


"The Taliban justified this attack as the 'start of retaliatory attacks' against government personnel for their 'indiscriminate bombings'," Ibraheem Bahiss, a consultant with International Crisis Group, told AFP.


"However, it is equally possible that the Taliban has been caught off guard by the prevalence of anti-Taliban sentiments in Afghanistan's urban centres," he added.


There was little respite in Kabul early Wednesday after a blast injured three people, according to police.


The Taliban threat came after the Afghan military launched a counterattack against the insurgents in the southern city of Lashkar Gah.


The military had asked people to leave the city on Tuesday as they prepared for their offensive.


Resident Saleh Mohammad said hundreds of families had fled as fighting erupted between the two sides, trapping many in the crossfire.


"There is no way to escape from the area because the fighting is ongoing. There is no guarantee that we will not be killed on the way," Mohammad said.


"The government and the Taliban are destroying us." - AFP


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