Rocket attacks near Afghan capital kills 5 (AP) Updated: 2005-10-25 15:32
Militants attacked security forces on two sides of Kabul, killing four
civilians and a police officer in one of the deadliest assaults near the Afghan
capital in months, police said Tuesday.
Security forces also uncovered a cache of bombs inside the city of 4 million.
Militants were suspected to be plotting to use the weapons against international
peacekeepers, police said.
It was not immediately clear if the two attacks were coordinated, but they
reinforced the security threat facing the tightly guarded capital, home to
thousands of foreign aid workers, diplomats and others.
The first attack was late Monday when rebels fired rockets at a U.S.-led
coalition convoy 10 miles south of Kabul but missed and instead hit three
civilian cars, killing four Afghans, said Khan Mohammed, the police chief in
Logar province.
Three civilians were also wounded. A child was among the dead, he said.
The civilian cars were traveling close behind five military Humvee vehicles
on a main north-south road when they were hit by two rockets and small-arms
fire, Mohammed said.
The police chief said extra security forces were rushed to the area and have
surrounded a run-down fort where the assailants were suspected to be hiding.
A coalition spokeswoman, Sgt. Marina Evans, said she had no details on the
attack.
The second assault happened hours later, just before dawn Tuesday, when
militants opened fire with assault rifles on a police vehicle 30 miles east of
Kabul, near a key trade route linking the capital with the eastern Pakistani
border, said Ghafor Khan, a police spokesman in the eastern town of Jalalabad.
The attack killed a senior police officer who was a teacher at a police
academy. Two others were wounded, he said.
Khan said investigators suspect the victims were targeted because they "are
teaching new police recruits and are crucial to bringing peace to our country."
The fledgling police force has been hit hard in recent months in a string of
ambushes that have left dozens of officers dead.
The bombs discovered in Kabul were found in a junkyard of old military
vehicles in the northern part of the city, said Interior Ministry spokesman
Yousuf Stanekzai.
The explosives were made from old anti-personnel mines, and rebels were
"suspected to be planning to use them against ISAF," he said, referring to the
NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, which guards the capital.
Taliban-led rebels have stepped up violence in the past half-year and killed
more than 1,400 people. The bloodshed has left many southern and eastern regions
off-limts to aid workers and raised fears for the country's fragile
democracy.
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