May 23, 2013

Six Afghan police killed in insider attack, officials say

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(Reuters) – Six Afghan were killed in Helmand province in a so-called “insider” attack involving a rogue Afghan policeman and a chef, local officials said on Saturday.

The Taliban took responsibility for the attack, saying they had despatched a “ who had infiltrated and penetrated the police ranks”, Qari Yousuf said.

The policeman and chef working for the officers approached a police checkpoint in Helmand’s Grishk district on Friday where they opened fire and shot dead two of their colleagues, the ’s office said in a statement.

then rushed to the scene, and killed four more policemen, the statement said.

Police officials added that the chef previously attempted to kill the officers by poisoning their food.

“First the cook poisoned his comrades and then he joined the Taliban and decided to shoot them instead,” said Farid Ahmad Farhang, a Helmand police spokesman.

At least 52 members of the NATO-led force have been killed so far this year in , prompting NATO soldiers to be armed at all times and leading the Afghan security services to introduce stricter vetting procedures.

The majority of those attacks are not Taliban-related, NATO and U.S. officials have said, but stem rather from .

Separately, two officials in Helmand’s Sangin district were ambushed and killed by insurgents as they drove car to a tribal elders’ meeting, the ’s office said.

(Reporting by Abdul and Mirwais Harooni; Writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Afghan officials: Insurgents behead 17 civilians

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( News / ) — KANDAHAR, Afghanistan – say have beheaded 17 Afghan for taking part in a music event in a -controlled area of .

The says the attack happened Sunday in Helmand province and that was also involved.

Helmand provincial government spokesman Daoud says the attack happened in Musa Qala district. says all of the victims had their heads chopped off. He says it was not clear if they were shot first.

The Musa Qala government chief says the people had gathered for a celebration and were playing music and dancing and the insurgents wanted to stop the event. Neyamatullah Khan says the area where the took place is completely in Taliban control and so he does not have more details yet.

Afghan official: Blast kills 22 civilians

43d0c829f1df8901ab1ce330ac19595a Afghan official: Blast kills 22 civilians

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – Two suicide bombers blew themselves up in a market area in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday, killing at least 22 people wounding about 50, authorities said.

The claimed responsibility for the , which occurred near small shops in a parking and waiting area for trucks that supply logistics to Kandahar Air Field, a massive military installation run by the U.S.-led coalition.

One suicide bomber detonated his filled with first. Then, as people rushed to assist the casualties, another suicide bomber on foot walked up to the area and blew himself up, said Javid Faisal, a spokesman for . He said the stood at 22 and that 50 were wounded. All the dead were , he said.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef claimed responsibility for the attack.

The explosion occurred 500 meters from an Afghan and about five (three miles) from the main gate to the air field.

10 Afghan police killed in outpost attack

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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – Gunmen attacked an of a government-sponsored militia in and killed 10 members of the , officials said Thursday.

spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi claimed responsibility for the attack.

Militants armed with stormed the outpost of the militia known as the Afghan Local Police late Wednesday in province’s Khaki Safed district, said provincial police chief Shamsul Rahman Zahid.

They shot a guard who was posted outside, then pushed into the compound and opened fire on those inside, said Abdul Khaliq Noorzai, the district administrator.

Another two militia members were dragged outside and shot dead, said Zahid. Four survived the attack, he said.

The Afghan Local Police are a force created with the help of the American military. They have been described as an armed neighborhood watch. The members come from the local community and receive a small government salary to man and oversee security in their area. They receive a few weeks of training before starting the work.

The attacks appear to be part of an increase in violence at the beginning of the spring fighting season. During the harsh Afghan winter, snow often blocks roads and fighting dies down.

Also on Wednesday, a Taliban on a motorcycle killed at least 10 people, including three , at a park in .

The Taliban are targeting Afghan and NATO security forces as they fight to assert their power and undermine U.S. efforts to try to build up the Afghan military, which will take the lead in combat responsibility over the next couple of years.

Suicide blast kills mayor of Afghanistan’s Kandahar

d7247687ca5be539b0747ddc1b593209 Suicide blast kills mayor of Afghanistans Kandahar

(Reuters) – A killed the mayor of Afghanistan’s Kandahar city on Wednesday, two weeks after the assassination of Afghan President ’s brother in the same city created a in the country’s turbulent south.

The death of Mayor Ghulam Haidar Hamidi is the latest in a string of of Karzai allies.

While it is unclear if all were the work of insurgents, the killings have stoked instability as foreign troops begin withdrawing ahead of Afghan forces taking full security control by the end of 2014.

Hamidi, 65, was killed and another person wounded when a suicide bomber detonated his in a corridor near Hamidi’s office, said Zalmay Ayoubi, the for the Kandahar provincial governor.

“It appears the bomber was carrying the bomb in his ,” Ayoubi said.

Kandahar province is the Taliban’s birthplace and a focus of recent efforts by a surge of U.S. troops to turn the tide against the insurgency in the decade-long war. More than half of all in Afghanistan between April and June were in Kandahar, according to a U.N. report.

Two of Hamidi’s deputy mayors were killed in attacks by insurgents last year.

Kandahar Abdul Razaq said Hamidi was meeting elders from a district of Kandahar city when one of them got close to the mayor and detonated a bomb hidden in his turban.

The mayor wanted to speak with the elders after they accused city staff of killing a woman and two children when they destroyed some houses and shops in their district on Tuesday, Razaq said. The buildings were unplanned, he said.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf initially said it was too early to tell what had happened but later claimed responsibility for killing Hamidi on behalf of the militant Islamist group.

Ahmadi said the mayor had been on the Taliban’s hit-list and that the main motivation for the attack was the deaths of the woman and children on Tuesday when the buildings were destroyed.

The Taliban are normally very quick to claim responsibility for the deaths of high-profile political figures.

NO RUSH TO Judgment

U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Ryan Crocker condemned the killing of Hamidi, but warned there should not be a rush to judgment over who carried out the attack.

“There was a demonstration in front of the mayor’s office over a road-building incident that resulted in the deaths of one or two young girls. This could turn out to be a murder that didn’t have anything to do with the Taliban,” he said.

“It is another indication again of both the challenges Afghanistan faces, but also the extraordinary resilience of the Afghan government and people,” he said.

Hamidi’s death comes at a time when experts say a dangerous power vacuum has been created in Afghanistan’s south by the assassination of Karzai’s brother Ahmad Wali Karzai.

Ahmad Wali Karzai was head of the Kandahar Provincial Council, a largely consultative role, but his power came from his family and tribal connections, and his fortune. He was killed by a guard at his home in Kandahar city on July 12.

Then at his funeral service a couple of days later, a suicide attacker who also appeared to have concealed explosives inside his turban killed a senior cleric — the head of the provincial Ulema council, an influential body of clerics that regulates religious issues — and at least four other people.

A top Karzai adviser, Jan Mohammad Khan, a former governor of southern Uruzgan province, was killed in an insurgent attack on his home in Kabul on July 17, while the police chief of Kandahar province, Khan Mohammad Khan, was killed by an attacker wearing a police uniform in mid-April.

Hamidi had been mayor of Kandahar since 2007 when he was appointed by president Karzai, a long-time friend.

He grew up in Kandahar province, studied at Kabul University and worked at the country’s Ministry of Finance for 13 years, said the Kandahar province media office. He moved to Pakistan and then the United States, where he lived for 20 years.

Hamidi was working as an accountant in a travel agency in Alexandria, Virginia, before moving back to Afghanistan to become Kandahar mayor. He has five daughters and two sons.

(Additional reporting by Ismail Sameem in KANDAHAR and Mirwais Harooni in KABUL; Writing by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Paul Tait and Sugita Katyal)