Bomber
targeted police commander in Afghan volleyball game attack
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[November 24, 2014]
By Mirwais Harooni
KABUL (Reuters) - The suicide bomber, his
explosives concealed under his clothes, walked quietly into a packed
volleyball venue in eastern Afghanistan. His target: a local police
commander. Minutes later, a devastating explosion tore through the
place.
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At least 50 people were killed instantly on Sunday evening when
the blast went off at the height of a popular volleyball game in a
remote area in Afghanistan's Paktika province.
Details of the attack, one of the deadliest in Afghanistan this
year, were initially sketchy but as dozens of wounded were brought
to the capital, Kabul, to be treated, a clearer picture emerged on
Monday of what happened during the tournament.
"Around 500 people had gathered there to watch the match. A local
police commander and his men also came an hour later," Ghazi Khan,
19, a volleyball player, told Reuters as he lay in a Kabul hospital,
his legs and stomach heavily bandaged.
"Soon after they arrived the suicide bomber came and detonated his
explosives attached to his body. He (the police commander) was the
target."
Other witnesses echoed the story. "The bomber’s target was those
government people and local policemen who came to watch the match,"
said Eid Mohammad, 28, another wounded player.
The Taliban have been increasingly active this year as most foreign
troops end combat operations in Afghanistan after more than a decade
of war. They are staging frequent attacks against government
officials, security forces and international targets.
But outright attacks on civilians are rare, and the high civilian
death toll from Sunday's attack surprised many Afghans. Officials
said most of those killed were spectators who came to watch the
match in the remote Yahya Khel district.
The local police commander, Bawar Khan, was also killed.
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Locals said the area where the tournament took place had been under
Taliban control until recently and that the Afghan security forces
who wrested it back were poorly equipped and faced daily attacks and
skirmishes.
The picture is similar elsewhere in Afghanistan where security
forces remain too weak to tame the aggressive Taliban insurgency, a
worry for the departing U.S.-led forces who have poured billions of
dollars into training the Afghan army.
"There was no security at the tournament from the beginning," said
Mohammad Khan, 19, another wounded local resident. "And bombers
usually do not target local civilians unless there are some
high-profile government or police officials among them."
(Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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