Taliban truck bomb kills at least 20 in southern Afghanistan
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[September 19, 2019]
KABUL (Reuters) - A Taliban truck
bomb killed at least 20 people and wounded 95 when it exploded near a
hospital in southern Afghanistan on Thursday, a provincial official
said, with casualties expected to rise as rescuers sift the rubble.
The Taliban, who have been carrying out nearly daily attacks since the
collapse of peace talks with the United States this month, said the
target was a nearby building of the government's intelligence department
in Qalat, the capital of Zabul province.
"The bomb was huge and it was carried by a mini-truck," said a senior
defense ministry official in the capital, Kabul, speaking on condition
of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media.
The militants wanted to target a training base for Afghanistan's
powerful National Directorate of Security, but parked the vehicle laden
with explosives outside a hospital gate nearby, said another defense
ministry source.
Twenty bodies and 95 wounded people had been evacuated from the blast
site, said Haji Atta Jan Haqbayan, a member of the provincial council in
Qalat.
"The number of casualties may rise as rescue teams and people are still
searching for bodies under the rubble," he added.
Several women, children, health workers and patients in the hospital
were critically injured in the blast.
There has been no let-up in Taliban attacks across Afghanistan as it
prepares for a presidential election this month.
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Damaged vehicles are seen at the site of a car bomb attack in Qalat,
capital of Zabul province, Afghanistan September 19, 2019.
REUTERS/Stringer
The Taliban has warned that its fighters will step up their campaign
against the Afghan government and foreign forces to dissuade people
from voting in the Sept. 28 election.
More than 9 million Afghans are expected to vote in the presidential
election, during which the government has committed more than 70,000
security forces across Afghanistan to protection duties.
U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly ended talks this month with the
Taliban for a deal on the withdrawal of thousands of American troops
from Afghanistan, in exchange for security guarantees from the
hardline Islamist group.
The talks, which did not include the Afghan government, were
intended to lead to wider peace negotiations to end the 18-year-long
war in Afghanistan.
(Reporting by Sarwar Amani, Ismail Sameem in Kandahar, Abdul Qadir
Sediqi; Writing by Paul Carsten and Rupam Jain; Editing by Kim
Coghill and Clarence Fernandez)
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