19 killed in Taliban strike at Afghanistan police headquarters
The attack in Kandahar by Taliban gunmen and bombers kills policemen, soldiers and civilians, and leaves 49 injured.
Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan —
A team of Taliban gunmen and bombers struck provincial police headquarters in the southern city of Kandahar on Saturday, killing at least 19 people and demonstrating a continued ability to mount complex attacks in a metropolis that has been a principal focus of Western military efforts.
The chaotic battle killed at least 15 Afghan policemen, two Afghan soldiers and two civilians, Kandahar Gov. Tooryalai Wesa told reporters. Civilians, including nine children, made up nearly half of the 49 injured. Four of the assailants were killed and one was captured, Wesa said.
The attack began at noon and paralyzed Afghanistan's second-largest city for hours. Automatic-weapons fire and explosions echoed through the dusty streets. Shopkeepers and passersby scrambled for cover as helicopters circled overhead.
The assailants, some said to be wearing police uniforms, stormed a complex containing a hotel, shops and a wedding hall directly in front of police headquarters, then used it as the springboard for their assault. That part of the city is heavily fortified; the governor's office and several other sensitive installations are nearby.
Officials said the attackers were armed with AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and explosives vests. One suicide bomber was reported to have blown himself up in the wedding hall, and at least two car bombs went off during the attack, according to the governor.
Taliban leaders have pledged to keep a grip on Kandahar, the movement's spiritual home. Before the winter set in, North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces seized several key districts surrounding the city and mounted a relentless series of targeted strikes against midlevel Taliban leaders, painting the campaign as a major success.
The blows undoubtedly weakened the insurgency, but a sense of insecurity still stalks the city. Western commanders acknowledge it will not be clear until the onset of the spring, when fighting normally increases, whether the Taliban suffered lasting setbacks. Fighters generally winter in havens in Pakistan and return when weather conditions improve.
In the meantime, the insurgents have terrorized Kandaharis with a string of assassinations of tribal elders and senior officials. The province's deputy governor was killed by a suicide bomber last month as he drove to work.
A Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, claimed responsibility for Saturday's siege, boasting of the heavy casualties. President Hamid Karzai and the NATO force condemned the attack.
NATO maintains one of its largest bases on Kandahar's outskirts, and a U.S. contingent uses the police headquarters as a base. Western military officials confirmed that NATO troops were involved in the fighting, but did not immediately provide details or disclose any casualties.
Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
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