More than 50 people -- including 27 students at a police academy
and one U.S. service member -- were killed in three separate attacks in
Afghanistan on Friday, according to U.S. and Afghan officials.
The American was
killed when a NATO coalition base in the capital city, Kabul, was attacked, a
defense official told CNN. Another official told CNN's Barbara Starr that
nearly 20 people of varying nationalities were wounded.
Separately, U.S.
Army Col. Brian Triebus said in a statement that eight Afghan civilian
contractors and four insurgents were also killed in that incident. Triebus also
said a coalition service member was killed, but he did not give the nationality
of that person.
The attack on
the coalition base, Camp Integrity, took
place at 10:15 p.m., beginning with an explosion from a suspected suicide
bomber followed by insurgents with small arms. The base houses U.S. and
coalition troops that help train Afghan forces.
There are
approximately 9,800 U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said the group was
responsible for the attack on the NATO base and for a suicide bombing at that
took place at the National Police Academy earlier in the day.
The suicide
bomber ignited his explosives at the police academy's front gate at around 7
p.m. local time, according to Ebadullah Karimi, a spokesman for the Kabul
Police Chief. That's where students had queued to enter the training facility,
said an Afghan police official in the police hospital who didn't want to be
named.
Authorities said
27 students were killed and 26 people were wounded in that attack.
The incidents at
Camp Integrity and the National Police Academy came hours after another
explosion in Kabul.
At around 1 a.m. local time, a truck detonated on a main road,
killing 15 people and wounding 240, said Sayed Zafar Hashemi, a deputy
spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani.
The ensuing
explosion destroyed residential areas and businesses, Police Chief Abdul Rahman
Rahimi said.
Among those
injured were 47 women and 30 children, Hashemi said.
Authorities were
investigating the truck blast. There were no claims of responsibility late
Friday.
From January 1
to Friday, 282 people have been killed and 1,241 have been injured in attacks
launched by "anti-government elements" in Afghanistan, according to
the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA). The UNAMA says
that's nearly double the amount of death and injuries compared to the same
period last year.
The U.S. State
Department and UNAMA Saturday condemned the attacks.
National
Security Adviser Susan Rice called President Ghani on Saturday to "express
the deepest condolences of the American people" on Afghan deaths in the
attacks, and Ghani in turn extended condolences for the U.S. service member's
death, according to a statement from the White House.
Taliban's
new leadership
The attacks come just days after the
Taliban announced the death of the man who is credited with creating the group, Mullah Mohammed Omar, and named his
replacement, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour.
His death has
thrown the already-fragile peace talks between the Sunni Islamists and the
Afghan government into flux; a second round of talks was slated to take place
in Islamabad on July 31 but was postponed after the Taliban confirmed Omar's
death.
One analyst told
CNN that Mansour's rise may bode poorly for the peace talks.
"People
should perhaps reassess the line which has been put about that he was leading
the movement towards peace," Michael Semple, a professor at the Institute
for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Social Justice at Queens
University Belfast, told CNN. "He is the one who has
presided over the movement during a period of escalation of the violence.
Actions speak louder than words."
Semple's assertion appears to be backed up by an audio tape that
was recently released and purports to be from Mansour.
In the message,
the Taliban's new leader denied that the group is attempting to work toward a
peace process.
"When we
hear about different processes including the peace process, they are all the
propaganda campaigns by the enemy," the message says. "They are
spreading their propaganda by spending money, through media and some scholars
to only weaken our jihad, but we will not pay attention to any of those including
the peace process. We will continue our jihad and we will fight until we bring
an Islamic rule in the country."
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