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BBC News, March 14, 2010

Afghanistan’s Kandahar hit by suicide bombers, 30 dead

A wedding celebration was taking place nearby and a number of guests were believed to be among the dead and injured

At least 30 people have been killed and 46 wounded in four suicide bombings in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, hospital officials say.

Broken glass after suicide attack
A screen grab shows broken glass at the site of a bomb blast in Kandahar March 13, 2010.(Photo: Reuters)

The first blast happened at about 2000 (1530 GMT). Officials said the biggest attack was aimed at the city's main prison.

The Taliban said they carried out the bombings as a "message" to Nato.

The US has hinted that the volatile area could be one of the next targets for operations against the Taliban.

The BBC's Quentin Sommerville, in Kabul, says Kandahar, one of Afghanistan's largest cities, is the Taliban's "spiritual home".

Wedding casualties

President Hamid Karzai's half-brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai, who is the head of Kandahar's provincial council, told the BBC the first suicide attack involved a vehicle targeting Kandahar's main prison.

kandahar_prison_blast.jpg
This was the scene when Taliban fighters attacked Kandahar prison in 2008. Yesterday's attack by at least four suicide bombers failed to free any prisoners. Photograph: Humayoun Shiab/EPA

The second explosion came from a motorbike parked near his home, he said, while another involved a suicide bomber on a bicycle who targeted a police vehicle.

The fourth blast was at Kandahar police headquarters, where four policeman were confirmed dead.

A wedding celebration was taking place nearby and a number of guests were believed to be among the dead and injured.

In June 2008, a suicide bomber blew apart the Kandahar prison gates and a nearby checkpoint, freeing hundreds of prisoners, many of them suspected insurgents.

But Ahmed Wali Karzai said this time, the walls of the prison were not breached, but that nearby buildings were badly damaged.

The head of the city's main hospital, Abdul Qayyum Pukhla, was quoted as saying that both civilians and police were among the dead in the attacks.

Western troops were assisting at the request of Afghan authorities, said Major Macen Waoczak, a spokesman for the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force.

Earlier on Saturday a roadside bomb killed six people travelling in a civilian vehicle in the capital of Uruzgan province in central Afghanistan.

The blasts came as Nato and Afghan forces continued a major operation against Taliban militants in neighbouring Helmand province.

The top US commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, has hinted in recent weeks that the Kandahar area could be one of the next targets for operations against the Taliban.

Category: Taliban/ISIS/Terrorism, US-NATO, HR Violations - Views: 12039