Bomb targets Afghan presidential hopeful

Afghan presidential front-runner Abdullah Abdullah says he's escaped an assassination attempt when an explosion hit his campaign motorcade in Kabul just days ahead of a run-off election.

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Afghan investigators inspect a damaged car at the site of a suicide car bomb attack on the convoy of Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah in Kabul on June 6, 2014. (AAP)

Afghan presidential front-runner Abdullah Abdullah escaped an assassination attempt Friday when two blasts hit his campaign motorcade in Kabul, killing at least six people just ahead of a hotly contested run-off election.

"The first attack was a suicide car bomb on a convoy of Dr. Abdullah Abdullah and the second was a mine attack," Sayed Gul Agha Hashemi, head of Kabul police's criminal investigation branch, told AFP.

Abdullah said he was unhurt, but at least six people were killed and 22 others wounded, according to the interior ministry.

"As a result of this failed attack, a number of civilians at the site were killed and wounded," a ministry statement said.

"Based on initial police information, six people were killed and 22 others were wounded in the attack."

Blood was splattered near one vehicle in the convoy which was badly charred, while medics carried a body away on a stretcher.

The blast site was cordoned off by security officials as ambulances rushed to the scene and took the wounded to hospital, making their way through a sandstorm that hit the capital.

"A few minutes ago, when we left a campaign rally our convoy was hit by a mine," Abdullah told supporters at an election rally, in quotes broadcast on Afghan television.

The blast occurred soon after Abdullah left an election rally in the city's Ariana hotel. Some witnesses in the area reported hearing two ear-splitting explosions.

The assassination attempt came ahead of the second-round presidential election on June 14, which Taliban insurgents have threatened to disrupt.

No one has so far claimed responsibility for the attack.

Afghanistan is in the middle of elections to choose a successor to President Hamid Karzai, who has ruled since the fall of the 1996-2001 Taliban regime.

Abdullah fell short of the 50 percent threshold needed for an outright victory in the April first round and will face former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani in the run-off.

"We condemn the attack on respected presidential candidate Dr. Abdullah Abdullah," Ghani said on Twitter.

"This is the act of the enemies of Afghanistan to disrupt the democratic process in the country."

Karzai also denounced the attack, saying in a statement that it was "the work of the enemies of Afghanistan who don't want Afghanistan to have a free and peaceful election".

President Barack Obama recently outlined the US strategy to end America's longest war, saying that the 32,000-strong US deployment in Afghanistan would be scaled back to around 9,800 by the start of 2015.

Those forces will be halved by the end of 2015 before eventually being reduced to a normal embassy presence with a security assistance component by the end of 2016.

But the drawdown relies on Afghanistan signing a long-delayed Bilateral Security Agreement laying out the terms of the US military presence in the country after this year.

The outgoing Karzai refuses to sign the pact, but both Afghan presidential candidates have vowed to sign it if elected.


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