Taliban attacks kill four in Afghanistan

Twin Taliban attacks killed four people and wounded 24 others, including children, in the Afghan city of Herat and at an Italian-led NATO reconstruction team.

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Twin Taliban attacks killed four people and wounded 24 others, including children, in the Afghan city of Herat and at an Italian-led NATO reconstruction team on Monday.

The blasts came just weeks before the usually peaceful historic city is to become one of the first places in the war-torn country to transition from NATO to Afghan security control nearly 10 years after the 2001 US-led invasion.

Italian press agency Ansa reported that 15 Italians had been injured, quoting parliamentary sources, but the Italian defence ministry could not confirm this when questioned by AFP.

An AFP reporter at the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Herat said there had been a large explosion at the gate and there was a crater at the scene, with fragments of twisted metal from at least one car scattered around.

Herat provincial health director Ghulam Sayed Rashid confirmed the four fatalities.

"Among the wounded we have four children and a woman. The rest are men. There are two among them (the injured) who are in military uniform, they are guards of the PRT.

"Three of the injured are in critical condition."

The attack was claimed by the Taliban. Its spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP: "Our mujahedeen are working on the operation in Herat.

"There have been explosions inside the compound as well as outside the PRT."

Local television pictures showed extensive damage at the scene.

The area around the PRT, which is in a residential part of the city, had been cordoned off and both Afghan and international security forces were in the area, the AFP reporter said.

Herat, close to the Afghan border with Iran, is seen as one of the safest parts of Afghanistan and is among the first wave of seven places due to pass from foreign to Afghan security control from around July.

PRTs are typically joint military and civilian operations that work on trying to help build up Afghan government capacity in a province. There are 28 of them in total working in provinces across Afghanistan.

There are nearly 4,000 Italian troops serving in Afghanistan as part of a 130,000-strong international force fighting a Taliban-led insurgency.

The current conflict in Afghanistan has been running for nearly 10 years.

It started when a US-led invasion ousted the Taliban from power in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks for harbouring al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who was killed by US forces in Pakistan this month.



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Source: AFP


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