...

Gun fight near Afghan election HQ ends, all militants killed

Other News Materials 29 March 2014 20:07 (UTC +04:00)
A five-hour gun fight close to the Afghanistan's main election office in Kabul ended Saturday evening after Taliban gunmen were killed in the counter-attack, an official said.
Gun fight near Afghan election HQ ends, all militants killed

A five-hour gun fight close to the Afghanistan's main election office in Kabul ended Saturday evening after Taliban gunmen were killed in the counter-attack, an official said, Xinhua reported.

"Five suicide bombers were killed and two policemen were wounded in Saturday's terrorist attack on the Independent Elections Commission (IEC) office in eastern Kabul," Deputy Interior Minister in-charge of Security Mohammad Ayoub Salangi told reporters near the site.

The attack began at midday after the militants seized a four- storey building close to the IEC HQ and fired several rocket propelled grenades (RPGs) on the fortified complex besides exchanging of fire with security forces.

The attack took place days before Afghans go to polls in the country's third presidential and provincial councils general elections slated for April 5. The Taliban insurgent group has vowed to disrupt the polls.

The militants, armed with heavy guns and RPGs, were wearing Burqas, a women cloth covering from head to toe, to pass several security checkpoints, the official noted.

An IEC staff told Xinhua by cell phone that no employee of the body was hurt in the incident.

Smoke was rising from the compound and nobody knows if any sensitive electoral materials were damaged in the incident.

The Afghan Crisis Respond Unit and the Afghan Special Forces arrived shortly after the attack.

On Friday, two Afghan civilians and five Taliban insurgents were killed after the militants launched an attack on a U.S. guest house in western Kabul. More than one dozen of foreign nationals survived the attack and a powerful car bombing.

"Attacks by terrorist will not deter Afghan National Security Forces from the path they have chosen, providing security for upcoming elections," Interior Minister Mohammad Omar Daudza said in a statement.

Since early this year, the Taliban insurgent group have launched several attacks on civilian targets.

The Afghan security forces are also taking over security charges from more than 52,000-strong NATO-led foreign troops who are set to leave the country by the year end.

Latest

Latest