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UN-linked office to resume work days after attack in Afghanistan

Other News Materials 26 May 2013 18:55 (UTC +04:00)

Regular operations at the International Organization for Migration (IOM) office in Kabul, which bore the brunt of a Taliban attack this weekend, will resume at the start of the week, the group announced Sunday, dpa reported.

"Tomorrow morning we will be back at work, not 100 per cent, but we will be operational and we are not going to let this terrorist act prevent us from doing the work that we have been asked to do in Afghanistan," Richard Danziger, the head of IOM in Kabul said on Sunday.

On Friday, a Taliban suicide bomber rammed a vehicle loaded with explosives into the gate of the UN-affiliated office, breaching security and sparking a 10-hour-long gunbattle with Afghan security forces.

Four other assailants shot their way in after the explosion and took refuge in a nearby building when they could not enter the IOM premises.

Danziger said an Afghan police officer guarding the compound had died in the attack. Additionally, four IOM staff members, five Nepalese security guards and one other United Nations employee were injured in the attack.

"We have four of our staff who are injured, one very severely burned and has been evacuated to Europe. There is one staff (member) from another UN agency (International Labour Organization) that was quite badly injured and will be evacuated today," he told reporters. "It is now confirmed that, on Friday, the IOM office was very deliberately the target of this attack. This was very planned and advanced. They clearly knew from which side to attack our compound," Danziger said.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the assault within hours, saying that a "CIA rest house" was their prime target.

"We are absolutely mystified as to why we would have been the target of this attack ... We know it can be enough to be an international organization to be a target. This talk of CIA we don't understand, frankly," Danziger said.

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