Taliban claim attack that killed 14 at Kabul guesthouse

  14 May 2015    Read: 1083
Taliban claim attack that killed 14 at Kabul guesthouse
The Taliban on Thursday claimed responsibility for an attack on a guesthouse in Afghanistan that killed a reported 14 people, including an American.

Gunmen opened fire in the restaurant of Kabul`s Park Palace Hotel as it hosted a party for foreigners on Wednesday evening.

The Associated Press reported that 14 people died in the assault, including 9 foreigners — seven men, and two women.

Five Afghans were killed and seven wounded, including a policeman.

The siege lasted for hours. Fifty-four hostages were rescued.

In an email distributed to media, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the militants targeted the hotel because of the presence of foreigners, the AP said. The hotel`s neighborhood is home to United Nations compounds and a hospital.

"The attack was planned carefully to target the party in which important people and Americans were attending," the militants said, according to the AFP.

Mujahid claimed that only one attacker armed with a Kalashnikov rifle, a suicide vest and a pistol was involved, and not three as the Afghan government reported, the AP reported. The Taliban often exaggerate their claims.

Police said all the attackers were killed in a shootout.

Kabul police chief Gen. Abdul Rahman Rahimi did not provide the nationalities of the victims. The U.S. Embassy in Kabul said one American was killed in the attack, but did not release the victim`s name.

The Times of India reported that four Indians were killed in the attack. Amar Sinha, India`s ambassador to Afghanistan, said he believed at least six of the hostages were Indian citizens, the AP reported.

"Our thoughts are with the families of the victims at this time," U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Monica Cummings told AFP. "Out of respect for the families of those killed, we have no further information at this time."

Amin Habi, a U.S. citizen from Los Angeles, told the AP that a party was going on at the hotel to honor a Canadian when the gunmen stormed the guesthouse.

U.S. and NATO forces formally ended their combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of last year, after which Afghan security forces have struggled to fend off attacks by the Taliban.

The extremists launched their spring offensive — an annual campaign against the Afghan government — last month.

More about:


News Line