Taliban attack Afghanistan office of US aid group

KABUL: The Taliban have attacked the offices of a US aid group in the heart of the Afghan capital with a car bomb, claiming the group promoted western traditions and mixing between men and women.

Coming as US negotiators try to reach a peace deal with the Taliban, the attack in Kabul is likely to fuel the concerns of critics who say the militant group cannot be trusted to protect women’s rights and other freedoms, whatever they may pledge at the negotiating table.

The attack began with a suicide blast at the entrance to Counterpart International’s Afghanistan headquarters in the centre of Kabul, near the offices of the attorney general. Gunmen then raced inside and battled special forces for several hours.

At least 80 people were evacuated from the building, said an interior ministry spokesman, Nasrat Rahimi. The Italian-run Emergency hospital said it had received 15 people who were wounded in the attack, and admitted about half.

Counterpart, which is based in the US and has operated in Afghanistan since 2005, did not immediately comment. Its website highlights work it does with civil society in the country, including supporting women’s rights and young Afghans.

A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said the group had been targeted because it carried out “harmful western activities” in Afghanistan, and one of its programmes was “promoting open inter-mixing between men and women”.

When the Taliban ruled Afghanistan, before the US-led campaign to topple them in 2001, they barred women from education and most work, and forced them to wear the burqa.

When the group announced its annual “spring offensive” this year, it promised to be careful of civilians. The Afghan president, Ashraf Ghani, the US ambassador and the UN condemned the attack.

“Today’s attack particularly deplorable, hitting civilians helping Afghans & taking place during Ramadan,” the UN said on Twitter.

The sixth round of peace talks between the Taliban and the US are under way in Qatar. Donald Trump is keen to wrap up a war that has lasted more than 17 years, costing the US billions of dollars.

Afghan women have warned they are being excluded from the process, putting their hard-won achievements of the last two decades at risk and jeopardising the foundations of any future deal.

Courtesy: (The Guardian)