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Afghanistan/South Asia
Afghans catch Taliban wanted for cleric's murder
2005-06-14
Afghan authorities have captured a Taliban regional commander wanted for the assassination of a leading anti-militant cleric last month, police said on Tuesday. Haji Atiqullah was wounded and captured during a shootout in the southern city of Kandahar on Monday night after attempting to assassinate a local militia commander, a senior police officer in the city said. Atiqullah, who was in charge of foreign relations in Kandahar during the Taliban's rule, was wanted for the assassination of Mawlavi Abdullah Fayaz, a prominent critic of the Taliban shot dead last month by gunmen riding on a motorcycle. Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi confirmed the arrest and said Atiqullah had been an important commander in Kandahar. A local militia commander named Mandoi was wounded along with a bodyguard in the attack on Monday night in which Atiqullah opened fire on them from a motorcycle, the police said.

Authorities have accused the Taliban of being behind a suicide bombing of a mosque in Kandahar during a memorial service for Fayaz on June 1 which killed 20 people. The Taliban have denied involvement in the attack, part of a surge in militant violence seen in the run-up to parliamentary elections due in September. Earlier on Tuesday, the U.S. military said U.S. and Afghan forces had killed two militants and detained 12 others after a clash north of Kandahar on Sunday. On Monday, a suicide bomber rammed a car packed with explosives into a U.S. military vehicle near the city, killing himself and wounding four American soldiers, one seriously. Goverment spokesman Jawed Ludin told a news briefing the attack on the Americans, which was claimed by the Taliban, was under investigation. He said the head of the suicide attacker had been found and from his appearance, he may have been a foreigner.
"The ear kind of looks Saudi"
"But this lip... This is definitely an Uzbek lip!"
If only someone could give them a hand ...
About 150 insurgents have been killed in violence this year, according to U.S. and Afghan government figures. Dozens of government security men have also died in the fighting, as well as 13 U.S. soldiers since March.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Mosque attacker was a Soddy
2005-06-02
A Saudi citizen was the suicide bomber who blew himself up at a mosque in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar on Wednesday, killing some 21 people, including the Kabul police chief, the Saudi newspaper Al-Watan, reported Thursday, citing the Kandahar press. The bomber was identified after his remains were analysed, the reports said.

Shortly after the attack, Afghan officials, including the governor of Kandahar, said they believed it had been carried out by a member of al-Qaeda, of Arab origin, because of the documents found on the bomber's body.

The attack happened at the end of a ceremony to pay respects to the senior anti-Taliban cleric Mawlavi Abdullah Fayaz, who was murdered by two men on a motorbike, as he left his office on Sunday. Witnesses say the bomber was dressed in a police uniform and helped the police chief, General Mohammed Akram, by pretending to prepare his shoes for him as the mourners filed out of the service, before detonating his explosives.

The Afghan police are now looking for possible accomplices who helped prepare the attack, which was the worst Afghanistan has suffered this year.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Al-Qaeda blamed for funeral attack
2005-06-02
Authorities say they believe foreign operatives linked to Al Qaeda were responsible for Wednesday's suicide attack that killed at least 19 people and wounded 50 at the funeral of a prominent Muslim cleric in the southern city of Kandahar.

Security officials said the mosque blast was a sign that the terrorist network was still a major force in Afghanistan, intent on staging major attacks, and that it was employing more aggressive tactics.

The explosion killed Kabul's newly appointed police chief, Akram Khakreezwal, and several other police officers.

More than 200 mourners had gathered for the early morning funeral of Mawlavi Abdullah Fayaz, the head of Kandahar's Cleric Council and a prominent critic of the former Taliban regime.

Fayaz was killed Sunday by gunmen on a motorcycle.

"This was a well-chosen target for the rebels, one of a higher level," said Nick Downie, who heads an independent body that advises aid organizations on security in Afghanistan. "They knew that important political and security officials would be there for the funeral."

President Hamid Karzai called the attack on the mosque "an act of non-Muslim and defeated terrorists." In a statement, he called on the Afghan people to be vigilant against foreigners conspiring against the country's national security.

Government officials said two of Karzai's brothers were expected at the funeral but had not arrived.

The Karzais are from Kandahar province and they usually attend high-profile events in the area.

The suicide bomber was reportedly wearing a police uniform and entered the mosque posing as a government security officer, authorities said.

"Our investigation so far gives us strong reasons to believe that this suicide bombing was the work of foreign operatives," said Zaher Azimy, a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense.

Azimy declined to give information about the identity of the bomber, but the governor of Kandahar, Gul Agha Sherzai, was quoted by journalists as saying "definitely it was Al Qaeda, I can say he was an Arab."

Many government officials believe the representatives of the former Taliban government were not responsible for the attack.

"The Taliban have killed a lot of people but they would not attack a mosque and Muslims, especially while they are praying for the dead," said a resident of Kandahar who did not want to be identified.

Azimy said insurgents were trying to undermine the government.

"The recent talks about a strategic partnership with the United States and the development of the parliamentary elections are both steps toward an independent and legitimate government for Afghanistan," Azimy said. "The violence is to get people fearful of these processes."
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