4 militants target U.N. offices

One blows up gate, others rush in, are killed by Afghan troops

Afghan policeman holds up a burqa worn by one of the attackers outside a UN compound in Herat, west of Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2010. A suicide car bomber and three armed militants wearing explosives vests and burqas attacked a United Nations compound Saturday in western Afghanistan, but Afghan security forces killed the attackers and no U.N. employees were harmed, officials said.
Afghan policeman holds up a burqa worn by one of the attackers outside a UN compound in Herat, west of Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2010. A suicide car bomber and three armed militants wearing explosives vests and burqas attacked a United Nations compound Saturday in western Afghanistan, but Afghan security forces killed the attackers and no U.N. employees were harmed, officials said.

— A suicide car bomber and three armed militants wearing explosives vests and dressed as women attacked a United Nations compound Saturday in western Afghanistan, but Afghan security forces killed the attackers and no U.N. employees were harmed, officials said.

The attack began when four militants drove up to the U.N. compound in a car laden with explosives and fired a rocket toward the entrance, said Dilawar Shah Dilawar, deputy police chief of Herat province.

The militants tried unsuccessfully to blow up the gate with the rocket so they could drive the car inside the compound, he said. When that didn’t work, three of the militants got out of the car and the fourth blew up the vehicle, killing himself. The explosion destroyed the gate, allowing the three to get inside.

“The three attackers were wearing police uniforms covered with burqas,” Dilawar said, referring to the long, flowing garment that many Afghan women wear in public. “All of them had suicide vests and AK-47s.”

Militants sometimes wear burqas or police uniforms as disguises. The Interior Ministry denied that the attackers were wearing police uniforms.

Interactive

http://www.arkansas…" onclick="window.open(this.href,'popup','height=650,width=750,scrollbars,resizable'); return false;">Afghanistan war

Guards at the U.N. compound and Afghan policemen who responded to the site engaged in sporadic gunfights with the three attackers, who were killed by Afghan security forces. NATO forces also responded, a statement by the U.N. said. Two Afghan guards were wounded.

“The attack did not disrupt the United Nations activities and no United Nations personnel was injured,” the statement said. It said the U.N. will continue its work in Herat.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the assault and said the United Nations is conducting a full investigation, a spokesman for Ban said in a separate statement.

The attack was similar to one in July in Kunduz in northern Afghanistan where Taliban suicide attackers used a car to blow a hole in the wall of a compound of a contractor for the U.S. Agency for International Development. Five men wearing suicide bomb vests then poured into the compound and fought a five-hour gun battle with Afghan security forces before being killed. A Briton, a German and two Afghans were killed in the attack.

In October 2009, Taliban militants attacked a guesthouse used by United Nations workers in central Kabul. Eight people were killed, including five foreigners working for the U.N.

Separately, NATO forces killed two civilians, including a teenage boy, during a fight with insurgents Saturday in Wardak province in eastern Afghanistan, said Mohammad Halim Fidai, the governor ofthe province. The deaths prompted hundreds of residents to stage a demonstration that blocked a highway for nearly an hour.

The coalition could not confirm the two deaths. NATO said that after insurgents attacked a patrol with a homemade bomb, the troops stopped to investigate the explosion.

They came under fire from an unknown number of insurgents, the coalition said. During the fighting, the coalition said two Afghans fell off a motorcycle and were taken away by villagers so their conditions could not be verified.

Also in the east, U.S. special forces, NATO troops and the Afghan army killed more than 10 insurgents and recovered four weapons caches during afour-day operation that ended Wednesday in the Dara-i-Pech district of Kunar province, NATO said Saturday.

In southern Afghanistan, a suicide bomber on a motorbike blew himself up before reaching a checkpoint in Kandahar, killing two civilians and wounding two others, said police chief Sardar Mohammad Zazai. Three other bombs - two in cars and one in a motorbike - were defused around the city after bombers left them on main roads and suspicious citizens called the police, said the provincial governor’s spokesman, Zelmai Ayubi.

A Danish soldier was killed in southern Helmand province after insurgents attacked his patrol Saturday, the Danish army said.

In a separate incident, a photographer for The New York Times was seriously injured when he stepped on a mine Saturday in Kandahar province.

Joao Silva, 44, received leg injuries from the blast, which occurred while he was accompanying American soldiers on patrol in the Arghandab district.

Silva was evacuated to Kandahar Air Field where he was receiving treatment, according to the newspaper.

No U.S. troops were wounded in the morning explosion.

Meanwhile, a government official said Pakistani army airstrikes have killed 12 suspected insurgents near the Afghan border.

The helicopter gunships targeted two suspected militant hide-outs in the Orakzai tribal region Saturday.

The day before, a roadside bomb killed six paramilitary soldiers in Orakzai, where the army has waged an offensive against the Taliban.

Government administrator Aurangzeb Khan said Saturday’s airstrikes also wounded six militants.

The violence is seen as a sign the Taliban are regrouping in Orakzai, where the army had declared victory earlier this year.

Independent confirmation of the strikes and death toll is nearly impossible because access to the conflict zone is restricted.

Information for this article was contributed from Kabul by Katharine Houreld, from Kandahar by Mirwais Khan and from Parachinar, Pakistan, by Hussain Afzal of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 11 on 10/24/2010

Upcoming Events