Bomb blast in Afghanistan's west kills 10

ALFRED de MONTESQUIOU
AP Features

Aug 03, 2009 03:02 EDT

The Taliban killed 10 people and critically injured a local police chief in western Afghanistan's main city on Monday with a remote-controlled bomb hidden in a trash can, officials said.

The bomb was set on a crowded street near a fruit market in Herat. It appeared to target the police chief for nearby Injil district who was driving into town, said Raouf Ahmedi, the top police spokesman in western Afghanistan.

He said the district chief, Mohammad Issa, was being transferred to a NATO-run hospital in critical condition.

Local police officials had initially reported 12 dead in the explosion. But the head of the regional health department, Doctor Ghulam Said Rashid, confirmed there were 10 killed: a woman, a young girl, six men and two police officers.

Rashid and Ahmedi said 30 people were injured in the blast, which blew windows out on a 100-meter (yard) radius.

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, said the group had targeted the police chief.

The Interior Ministry, meanwhile, said insurgents attacked a police checkpoint in the old city of Baghlan to the north of the country on Sunday. Eight militants and two police died in the ensuing gunbattle, the ministry said in a statement Monday.

The violence in the comparatively calm cities of Herat and Baghlan highlighted the volatile situation across the country as Afghanistan braces for presidential and local elections later this month.

President Hamid Karzai, considered the front-runner in the vote, condemned Monday's bombing and urged police to track down its perpetrators. "This is another attempt by the terrorists to disrupt democracy and development in Afghanistan," Karzai said in a statement issued by his office.

Some 101,000 NATO and U.S. forces are deployed to secure the country. This includes a record 62,000 U.S. troops, more than double the number a year ago but still half their strength in Iraq. President Barack Obama has increased the U.S. focus on Afghanistan as the Pentagon begins pulling troops out of Iraq.

Nine troops have been killed in fighting or bombings this month in Afghanistan, including three Americans on Sunday and three on Saturday, along with two Canadians and one French.

July was the deadliest month for international troops since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion to oust the Taliban government for sheltering al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, with 74 foreign troops, including 43 Americans, killed.

Roadside bombs have become the militants' weapon of choice in Afghanistan, and the number of such attacks has spiked this year.

U.S. troops say militants are now using bombs with little or no metal in them, making them even harder to detect. The Taliban are also planting multiple bombs on top of one another and planting several bombs in one small area.

U.S. commanders have long predicted a rise in violence in Afghanistan this summer, the country's traditional fighting season, and Taliban militants have vowed to disrupt the country's Aug. 20 presidential vote.

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Associated Press reporter Rahim Faiez contributed to this report.

Source: AP Features