2 Indians among 5 foreigners killed in Kabul guesthouse siege

Kabul: At least two Indians, one American are among five foreigners killed in an attack on a guesthouse during an hours-long siege that ended early Thursday morning in Afghanistan capital.

Authorities cordoned off the area around the Park Palace guest house in Kabul’s Kolola Pushta area immediately after the attack began, at around 8:30 PM local time (1600 GMT).

The attack ended about five hours later as ambulances raced out of the area.

The brutal assault was reminiscent of two attacks by Taliban fighters in Kabul last year, one on a restaurant and another on a hotel.

Kabul Police Chief Abdul Rahman Rahimi said early on Thursday morning that at least five people had been killed and five wounded in the attack. He said police shot dead one attacker but gave few other details.

A spokeswoman for the US Embassy confirmed that one American was killed in the attack.

At least two Indian nationals were also killed and three who had lived at the guest house were rescued and sheltering at the Indian Embassy, a diplomat said.

Though the exact number of Indians died in the seize was not known, Indian ambassador in Kabul Amar Sinha said there are “a few Indian casualties among others at the Kabul”.

“Unfortunately a few Indian casualties among others at the Kabul guest house attack today,” Sinha tweeted.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

Rahimi said at least 44 people who had been trapped inside the guest house – some there for a music concert, others who had been having dinner – were rescued by police and special forces.

Kolola Pushta, home to several international guest houses and hotels, is near both the Ministry of Interior and the Indian Embassy.

Last year in Kabul, Taliban gunmen killed nine people – including three children – dining at a restaurant in the upscale Serena Hotel. Two months earlier, attackers stormed into a popular Lebanese restaurant and gunned down 21 people including three United Nations staff and a senior IMF official.

Earlier on Wednesday, gunmen opened fire at a meeting of prominent Muslim clerics in the southern province of Helmand, killing at least seven people, police official Jan Aqa said.

The Ulemma Council, the highest religious authority in a deeply conservative country, had repeatedly announced its support for security forces fighting the hardline Islamist Taliban insurgents.

The Taliban have stepped up attacks since they announced their “spring offensive” last month, after most foreign forces pulled out at the end of last year, and claimed responsibility for the Helmand assault.

Ousted from power in 2001, the Taliban have been fighting to bring down the U.S.-backed government in Kabul.

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