GUNMEN ATTACK INTERCONTINENTAL HOTEL IN AFGHAN CAPITAL KABUL
Afghan security forces keep watch as smoke rises from the Intercontinental Hotel in Kabul, Afghanistan, January 21, 2018. REUTERS |
Six dead after gunmen storm
Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel
Gunmen dressed in
army uniforms who stormed Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel battled Afghan Special
Forces for 13 hours in an overnight siege that caused heavy casualties among
hotel guests, officials and witnesses said on Sunday.
The Taliban claimed
responsibility for the attack, which saw more than 150 guests flee as parts of
the building caught fire, with some shimmying down tied-together sheets from
upper-floor windows and others rescued by Afghan forces.
Interior Ministry
spokesman Najib Danesh said at least five people - four Afghans and one
foreigner - were killed and six wounded but the casualty total is almost
certainly higher.
Local airline Kam
Air said around 40 of its pilots and air crew, many of whom are foreigners,
were staying in the hotel and as many as 10 had been killed. But Zamari Kamgar,
the airline’s deputy director said it was still trying to locate its staff and
did not yet know whether they were all safe.
Abdul Rahman Naseri,
a guest who was at the hotel for a conference, was in the hall of the hotel
when he saw four insurgents dressed in army uniforms.
“They were shouting
in Pashto (language), ‘Don’t leave any of them alive, good or bad. Shoot and
kill them all,’ one of them shouted,” Naseri said.
“I ran to my room on
the second floor. I opened the window and tried to get out using a tree but the
branch broke and I fell to the ground. I hurt my back and broke a leg.”
It is unclear
exactly how many gunmen were involved and even after officials said the attack
was over, sporadic gunshots and explosions could be heard from the site. Danish
said three gunmen were killed, while witnesses said four were involved and the
Taliban said five.
The raid was the
latest in a long series of attacks which have underlined the city’s precarious
situation and the ability of militants to mount high profile operations aimed
at undermining confidence in the Western-backed government.
Taliban spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid sent a statement claiming responsibility for the attack,
which he said had been carried out by five fighters.
A statement from the
interior ministry put the blame on the Haqqani network, a group affiliated with
the Taliban, which claimed a previous attack on the hotel in 2011.
SOURCE
: REUTERS
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