30 killed in suicide bomb attack in Afghanistan

A suicide bomber wearing an Afghan army uniform set off a huge explosion early today while trying to board a military bus in Kabul, killing 30 people and wounding 30, officials said. The Taliban claimed responsibility.

A suicide bomber wearing an Afghan army uniform set off a huge explosion early today while trying to board a military bus in Kabul, killing 30 people and wounding 30, officials said. The Taliban claimed responsibility.

The blast ripped off the roof of the bus and tore out its sides, leaving a charred hull of burnt metal.

The bombing mirrored the country’s deadliest ever suicide attack just a few months earlier, when a bomber boarded a police bus in June and killed 35.

Dozens of civilians and police officers picked through the site in search of bodies today.

“For 10 or 15 seconds, it was like an atom bomb – fire, smoke and dust everywhere,” said Mohammad Azim, a police officer who witnessed the explosion.

President Hamid Karzai said 30 people were killed – 28 soldiers and two civilians. The Health Ministry said another 30 were wounded.

“It was a terrible tragedy, no doubt an act of extreme cowardice,” Karzai said. “Whoever did this was against people, against humanity, definitely against Islam. A man who calls himself Muslim will not blow up innocent people in the middle of Ramadan,” the Islamic holy month.

A purported Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, claimed the militant group was responsible for the blast. Mujahid said the bomber was a Kabul resident named Azizullah.

The bus had stopped in front of a movie theatre to pick up soldiers when a bomber wearing a military uniform tried to board around 6.45am (2.15am Irish team), army spokesman General Mohammad Zahir Azimi said.

“Typically there are people checking the IDs of soldiers who want to board the bus,” Azimi said. “

While they were checking the IDs the bomber tried to get on the bus and blew himself up there.”

Kabul’s police chief, General Mohammad Aslam Hasas, said Afghan forces should not let strangers get close to them at bus stops.

“They know who should be on the bus,” Hasas said. “Whenever they see a stranger’s face, they should prevent them from getting close. Later we (officials) will discuss these issues.”

The theatre, a restaurant and a pharmacy were among several shops that were badly damaged.

Body parts were scattered in all directions; police and soldiers climbed trees to retrieve some.

A woman who lives nearby was woken up by the explosion, which shattered her bedroom window, cutting her feet. The blast’s force sprayed a chunk of scalp onto a nearby rooftop.

Sulahdin, an army officer at the scene who goes by one name, said about 50 people were on the bus. Adbul Karim, a witness, said several people in the back of the vehicle survived.

Taliban attacks typically target international and Afghan military and police, though civilians are often killed or wounded as well. The Taliban have launched more than 100 suicide attacks this year, a record pace.

The attack mirrored a similar suicide bombing in June, when a bomber boarded a police academy bus at Kabul’s busiest transportation hub, killing 35 people - the deadliest insurgent attack in Afghanistan since the US-led invasion in 2001.

More than 4,500 people have been killed in insurgency-related violence this year, according to figures from Western and Afghan officials.

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