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Bomb rocks India embassy in Kabul

Cheetah786

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A suicide bomber has rammed a car full of explosives into the gates of the Indian embassy in the Afghan capital, killing 41 people, officials say.

More than 140 were injured, including civilians and security forces.

Defence attache Brig R Mehta, a senior Indian diplomat and two Indian security guards were among those killed.

No-one has admitted being behind the attack, one of the deadliest in Kabul for some time. The Taleban have vowed to step up their attacks in Kabul.

President Hamid Karzai said the attackers wanted to undermine good relations between Afghanistan and India.

India also condemned the "cowardly terrorists' attack". The US condemned the "needless act of violence", as did the European Union, which described it as a "terrorist attack targeting innocent civilians".

Afghanistan has seen a sharp increase in violence in the south and east.

People shocked

The bomb exploded as people were queuing for visas at the embassy
"I saw glass falling down from buildings, before the area was crowded with ambulances, police and forces of the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf)", Abdul Raziq, who was distributing newspapers at the time, told the BBC.

Ali Hassan Fahimi said shrapnel had landed into his office, which is close to the site of the blast.

"It was so strong... and our staff were shocked," he said.

Among those killed in the attack were five Afghan security guards at Indonesia's Kabul embassy.

Officials in Jakarta said they did not believe they were targeted, but it was simply because the two embassies were close to each other.

India has close relations with Afghanistan. It has been funding a number of large infrastructure projects, correspondents say.

Afghan Foreign Minister Rangeen Dadfar Spanta visited the Indian embassy shortly after the attack, his spokesman Sultan Ahmed Baheen said.

"India and Afghanistan have a deep relationship between each other. Such attacks of the enemy will not harm our relations," Mr Spanta told the personnel at the embassy, the spokesman said.

And the Indian government spokesman said: "Such acts of terror will not deter us from fulfilling our commitments to the government and people of Afghanistan."

Afghanistan's interior ministry said it believed the attack was carried out "in coordination and consultation with an active intelligence service in the region".

It did not specify. But in the past, Afghanistan has accused Pakistani agents of being behind a number of attacks on its soil.

In April, there was an assassination attempt against the Afghan President Hamid Karzai in the city.

And earlier in the year, Taleban militants launched an attack on the Serena hotel killing several people
BBC NEWS | South Asia | Bomb rocks India embassy in Kabul
 
i can hardly wait for the blame game / finger-pointing!
 
NDTV :
Taliban has already denied that they were behind the attack. They said that had they carried it out, they would have taken responsibility immediately.
 
Ah well! All in a day's work!


Happens and one has to watch the space.

Of course no one is responsible for this. It was self combustion!

I am glad that none has blamed climate change for the same.

All must keep their cool and work out the next action.
 
Salim,

As I mentioned elsewhere. This tendency to lump everything walking with a gun in Afghanistan/FATA as "Taliban" is counter productive and inaccurate.

There is the Taliban dimension to this insurgency, an ethnic dimension, the criminal dimension, and the AQ dimension.

The Taliban denied responsibility, and the way the usage of "Taliban" has been made prevalent resulted in you not even bothering to explore what other potential parties might be responsible.

A huge flaw.
 
Obviously those responsible are those who don't want the Indo-Afghan relationship to continue.

Taliban has to be a strong suspect.
 
AM,

I have not blamed anyone, not even the climate change.

I am so tired of these terrorists that labels have become meaningless. They are all terrorists and that is all!
 
Obviously those responsible are those who don't want the Indo-Afghan relationship to continue.

Taliban has to be a strong suspect.

Thats a very loose motive. India is a major player in supporting the new GoA, which is considered America's puppet and an extension of the NA.

They are therefore highly likely to be targeted by either AQ or the Taliban.
 
We are all puppets.

Some are temporal puppets and some are spiritual puppets.

The whole thing is becoming a Punch and Judy show.

I just hope that it does not enlarge the Indian presence in Afghanistan.
 
Fingers will be pointed at Pakistan, not by the Afghani people, but by the Americans, the (Northern Alliances) president and perhaps, but hopefully not, by India.
Afghanis as a people have a good relation with Pakistanis, but the (Northern Alliances) government has never and will never have good relation with Pakistan.
 
Vinod, what Indo-Afghan relations are there?
It's Northern Alliances-India relation.
 
Vinod, what Indo-Afghan relations are there?
It's Northern Alliances-India relation.

Well India is dealing with their current government which is internationally recognized including by Pakistan.

Not like Taliban which was recognized by 2 countries (or was it 3) at the peak of its popularity.

And Hamid Karzai is a Pashtun AFAIK not a Tajik.
 
It's reasonable to assume that the Indian embassies, consulates and other enterprises are high priority targets; that this is only the first major attack of this sort is really a fluke. IMHO the Indian authorities really need to get their act straight and build better facilities with safety being the primary concern. Driving bomb laden trucks into buildings has been an age old tactic used by terrorists and something that should have been anticipated. I have seen how western nations design their embassy-fortresses all over the middle east and Africa (designs that were adopted after the turbulent late 70s); and it is time the GoI's foreign service adopts the similar model.
 
Vinod, what Indo-Afghan relations are there?
It's Northern Alliances-India relation.
Not really. India is one of the biggest investors in Afghanistan and virtually all of the money is being spent on critical infrastructure which is meant for all Afghanis regardless of their political, tribal or ethnic persuasion.

As per the BBC:
BBC said:
India also became one of Kabul's leading donors - it has pledged to spend $750m on helping rebuild the country's shattered infrastructure.

Funds have been committed for education, health, power and telecommunications. There has also been money in the form of food aid and help to strengthen governance.

India is erecting power transmission lines in the north, building more than 200km (125 miles) of road, digging tube wells in six provinces, running sanitation projects in Kabul, and working on lighting up 100 villages using solar energy.

It has given at least three Airbus planes to Afghanistan's ailing national airline. Several thousand Indians are engaged in development work.
As far as I know there are no major defense deals or any other bilateral agreements that weigh heavily in the favor of one particular group.
 

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