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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

A Taliban Suicide and Grenade Attack Kills 6 NATO Personnel in a Kabul Hotel, Norwegian Foreign Minister Survived

Attack at luxury hotel in Afghan capital kills 4 people

www.chinaview.cn 2008-01-14 22:05:11 Print

KABUL, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- 

Militants in an explosion and firing attack at a luxury hotel in Afghan capital Kabul killed four hotel employees and injured six other people Monday evening, the interior ministry said.

Afghan Interior Ministry Spokesman Zamarai Bashari confirmed that suicide explosion and gun-fighting went off at Serena Hotel in the central city but did not give the identities of the casualties.

The incident took place at around 6:15 p.m. (GMT 1345) in Serena Hotel, a five-star one usually frequented by foreigners and dignitaries and several bombing bangs had been heard across the city.

Bashari said the hotel now is under full control of security personnel.

Local TV channel reports and witnesses earlier said that some armed men after firing with guards at the hotel gate, killing one guard, entered the compound and after that there was a huge explosion and gun-firing inside the hotel.

Zabihullah Mujahed, a purported spokesman for the Taliban, told Xinhua via phone from an unknown location that his outfit took the responsibility for the attack targeting foreigners in the hotel.

Mujahed said four Taliban entered the hotel and then one of them, a suicide bomber called Faruq from eastern Afghan province of Khost, blew himself up.

He added that three other fighters opened fire and after several minutes of firing they escaped from the scene.

War-torn Afghanistan has seen a resurgence of Taliban-related militancy since some three years ago and rising violence claimed over 6,000 lives in the country last year, hitting a record high since the Taliban regime fall in late 2001.

The Taliban insurgents continued to engage Afghan security forces and foreign troops with guerrilla-style attacks, besides launching roadside bombing and suicide attacks, across the country.

Both Afghans and NATO commanders have expected more Taliban attacks this year in Afghanistan.

Editor: Yan Liang

At Least 6 Slain in Coordinated Attack on Luxury Afghan Hotel Popular With Foreigners

By FISNIK ABRASHI Associated Press Writer

Jan 14, 2008, 4:07 PM EST

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- 

(Taliban fighters) with suicide vests, grenades and AK-47 rifles attacked a luxury hotel on Monday, killing at least six people in a brazen attack on Western civilians in Kabul, witnesses and a Taliban spokesman said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the Norwegian foreign minister, who was not hurt, was the target of the assault, which came as the Norwegian embassy was holding a meeting at the Serena Hotel. Two State Department officials said at least one American was among the dead. A Norwegian journalist also died.

It was the deadliest assault on a hotel in Kabul since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. The assailants appeared to concentrate on the hotel's gym and spa, where foreigners relax and work out. An American inside said she saw a dead body and pools of blood in the lobby.

The (Taliban fighters) killed six people and wounded six, said Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary. He spoke before news of the Norwegian journalist's death and it was not clear whether he was counted among the six dead.

One of the attackers was shot to death and the Taliban spokesman said a second died in the suicide explosion.

More than 30 U.S. soldiers in a half dozen Humvees rushed to the hotel, and security personnel from the U.S. Embassy raced through the building searching for Americans.

Suzanne Griffin, a Seattle resident who works with the aid agency Save the Children, said she was in the gym's locker room when the attack started.

"Thank God I didn't get into the shower because then we heard gunfire, a lot of it. It was very close, close enough that plaster came off the ceiling," said Griffin, her voice shaking. "We all just sat on the floor and got as far as we could from any glass and huddled on the floor. We turned our phones on silent."

Griffin, 62, said hotel staff evacuated the women to another part of the hotel.

"We had to step over a woman's dead body. She was one of the gym people," she said.

She contacted the U.S. Embassy, about a mile away from the hotel. A switchboard operator told her not to open the door unless she heard an American voice. U.S. soldiers evacuated her.

"There was blood on the floor all the way to the kitchen. There was a lot of blood in the lobby. There were empty shell casings outside," she said.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, told The Associated Press that four (Taliban fighters) with suicide vests attacked the hotel - one bomber who detonated his explosives and three (others) who threw grenades and fired guns and then fled. The claim could not be verified but came very soon after the attack.

Norway's Foreign Minster Jonas Gahr Stoere, who was in the hotel basement with a Norwegian delegation at the time, said he was about to start a meeting when the explosions hit, and everyone was ordered to lie on the floor for about 10 minutes.

"I don't think anyone could experience this without feeling you are in a serious situation," Stoere said on the TV-2 television network.

"Our security guards undertook an armed evacuation, where we went from corner to corner in the cellar until we reached a safe area," he told Norwegian reporters.

Stoere arrived in Kabul on Monday and had been scheduled to meet top leaders and some of the 500 Norwegian peacekeepers stationed in Afghanistan in NATO's International Security Assistance Force.

Stian L. Solum, a photographer from the Norwegian photo agency Scanpix, said a Norwegian journalist from the Oslo newspaper Dagbladet and a Norwegian diplomatic staff member were wounded and the journalist later died, his newspaper said.

"We feel great sorrow and powerlessness," Dagbladet managing editor Anne Aasheim said on the paper's Web site.

The paper identified the dead journalist as Carsten Thomassen, 39.

"There were two or three bombs, and there was complete chaos," Solum said on the state radio network NRK. "When I started to walk out (of the elevator) a bomb went off, a little way from me. There were shots fired by what I think was an ANA (Afghan National Army) soldier."

The 177-room Serena is a newly built hotel frequently used by foreign embassies for meetings, parties and dinners. The nicest hotel in the city, Westerners often stay or eat dinner there. Located in downtown Kabul, it is near the presidential palace though separated by fences, blast walls and checkpoints. It is also near several government ministries and a district police station.

On its Web site, the hotel claims it is an "oasis of luxury in a war-ravaged city."

Aftenposten journalist Tor Arne Andreassen told the Oslo paper's Internet edition that he heard a grenade explode.

"Out the window I could see shots being fired at the guardpost by the gate," Andreassen said. He said he saw a female hotel employee so badly wounded that he did not believe she could have survived.

"The plaster flew around our room and the whole building shook," Andreassen said.

In Washington, two State Department officials said that at least one American was among the dead. The identity of the victim was being withheld until family could be notified, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of a formal announcement of the death.

Earlier, the officials said no U.S. government employees were believed to have been in the hotel when the attack occurred. They said several Americans who had been there had called the embassy in Kabul to say they had not been injured. But the officials could not say if any private U.S. citizens were unaccounted for.

White House press secretary Dana Perino said it unclear who was responsible for the attack.

"It underscores the reason we have to stay on the offense against the extremists in places like Kabul but also in other places around the world," she said.

She said U.S. and NATO forces were waging a strong stand.

In 2003, a rocket exploded near the Intercontinental Hotel in Kabul, knocking some guests from their restaurant chairs and shattering windows across the lobby and in many bedrooms. No injuries were reported.

---

Associated Press writers Alisa Tang, Amir Shah and Jason Straziuso in Kabul; Matthew Lee in Washington; Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations; and Terence Hunt in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed to this report.

 


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