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Afghanistan: Russian embassy staff killed in Kabul bombing | Afghanistan: Russian embassy staff killed in Kabul bombing |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A Taliban fighter stands guard in front of the embassy after the blast | A Taliban fighter stands guard in front of the embassy after the blast |
Two Russian embassy staff are among at least six people killed in a suicide bombing in the Afghan capital Kabul, Russian and Taliban officials say. | |
Guards shot the attacker dead as he approached the entrance to the consular section, officials said. | |
A number of other people are reported to have been wounded. No group has said it carried out the bombing. | |
The attack is the first on a foreign mission in Afghanistan since the Taliban swept to power in August 2021. | |
Earlier, a Taliban official said at least 10 people had been injured. Russia's state-owned news agency RIA reported that a diplomat and an embassy security guard had been wounded. | |
Other media reports put casualty figures higher. | |
It was not immediately clear who would want to target Russia's interests in Afghanistan, or whether the bombing - the latest in a spate of attacks in Kabul and elsewhere - may have been aimed at undermining Taliban security reassurances. | |
"This morning, an explosion took place at the Russian embassy in Kabul - four people and two employees of the Russian embassy were killed, and a number of Afghans were injured," a statement from the Taliban police chief's spokesman in Kabul said. | |
It added the suicide bomber had been spotted by Taliban security personnel guarding the embassy as he approached people gathered in front of the building. | |
"He was identified by security and targeted, which caused a blast," the spokesman said. | |
Russia's foreign ministry said "an unknown militant set off an explosive device near the entrance to the consular section". | |
"Without any doubt, we are talking about a terrorist act, which is absolutely unacceptable," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow. | |
Russia is one of the few countries to maintain a diplomatic presence in Afghanistan. Moscow does not officially recognise the Taliban's government - no country does. However the two sides have discussed possible Afghan purchases of commodities like wheat, gas and oil from Moscow. | |
The Taliban's broken promises | |
Peace at a price in the Taliban’s heartlands | |
Violence in Afghanistan has greatly declined since the Taliban returned to power - under its 20-year campaign to drive US-led forces from Afghan soil many attacks were carried out by Taliban militants themselves. | |
However security has been deteriorating in recent months. A string of deadly bomb blasts have targeted mosques or minority communities, many claimed by the militant jihadist Islamic State (IS) group who see the Taliban as not radical enough. | |
Last week, a suicide bomber struck one of western Afghanistan's biggest mosques, killing at least 18 people, including an influential imam who supported the Taliban. |