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Gunmen attack hotel Serena in Kabul Taliban gunmen attack hotel Serena in Kabul
(about 4 hours later)
Two people have been wounded by gunmen who opened fire at a luxury hotel in the centre of the Afghan capital Kabul, according to police. Two people were wounded when four Taliban gunmen opened fire in a luxury hotel in the centre of the Afghan capital Kabul at around 6pm, according to police.
There were no details yet on the nationality of the pair or who the perpetrators were. There were no details yet on the nationality of the pair.
Security sources said that two or three gunmen entered the Serena hotel by a back door. Security sources said that the armed men entered the Serena hotel by a back door and told them they were going to dinner.
To enter the premises, guests must pass through an exterior gate and undergo a metal detector search and pat down.
Inside, they drew the pistols hidden in their socks and opened fire, Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said.
Bursts of gunfire could be heard from outside the hotel as Afghan troops cordoned off the area.
A hotel worker named Gulam Ali said that all the guests and staff members had taken refuge in the basement. "Everybody's fine," he told his brother Mohammed Nabil, who let an Associated Press reporter listen to the conversation. "Foreigners, workers, everybody is in the basement."
One person who was taken to safety along with other guests said that the shooting appeared to begin in the hotel restaurant.One person who was taken to safety along with other guests said that the shooting appeared to begin in the hotel restaurant.
Another guest, hiding in his room, said he could hear sporadic gunfire.Another guest, hiding in his room, said he could hear sporadic gunfire.
The hotel is considered to be the safest place to stay in Kabul. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the assault on the Serena hotel.
United Nations staff and foreign delegations are currently staying at the hotel ahead of next month's Presidential elections. "Our people, if they decide to attack any place, they can do it," he said.
The hotel was last attacked in 2008, when a suicide bomber claimed the lives of six people. United Nations staff and foreign delegations are currently staying at the hotel ahead of next month's Presidential elections, as it is considered to be the safest place to stay in the capital.
The incident follows a Taliban attack against a police station in Jalalabad that killed 10 officers and a university student. Also on Thursday, the Taliban let off a suicide bomb at a police station in Jalalabad , killing 10 officers and a university student.
Additional reporting by Reuters The attacks come after the Taliban threatened to use violence to the disrupt 5 April elections.
The polls include provincial votes, but the most closely watched is the presidential race. Karzai's successor will guide the country for the next five years as most US and allied forces leave the country by the end of 2014.
Additional reporting by Reuters and AP