The much-predicted Taliban spring offensive began Sunday as the armed outfit launched multiple suicide attacks and gun shots in several Afghan cities including the fortified capital city Kabul.
A group of insurgents including some suicide bombers, according to police and eye witnesses, sneaked into a luxury hotel named Kabul Star in the embassy area which was also located next to a United Nations (UN) office and some government institutes. The firing begun at 01:35 p.m. local time (0905GMT), followed by several bombings in three more strategic places including the parliament.
In a statement, Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi insisted that two or three terrorists entered a building in the 10th precinct and two more terrorists entered a building in the 7th precinct to disrupt law and order, saying police have beefed up to eliminate the attackers.
Sediqi said that two attackers have been killed. Kabul police said two would-be suicide bombers were arrested.
All the roads leading to Kabul city have been blocked by police and all streets are deserted, an eyewitness Farukh Shah told Xinhua, saying police do not allow any pedestrian to walk on streets.
Shortly, Zabihullah Mujahid who claims to speak for the Taliban outfit, in talks with media via telephone from unknown location, claimed responsibility for the multiple attacks, saying the Taliban had launched "Spring Offensive" and targeted government interests in Kabul, Logar, Nangarhar and Paktia provinces inflicting huge casualties.
He also stressed that the gun battle with Afghan and NATO-led forces is going on.
Xinhua photographer Ahmad Masoud has seen four bodies lying on street near to the Kabul Star hotel.
Elsewehere out of Kabul, three blasts have rocked Jalalabad, the capital of eastern Nangahar province. The militants, according to a local official who declined to be identified, targeted the NATO-led civilian-military unit -- Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) with suicide car bomb but failed to inflict casualties.
Simultaneously, several rockets fired by militants, slammed into Jalalabad airport.
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF ) confirmed that insurgents attacked an ISAF installation located in Jalalabad, allegedly killing one civilian with a vehicular-borne suicide bomb and small arms fire. Three insurgents were killed and one wounded and captured in the attack, the ISAF said in a brief statement.
Also in eastern Paktia's provincial capital Gerdez, many militants stormed the police headquarters leaving three attackers dead and injuring 11 others including a police and 10 civilians, provincial administration spokesman Roohullah Samon told Xinhua, admitting that gun shots continued.
There is no report of possible casualties in Logar province, 60 km south of capital Kabul, where sources said several Taliban loyalists including suicide bombers targeted the governor office in provincial capital Pul-e-Alam.
It is the biggest Taliban offensive so far this year and comes as Afghan and Western officials discussed the possibility of a spring attack.
Earlier in March, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General John Allen, told a Congressional committee that "As a result of our recent winter operations, we have seriously degraded the Taliban's ability to mount a major spring offensive."
Sunday's dreadful attacks occurred just days after an agreement was inked between the U.S. and Afghan governments which allows the Afghan security forces to conduct special operations including the controversial night raids.
In Kabul and other cities, the Afghan forces backed by NATO-led troops have been striving hard into the dusk to eliminate the attackers and bring the situation under control at its earliest.
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