Kabul fighting over, all militants killed

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    KABUL: Afghanistan said Monday its security forces had regained control of Kabul, killing all the Taliban militants who launched one of the biggest coordinated attacks on Kabul in a decade of war.

    “All attackers are dead, the fighting is over,” Interior Ministry spokesman  Sediq Sediqqi told AFP after final assaults were launched on the militants’  remaining strongholds in the diplomatic enclave and near the parliament.

    Sediqqi said he could not say how many militants had been involved as the  areas were still being investigated and the body count was not complete.

    Eight members of the security forces were killed and 44 others, including  five civilians, were wounded, said Kabul CID chief Mohammad Zahir.

    Kabul was hit by a wave of attacks in three areas Sunday, with embassies  and foreign military bases coming under fire in what the Taliban said was the  start of its spring offensive.

    Afghan security forces took the lead in countering the assault, but a  spokesman for NATO forces in the country said they had provided air support in  response to requests from the Afghans.

    The attacks raise fears over the precarious security situation in  Afghanistan as NATO prepares to withdraw its 130,000 troops by the end of 2014  and hand responsibility for security to Afghan forces.

    But NATO was quick to hail the performance of the Afghans.

    “I am enormously proud of how quickly Afghan security forces responded to  today’s attacks in Kabul,” said ISAF commander General John Allen.

    “They were on scene immediately, well-led and well-coordinated. They  integrated their efforts, helped protect their fellow citizens and largely kept  the insurgents contained.”    However, the fact that so many militants had managed to make it through  Kabul’s so-called “Ring of Steel” checkpoints and attack high value targets in  the heart of the capital has raised questions about lapses in security.

    “That they did manage to pull off simultaneous complex attacks shows quite  a level of sophistication in preventing detection... so that would be a failure  in intelligence,” said Martine van Bijlert of the Afghanistan Analysts’ Network.

    “But having said that, in a big bustling city like Kabul it is incredibly  difficult to stop this type of attack,” she said.

    US Ambassador Ryan Crocker said the ability of Afghan security forces to  respond to the attacks was a “clear sign of progress”, while ISAF labelled the  attacks “largely ineffective”.    US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton later called Crocker to discuss the “cowardly” attacks, the State Department said, and asked him to convey to  Karzai her appreciation for the “swift and effective response” of Afghan forces.

    The US, British, German and Japanese embassy compounds came under fire as  militants attacked the city’s diplomatic enclave and tried to storm parliament,  sparking a gun battle as lawmakers and bodyguards fired back from the rooftop.

    Outside the capital, militants attacked government buildings in Logar  province, the airport in Jalalabad, and a police facility in the town of Gardez  in Paktya province, where a NATO helicopter was reportedly deployed against  them.

    The attacks were one of the biggest assaults on the capital in 10 years of  war in terms of their spread and coordination, observers say, even if the final  death toll was relatively low.

    In September last year Taliban attacks targeting locations including the US  embassy and headquarters of foreign troops in Kabul killed at least 14 during a  19-hour siege.

    And in August, nine people were killed when suicide bombers attacked the  British Council cultural centre.   - AFP

    Gunfire and smoke is seen coming out of a building occupied by militants during a battle with Afghan-led forces, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, April 16, 2012. The Afghan capital awoke Monday to a second day of explosions and heavy gunfire as Afghan-led forces worked to defeat insurgents holed up in the building in the heart of the city and another near parliament.Pic by AP.

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