World

Afghan Vice President, Staunch Opponent of Taliban, Survives Blast

KABUL, Afghanistan — Amrullah Saleh, Afghanistan’s senior vp and a staunch opponent of the Taliban, survived a bombing that focused his convoy within the capital on Wednesday, the second lethal assault towards him in a bit of over a yr.

At the least 10 bystanders have been killed and 15 different folks have been wounded by a bomb that had been planted on the aspect of the highway, Afghanistan’s inside ministry stated. Pictures from the blast web site, a crowded roundabout in Kabul with mechanic retailers and crockery shops, confirmed huge carnage.

Rizwan Murad, a spokesman for Mr. Saleh, stated “two or three” of the vp’s guards had been wounded.

Mr. Saleh, a former spy chief who grew to become one of the nation’s two vice presidents early this yr, appeared shaken in a video message from his workplace about two hours after the assault, his proper hand bandaged. He stated he and his son Ebadullah, a university pupil who was with him within the automotive as he headed to work within the morning rush hour, had suffered slight burns.

“My hand is wounded, because the explosion wave was sturdy and the automotive window melted,” Mr. Saleh stated. “The state of affairs that has come on me at the moment comes on our safety forces every single day, each hour.”

The Taliban denied that they have been behind the blast, and no group instantly claimed duty.

The insurgents signed a deal with the United States in February on a withdrawal of American troops, with the understanding that the Taliban would stop bombing urban centers. But Afghan officials say they have continued to carry out attacks without claiming responsibility for them, exploiting a complicated situation in which violence is also perpetrated by an Islamic State offshoot, as well as organized crime gangs.

In July of last year, just hours after Mr. Saleh declared his candidacy for the vice presidency, he barely survived an attack on his office that killed about 20 of his closest aides, including family members. A squad of suicide bombers first set off a car bomb outside, then fought their way up the stairs to the fourth-floor office where Mr. Saleh was holding meetings. They gunned down many of his aides and guests; after hours of fighting, Mr. Saleh managed to escape by climbing a ladder to a neighbor’s roof.

The blast targeting Mr. Saleh on Wednesday came as final preparations were underway in Doha, the capital of Qatar, for direct negotiations between the Taliban and a group of government and opposition officials on ending the war in Afghanistan, which in some shape or form has dragged on for more than 40 years. The talks were originally expected to begin soon after the February deal between the United States and the Taliban, but they have been delayed for months because of disagreements over a prisoner swap.

The government has been reluctant to release 5,000 Taliban prisoners in return for 1,000 members of its security forces, an agreement that the insurgents reached with United States in talks that did not include the Afghan government. But after much pressure from the Trump administration over the past six months, the prisoner swap is nearly complete, removing the final hurdle to the upcoming talks.

The insurgents have tightened their grip on Afghanistan’s highways and are accused of carrying out a wave of assassinations in Kabul to increase pressure on the government. On Tuesday, the Taliban carried out their first large-scale attack in nearly two decades in the northern province of Panjshir, which was the hub of resistance to the group when it controlled about 90 percent of Afghan territory in the 1990s.

Fahim Abed contributed reporting.

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