Insurgents dressed as doctors attack Afghanistan’s largest military hospital

Explosions and gunfire rattled Kabul’s diplomatic district Wednesday when insurgents dressed as doctors attacked Afghanistan’s largest military hospital, officials said, as growing insecurity besets the war-battered country.

No insurgent group immediately claimed responsibility for the ongoing assault on the Sardar Daud Khan hospital, but it comes as the Taliban ramp up attacks even before the start of their annual spring offensive.

At least two people were so far reported killed and 12 others wounded, the health ministry said around two hours after the raid began, with medical staff trapped in the facility posting desperate messages for help on social media.

Hospital administrators told AFP three gunmen wearing white laboratory coats were on the loose after the first explosion struck, sparking chaos inside the 400-bed facility.

“The attackers are shooting everywhere,” administrator Abdul Hakim told AFP by telephone.

“We are trying to bring the situation under control,” he said in a frantic hurry before hanging up.

At least two other loud explosions were heard as Afghan special forces sought to rein in the attackers.

“This is a criminal act. Nothing can justify an attack on hospitals,” said Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah.

“We will never forgive these criminals. Unfortunately, this attack has resulted in some casualties. The attackers entered the backdoor disguised as doctors.”

– Rising insecurity –
The attack comes just a week after 16 people were killed in simultaneous Taliban suicide assaults on two security compounds in Kabul.

Dozens of others were wounded as a suicide car bomber struck an Afghan police precinct in western Kabul and a five-hour gun battle ensued after another attacker snuck in, sending clouds of smoke billowing into the sky.

In the second attack, a suicide bomber blew himself up at the gates of an Afghan intelligence agency branch in eastern Kabul.

The growing violence underscores rising insecurity in Afghanistan over the resurgent Taliban.

The country is bracing for an intense fighting season in the spring as the government’s repeated bids to launch peace negotiations with the Taliban have failed.

Afghan forces, already beset by record casualties, desertions and non-existent “ghost soldiers” on the payrolls, have been struggling to rein in the Taliban since US-led NATO troops ended their combat mission in December 2014.

Kabul last month endorsed US general John Nicholson’s call for thousands of additional coalition troops in Afghanistan to fend off the militants before the spring offensive.

Extra troops were needed to end the stalemate in the war, Nicholson, the top US commander in Afghanistan, told the US Congress in what could be President Donald Trump’s first major test of military strategy.

Separately, the Pentagon this year said it would deploy some 300 US Marines this spring to Helmand province alone.

The Marines will assist a NATO-led mission to train Afghan forces, in the latest sign that foreign forces are increasingly being drawn back into the worsening conflict.

 

Source: The Guardian

Bus Passengers Killed in Afghanistan Attack

Latest incident to target civilians in the country’s conflict leaves 13 people dead in Wardak province, close to Kabul.

Armed men have killed 13 passengers travelling on a bus towards southern Afghanistan, officials say, the latest attack to target civilians in the country’s conflict.

Tuesday’s killings in Wardak province, which lies close to the capital Kabul, highlighted Afghanistan’s fragile security situation as President Ashraf Ghani holds talks in Washington.

With the spring fighting season about to begin, Ghani has asked the US for “flexibility” as it pulls out its remaining 10,000 troops by the end of 2016.

Ataullah Khogyani, spokesperson for the provincial governor, told AFP a group of armed men opened fire on a bus in Wardak around 1am local time (2030 GMT Monday), killing 13 people including one woman.

The bus was heading for the southern city of Kandahar, once a bastion of the Taliban.

Read More: aljazeera

Meet Afghanistan’s Only Female Taxi Driver Who’s Getting Death Threats

Sara Bahai’s decision to become Afghanistan’s only known female taxi driver has earned her alot of death threats..Bahai, now around 40 years old, had already spent much of her life defying taboos in Afghanistan, where women are widely regarded as inferior to men and discouraged from working outside the home.

According to AP,She never married, she said, because she had to support her parents and siblings and feared a husband would prevent her from working. With no children of her own she adopted two boys, now both in high school. When Taliban insurgents shot and killed her brother-in-law, she took in her sister and seven nieces and nephews. She now supports a dozen people.

To put food on the table, she drives around the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif in a spotlessly clean yellow and white Toyota Corolla with sparkly woven seat covers and a good luck talisman in the front window.

“I receive threats from unknown callers who tell me to not drive in the city because I am a woman, because it is against Islam. Some tell me that if I continue to work as a taxi driver they will kill me,” she said.
“Male passengers are very jealous and often abuse me, but I don’t care what they think of me, I am not afraid. I will change the country with whatever ability I have to do so,” she said.

She got her driver’s license in 2002 and is also a mechanic. She earned a university degree in education and now teaches other women to drive so they can be more independent”

Why We Won’t Publish Missing $20M Audit- FG

The Nigerian government has finally opened up on why it has refused to disclose the full findings of investigations into the alleged missing $20 billion oil money, several months after a forensic examination had been concluded by an independent firm.

The audit report by PriceWaterHouseCoopers on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, accused of diverting the money, has been ready since September 2014, but the government has declined repeated demands to make the document public.

Amid pressure from the public and the opposition All Progressives Congress, APC, the government early February issued a “highlight” of the report, with a conclusion that the alleged missing $20 billion, exposed by a former Central Bank Governor, Lamido Sanusi, was a farce.

In an interview with the Financial Times of London, published Monday, Nigeria’s Petroleum Minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, said the government could not publish the report ahead of elections as only the country’s Auditor General has the powers to do so.

Even more important, the minister said the government was not making the report public to avoid a “rabid opposition”- a reference to the APC – from finding “all sorts of minute detail [in the full report] to create concern”.

Credit: PremiumTimes

Afghanistan says ISIS Commander Killed in Drone Strike

Country’s intelligence agency says the commander, identified as Mullah Abdul Rauf, was killed along with five others.

Afghan officials have said that a senior commander in the armed ISIS group has been killed in a drone strike in the southern Helmand province.

Afghanistan’s intelligence agency, the NDS, put out a statement on Monday saying the commander, identified as Mullah Abdul Rauf, was killed along with five other fighters when a drone-fired missile struck their car.

Read Morealjazeera.com

British PM Cameron Arrives in Afghanistan to Meet Unity Government

British Prime Minister David Cameron made an unannounced visit to Afghanistan on Friday to meet with the new unity government, the first major Western leader to visit since an election crisis was resolved, easing threats of armed conflict.

Cameron’s visit comes four days after new President Ashraf Ghani was sworn into office after months of political turmoil following a disputed election.

Cameron said he was looking forward to working in future with Ghani and with new Afghan chief executive Abdullah Abdullah.

“We all share a common goal, which is a more secure, stable and prosperous Afghanistan,” Cameron told a news conference with Ghani.

“We want an Afghanistan that is no longer a safe haven for terrorists or a threat to the security of either of our countries, and today we’ve discussed how together we can achieve those goals,” he said.

Shehu Sani Mocks PDP, Says Fayose’s Rice Was Mixed With Marijuana

A foremost Nigerian Human Rights Activist, Shehu Sani has attributed the ongoing mayhem in Ekiti State to Marijuana grown alongside the rice shared by governor-elect, Ayodele Fayose during his electoral campaign two months ago.

Fayose, distributed over 14,500 branded 5kg bags at the Ado Ekiti Central Mosque and Ansarudeen Central Mosque, noting that the gesture was inspired by the Ramadan season.

Explaining why they shared the rice, the Deputy Governor-elect, Dr. Olusola Elega, who spoke on the behalf of Fayose, had said: “You know the Governor-elect is a man of the people and he so much has the love of the people at heart.

Reacting to the incident, Shehu Sani, who doubles as President, Civil Rights Congress mockingly stated that the crisis was inspired by the ‘adulterated’ rice

The activist took to his Facebook wall on Monday to air his view on the mayhem, which has wrecked havoc in the state.

He said, “Since the consumption of PDP basmati rice by some people of Ekiti, peace has eluded the state. That rice must have been grown along with Ganja in Afghanistan”.