Deadly Blasts Continue to Ravage Kandahar

By Alok Bhatt
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan – Three soldiers and three foreigners were left dead as the result of further violence in Kandahar.  A suicide bomber drove a vehicle into the populated region of the city and detonated, creating a high-impact blast that scattered debris and blew out the windows of multiple buildings.  The home of the brother of Afghan president Hamid Karzai was also damaged in the attack, though it is unconfirmed whether or not he was the target of this particular attack.

An alleged target of the attack, however, was ascertained moments after the strike occurred.  A provincial leader divulged that the suicide-bomber intended to take out an establishment for a security company.  Though there do not seem to be any published reports on the success of the attack, this instance was the second such attack in the city of Kandahar occurring this afternoon.  The city centre suffered another explosion earlier on as a car-bomb exploded in the proximity of a hotel, wounding multiple people and destroying some shops and vehicles.

The spike in violence in Kandahar seems to have been spurred by the extensive Nato and US offense initiatives which have also been occurring in Afghanistan.  The Nato and US strikes have long been criticized for their moments of insufficient discrimination when identifying targets, resulting in unreasonable numbers of civilian deaths .  The nature of the insurgent attacks, however, is thought to be pre-emptive in nature, perhaps in anticipation of more strikes by the West.

The attacks in Kandahar also follow another strike upon German soldiers in the northern region of Afghanistan.   Opposition fighters in the province of Baghlan let fire off at four German soldiers near their military camp station.  The German Defence Ministry claims that their soldiers came under rocket-fire.

The continuance of these attacks, it seems, will only proliferate the Western presence in Kandahar, which has been identified as a pivotal territory for terrorist activity.  US-led forces have occupied the region since 2001, subsequent to the September 11 attack on US soil.  The blasts in Kandahar today signify only a couple instances in what has become a long strain of attacks which often claim the lives of many civilians.  The violence in Afghanistan, unfortunately, sees no near end if the current trends persist and escalate.

For more information, please see:

Al-Jazeera – Many dead in Afghan in blasts – 16 April 2010 (Mecca Time)

BBC – Afghanistan  attacks kill Germans… – 15 April 2010

Sky – No Britons Killed in Kandahar Blast – 15 April 2010

Author: Impunity Watch Archive