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Dublin: 8 °C Wednesday 22 May, 2013

Afghan MP among 20 killed after suicide bombing at daughter’s wedding

Ahmad Khan Samangani was welcoming guests to his daughter’s wedding when the explosion occurred in Aybak, the capital of Samangan province.

Afghan president Hamid Karzai (File)
Afghan president Hamid Karzai (File)
Image: Ahmad Jamshid/AP/Press Association Images

A SUICIDE BOMBER blew himself up in a wedding hall in northern Afghanistan, killing more than 20 people including a well-known commander in an attack that deals a setback to efforts to unify the nation’s ethnic factions, Afghan officials said.

Ahmad Khan Samangani, an ethnic Uzbek who is also a member of parliament, was welcoming guests to his daughter’s wedding when the explosion occurred in Aybak, the capital of Samangan province.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the blast. But in announcing their spring offensive on May 2, the Taliban said they would continue to target those who back the Karzai government and the US-led international military coalition.

There is also a long history of conflict between the Taliban — who come mostly from the country’s biggest group, the Pashtuns — and members of ethnic minorities.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai needs the minority groups — loosely known as the Northern Alliance — to back his efforts to reconcile with the Taliban.

But minorities already worry that Karzai, a Pashtun, will make too many concessions to their Taliban enemies to achieve a peace deal to end the war. Whatever support for peace talks that Karzai has won from minority groups is likely to erode if militants continue to pick off their leaders one by one.

Mohammad Nawab Sherzai, criminal investigations director in Aybak who was helping provide security for the wedding, said most of the local guests had already gathered on the second and third floors of the three-story wedding hall when the morning explosion occurred.

Samangani and other relatives and elders had moved to the first floor to welcome additional guests arriving from Mazar-i-Sharif, the capital of neighboring Balkh province.

“Suddenly, the attacker, who was among the guests from Mazar-i-Sharif, got very close to Samangani. He detonated his suicide vest,” Sherzai said. “It was a big explosion. There were bloody bodies all around the first floor. The explosion was so strong. There were people even on the third floor who were wounded.”

“Everybody was running in different directions. For about 10 minutes, nobody knew what was happening,” he said. “There was dark smoke all around. After about 10 minutes, the people were able to see the bodies and start helping with the wounded.”

40 wounded

Ghulam Mohammad Khan, the criminal investigations director of the provincial police, said more than 20 people died in the morning blast. Khan said the provincial chief of intelligence and an Afghan National Army division commander also were among those killed.

More than 40 others were wounded, including Gen. Sayed Ahmad Sameh, a western regional commander for the Afghan National Police, who was a relative of Samangani, Khan said.

Samangani became famous during Afghanistan’s fight against the Soviets, who left the country in 1989 after a 10-year occupation. He became a member of parliament last year and was considered a key leader in Samangan and northern Afghanistan.

The withdrawal of most foreign troops by the end of 2014 has spawned fears the country will descend into civil war when foreign troops leave.

To prevent that, Karzai needs the Northern Alliance to back his efforts to reconcile with the Taliban. That’s because, while Pashtuns make up 42 percent of the population, collectively the minority Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks and other smaller groups outnumber them. Without minority support, the country risks a de facto partition into a Pashtun south and a “minority” north.

The Taliban have assassinated a number of Northern Alliance and other minority leaders in recent years.

Gen. Daud Daud, an ethnic Tajik, who oversaw police activities in nine northern provinces, was killed in May 2011 when a Taliban suicide bomber wearing a police uniform blew himself up inside a heavily guarded compound as top Afghan and international officials left a meeting.

Daud had also served as governor of Takhar province in the north, deputy interior minister for counternarcotics and was a former bodyguard of Ahmad Shah Massoud, the charismatic Northern Alliance commander who was himself killed in an al-Qaida suicide bombing two days before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Other assassinations include the Takhar provincial police chief, Gen. Shah Jahan Noori, who died in the same blast as Daud. Mohammad Omar, the governor of neighboring Kunduz province in the north, was assassinated in October 2010 inside a mosque. Gen. Abdul Rahman Sayedkhili, the provincial police chief of Kunduz province, was killed by an insurgent bomber in March 2011.

A month later, a suicide bomber killed Gen. Khan Mohammad Mujahid, who was police chief in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar province in the south, but was aligned with the Northern Alliance.

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Comments (15 Comments)

  • random 14/07/12 #

    Ah that’s terrible, on his daughters wedding. The poor girl.

    Reply
  • mcbab 14/07/12 #

    This news would just leave you in total despair.

    Reply
  • Bit dodge using the picture of Hamid Karzai to illustrate this one. I was genuinely confused — I only glanced at it at first and read the front page extract as “Afghan PM among 20 killed…” The BBC, the Guardian and the Telegraph have a picture of the right guy, but we get the Afghan PM, and confusion.

    I guess Reuters had a pic and AP didn’t.

    Reply
  • The religion of Peace.

    Reply
    • Christians are no more peaceful

      Reply
    • Dermot 14/07/12 #

      Do you have a problem with reporting this — even though it doesn’t even mention Islam as a motivating factor but (mistakenly) attributes it to ethnic antagonisms? So let’s have a few examples of recent similar attacks by Christians — not, please, by folks who just happen to be Christians, but by Christians who kill others in the name of their religion, as these Islamists do in the name of theirs.

      Reply
    • Have a look at the Southern Poverty Law center website

      http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/publications/terror-from-the-right

      January 16th 1997

      Reply
    • Dermot 14/07/12 #

      @Pierce 2020: Where is the evidence that McVeigh aand Nichols ever claimed to have bombed the Oklahoma building in the name of Christian principles or quoted Christian scripture in support of their deed, as the Afghan Talibans and other Islamist terrorists do with Islamic scripture?

      Reply
    • Like I said Dermot have a look at what the Army of God did on January 16th 1997

      Reply
    • These people are sick cowardly savages who want a short cut to paradise by slaughtering other people. I wish people would stop making excuses for people who believe in holy war and other acts of savagery in the name of an imaginary friend.
      If people seek comfort and salvation in their religion then it is their right to do so and they have my 100% support,on the other hand when their actions inspired by their beliefs cause harm and hurt to others then I regard this belief system as a threat and it should be treated with the contempt it deserves.

      Reply
    • Dermot 14/07/12 #

      @pierce 2020 Violent attacks on gays and abortion clinics are reprehensible and must be condemned but get no support from Christian scriptures. Also, the number of attacks pales into insignificance beside the 16,000-plus jihadist attacks all over the world since 9/11, of which the vast majority of victims were Muslims.

      Reply
    • @Dermot Agreed, all of these attacks are deplorable. You asked for examples and I was simply giving them to you. I couldn’t agree with Joe more, people should believe in whatever they want and leave their hatred at home.

      Reply
    • The IRA used religion as an excuse for killing – of course it was not the only reason they killed they also killed in the name of peace.

      Reply
  • Dermot 14/07/12 #

    Although inter-tribal violence has been endemic in Afghanistan, suicide bombing is not one of the weapons ethnic group use against each another. Suicide per se is prohibited under Islamic law and is allowed only for religious reasons — that is, when it is accompanied by and is a means to the killing of infidels. The Taliban have decided that their (Muslim) Uzbek victims are not proper Muslims but infidels, just as Pakistani Islamic jihadists frequently carry out suicide bomb attacks against Ahmadi Muslims and other groups they brand as heretics. Ethnic differences are irrelevant to this attack, which is but a further example of the wonderful tolerance we can expect to see blossom as the Religion of Peace and Sharia law continue their advance.

    Reply
  • The belief in an immortal, omnipotent, omnipresent, supernatural being who has never been seen or heard from seems to be causing a lot of pain and misery in the world.

    Reply

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