Five Taliban attackers laid siege to a British cultural centre in the Afghan capital today, killing at least nine people during a lengthy assault on the 92nd anniversary of Afghanistan's independence from British rule.
A suicide bomber in car blew himself up in front of the gate of the British Council in Kabul before dawn, and another car packed with explosives detonated moments later while four attackers, three of them men clad in the burqa headcovering worn by Afghan women, stormed the compound, police said.
Scores of Afghan and Nato troops surrounded a compound strewn with wooden and metal debris while two helicopters hovered on watch above as the fighting progressed over at least eight hours, interspersed by a total of eight blasts.
Towards the end, the last of the four attackers who fought into the compound holed himself up in the bulletproof basement of the shattered building. Authorities said the only option left to get him out was to blow him up.
A Reuters witness heard two big blasts in close succession near the siege's end, around 1pm Kabul time.
"Eight members of the Afghan national police and one foreign soldier were killed," Mohammad Zahir, head of criminal investigations for the Kabul police, told Reuters. He said he was not able to confirm the nationality of the foreign soldier.
A ministry of interior spokesman said at least 16 people were wounded in the attack on the British Council, a state-funded agency running mainly cultural programmes. It is not part of the main British embassy in Kabul's diplomatic zone.
Two British nationals and one South African were inside the compound during the attack, but were later rescued by an elite Afghan unit, British Ambassador to Afghanistan Sir William Patey told a press conference.
"This was a dastardly, cowardly attack designed to attack British interests, but ultimately ending in the deaths of many Afghans and we regret the death of the Afghans," Patey said, adding that the attack was over.
Kabul police chief Mohammad Ayob Salongi said four Afghan police, three Nepalese British Council guards and one Afghan street cleaner were killed. He too had no details on the nationality of the foreign soldier.
The Taliban said they were sending two messages: "One to the Afghan government and one to the British," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.
"We are now reminding them that we will become independent again from all foreigners, especially from the British," he said, referring to Afghanistan's independence from British rule 92 years ago.
Mr Mujahid declined to say how many bombers the Islamist group used for the attacks, which come a month after Nato handed over security responsibilities to the Afghans in several areas across the country, as part of a gradual transition process to be completed by the end of 2014.
Reuters