Taliban bombers have
attacked an Afghan police convoy outside the capital Kabul, killing at least 30
people and wounding 50 others, officials say.
Two bombs hit a convoy of
buses carrying graduates from a ceremony on the city's western outskirts.
Paghman District Governor
Musa Khan told the BBC that all but two of the dead were police cadets.
The bombing was claimed
by the Taliban and follows an attack on a bus just over a week
ago that killed 14 people.
A Taliban spokesman said that in Thursday's attack, the first bomber attacked one bus and when rescuers began to arrive the second drove an explosives-laden car into their vehicles.
The cadets were returning
to Kabul from a training centre in Wardak province and were about to go on
leave.
A softer target: Waheed
Massoud, BBC News, Kabul
The Taliban's main
targets are the Afghan government, international organisations and foreign
military, but in particular the Afghan army and police force.
There have been numerous
attacks on the Afghan police, even when the officers are unarmed. They are
perhaps a softer target than the army, using un-armoured vehicles and lighter
weapons.
The Taliban have tried to
increase their attacks recently, especially after the appointment of their new
leader.
Big attacks make
headlines, but there have been many foiled attacks that are not widely
publicised.
Taliban violence normally
increases at this time of year, but this year there is an unusual upsurge in
several provinces.
On top of that, the
authorities have also for the first time engaged in several stand-offs with the
Islamic State group in the east, which has forced hundreds of families to flee
their homes.
The attacks were
immediately condemned by President Ashraf Ghani, who called the incident a
"crime against humanity".
"While Muslims are
busy praying during this holy month of Ramadan, the Taliban keep committing
reprehensible crimes by killing innocent people and spreading fear and
terror," he said in a statement.
Recent Taliban attacks
19 June: At least 14
Nepali security guards killed in suicide attack on minibus in Kabul
5 June: Afghan lawmaker
and at least three other people killed by a bomb in Kabul.
25 May: 25 people killed
in Kabul, including employees in judiciary
19 April: At least 64
people killed in explosion in Kabul
11 April: At least 12
police recruits killed on bus near Jalalabad
27 Feb: Suicide bomber
kills 15 people near the Afghan defence ministry in Kabul
28 Jan: Afghan police
officer drugs and kills 10 colleagues
BBC diplomatic
correspondent Jonathan Marcus says the latest violence in Afghanistan - just a
few days ahead of a Nato summit in the Polish capital Warsaw - underscores the
need for a continued Western engagement in Afghanistan where local security
forces are having only limited success in restoring order.
The US and Nato combat
mission in Afghanistan ended in December 2014.
US forces have taken on
an advisory role since then, while also carrying out counterterrorism missions
against so-called Islamic State and remnants of al-Qaeda.
Source: BBC NEWS
Source: BBC NEWS
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