Grenade attack wounds 20 in southeast Afghanistan

GARDEZ – At least 20 people were wounded when a man threw grenades at a police vehicle in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, an official said.

Grenade attacks are relatively uncommon in Afghanistan but it was the second time in less than 48 hours that police have been targeted in such a way.

The attacker threw at least two grenades at a police pickup truck in a crowded market in Khost city before fleeing the area, Khost provincial police spokesman Mir Akbar Mangal told AFP.

“Twenty people, including several police, were wounded in the attack. No one has been killed,” he said, adding that police were hunting the attacker.

Khost province, which borders the Pakistan tribal areas, is a stronghold of the Al-Qaeda- and Taliban-linked Haqqani militant group.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the Taliban have said they were behind a grenade attack on a police station in Kabul on Friday night.

Police said nobody was injured after a man lobbed at least one grenade at a district police station in the west of the capital.

The insurgents who have been fighting NATO-led foreign troops and Afghan government forces for a decade use roadside and suicide bombs more frequently than grenades.

The United Nations said the number of civilians killed in violence in Afghanistan rose by 15 per cent in the first six months of this year to 1,462, with insurgents blamed for 80 percent of the killings.

There are around 140,000 international troops, mainly from the United States, in Afghanistan helping government forces combat the insurgency.

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