Afghanistan attack results in 11 deaths

KABUL, Afghanistan -- A squad of assailants, including gunmen and a suicide bomber, stormed a government building Wednesday in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad, killing at least 11 people.

It was the latest of half a dozen deadly attacks in that region since mid-June. No group has asserted responsibility for the attack, but most of the others have been claimed by the Islamic State militant group.

The morning attack on a busy education office building in the provincial capital left several dozen officials and visitors trapped for hours while insurgents and security forces exchanged gunfire, officials and witnesses said. Ten people were injured. A spokesman for the provincial governor's office said the assault ended later Wednesday but gave no details.

Wednesday's attack came a day after a suicide bombing in Jalalabad, claimed by the Islamic State, killed 12 people, including several children who were working in a carwash, officials said. The bomb detonated near a gas station, setting off a large fire. Two people working for the national intelligence agency, which has offices nearby, were among the dead.

In that attack, a news agency affiliated with the Islamic State released a statement saying "a martyrdom attack using an explosives jacket hit a gathering of Afghan intelligence."

The spate of Islamic State attacks in the Jalalabad region and surrounding Nangahar province has come as U.S. and Afghan special operations forces have stepped up their joint counterterrorism campaign against the foreign-based group, which controls several districts of Nangahar near the border with Pakistan.

It also comes as hopes have soared for negotiations and reconciliation with Taliban militants after a successful three-day cease-fire between the group and the government of President Ashraf Ghani that triggered an outpouring of support and sent Taliban fighters into cities and towns to greet civilians and Afghan troops.

During and shortly after that three-day truce, the Islamic State staged two deadly attacks in Nangahar province, both aimed at gatherings or locations where government officials, elders and clerics, and local Taliban forces had met to talk for the first time in the 17-year conflict.

On June 16, 26 people were killed in an attack on a gathering in the Rodat district, where Taliban and local leaders were celebrating the Eid al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Officials said explosives were hidden in a car near the meeting site.

On July 1, a suicide bombing in Jalalabad killed at least 19 people, most of them members of the country's Sikh religious minority who were traveling in a vehicle to a meeting with Ghani. One of the dead was Atwar Singh Khalsa, a Sikh candidate for parliamentary elections to be held in October.

A community of Sikh traders and merchants has been based in Jalalabad for decades, many originally migrants from India. Sikhs suffered discrimination during recent years of conflict and Taliban rule, and their numbers have shrunk from tens of thousands to less than 1,000. The candidacy of Khalsa, the country's first legislative contender from that group, was a sign of the Sikhs' hopes for political resurgence.

Analysts said the surge in attacks in and around Jalalabad suggest the Islamic State has decided to hit back hard against the growing national momentum for peace with the Taliban and to demonstrate its continued power to strike in the regional capital after U.S. and Afghan troops have driven it out of its original border-area strongholds.

"They are mainly targeting government institutions to attract local and international media attention," Mushtaq Rahim, an analyst in Kabul, said Wednesday. He said the group has "accelerated" its efforts "because they are under pressure in the battlefield."

A Section on 07/12/2018

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