At least 18 civilians were killed and six wounded Sunday in a suicide car bomb attack near a military base in Afghanistan's eastern province of Khost, where Afghan and foreign soldiers are stationed, authorities said.
The bomber detonated the explosives at a military roadblock near the entrance to Camp Chapman as people were rushing to get home for iftar, the meal breaking the Ramadan fast, said Faizullah Ghairat, the Khost city police chief. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the Taliban has often targeted Afghan and foreign troops.
The insurgents launched a countrywide offensive in late April, stepping up attacks on government and foreign targets in what is expected to be the bloodiest fighting season in a decade.
However it is ordinary Afghans who are paying the price so far this year, the UN mission in the country has said. Almost 1,000 civilians were killed during the first four months of this year, a sharp jump from the same period last year, the UN said. "We counted 18 dead and six wounded," said a doctor at a hospital in Khost city Sunday.
Ghairat put the toll at 25 dead and 16 wounded, adding that they were all civilians.
Foreign troops including US soldiers are stationed at Camp Chapman alongside Afghan soldiers. A statement from the NATO mission in Afghanistan said it was "aware" of the blast, but did not elaborate.
In 2009, Camp Chapman was the target of a spectacular suicide attack claimed by al Qaeda. Seven CIA American officials were killed in the deadliest assault on the US agency since 1983, when eight officers died in an attack on a military base in Beirut.
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