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Suicide attacker targets UN vehicles

A suicide attacker in Afghanistan’s volatile southern province of Kandahar detonated an explosives-filled car near a convoy of vehicles belonging to the UN mine-clearing agency, killing himself and wounding an agency driver, the United Nations Mine Action Centre for Afghanistan (UNMACA) confirmed on Wednesday. "There were two UNMACA vehicles heading from the airport towards Kandahar city when the suicide bomber detonated his explosives-filled car near their convoy,” Masood Ahmad Hamidzada, external relations officer for UNMACA, said. “One of our drivers was slightly injured and has been treated while the other is safe,” Hamidzada explained. The bomber was the only person who died in the attack, according to police officials in Kandahar. According to Hamidzada, both of the vehicles were unmarked and only one of the vehicles was damaged during the attack. Wednesday’s attack was the second involving the United Nations in less than a week. Two men were killed and one was injured in an ambush on a UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) vehicle in the western province of Herat on Friday. Commenting on this incident, Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), said: ”I cannot say with certainty that this was an attempt to target the UN,” noting that both of the vehicles were unmarked. Violence blamed on the Taliban insurgents who were toppled by US-led coalition forces in late 2001 has left many southern and eastern parts of Afghanistan off-limits to aid workers, government officials and police. More than 500 people, many of them militants, have been killed during 2006 in various incidents in the war-ravaged nation, still recovering form over three decades of brutal civil war and internal strife.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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