Second Guesthouse Targeted In Latest Kabul Attack

May 26, 2015

An all-night gunbattle with insurgents who stormed a guesthouse in the diplomatic quarter of Kabul ended at daybreak May 27 with four attackers dead, an Afghan government minister said.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack on what it called "the occupiers." 

 Deputy Interior Minister Mohammad Ayoub Salangi announced on Twitter that four attackers were all killed after hours of clashing with police, despite carrying heavy weapons, including grenade and rocket launchers and AK-47s. 

"There were no civilian or military casualties," he added, apparently because the militants were cut off by police before reaching the guesthouse.

Authorities did not identify the guesthouse, but Afghan and Western security sources said the target was the Rabbani guesthouse, a hotel owned by the family of a former president and the current foreign minister of Afghanistan, Salahuddin Rabbani.

The Rabbani, also known as the Heetal Hotel, is popular with foreigners. The Afghan capital has been hit by a series of high-profile attacks on foreigners and government targets over the past two weeks.

Taliban militants staged an assault on a Kabul guesthouse May 13, killing an American, a British citizen, an Italian, four Indian nationals, five Afghans and two Pakistanis. 

The stepped-up attacks on government and foreign targets come despite Kabul's repeated overtures to reopen peace talks.

But the Taliban failed to hit its target this time, authorities said. 

Kabul police spokesman Ebadullah Karimi told AFP that "the attackers wanted to get into Heetal Hotel but failed."

He said they were forced to shoot it out with police in a stand of trees behind the hotel.

The manager of the Heetal Hotel said all the guests were in safe rooms and no one was hurt.

"Heetal is very well fortified. After one or two initial explosions, our guards started firing on attackers who were unable to get inside," he told AFP by telephone.

The Rabbani guesthouse has seen battle before, suffering damage in a December 2009 suicide car bombing that killed eight people and wounded nearly 40.

The assault began at about 11 pm local time, and lasted for hours, with sporadic gunfire and huge explosions reverberating through the upscale neighborhood.

Police fanned out around the neighborhood, taking up positions on rooftops, though visibility was limited by darkness. Police set up roadblocks around the diplomatic quarter to prevent the insurgents from escaping.

Based on reporting by Reuters, AP, and AFP