This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/08/world/asia/kabul-military-hospital-in-afghanistan-comes-under-attack.html

The article has changed 11 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 6 Version 7
Dozens Killed as Kabul Military Hospital in Afghanistan Comes Under Attack Dozens Killed as Kabul Military Hospital in Afghanistan Comes Under Attack
(about 2 hours later)
KABUL, Afghanistan — Gunmen stormed the main military hospital in Kabul on Wednesday after a suicide bombing at one of its gates, leaving 30 people dead and dozens injured in a seven-hour battle, Afghan officials said. KABUL, Afghanistan — Gunmen stormed the main military hospital in Kabul on Wednesday, killing at least 30 people and wounding dozens as Afghan forces struggled for seven hours to evacuate the crowded facility and end the siege.
Major Gen. Dawlat Waziri, a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense, said a suicide bomber on foot had detonated his explosives at the gates of Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan Hospital near Kabul’s diplomatic district, after which other attackers entered the building. The attackers were wearing medical uniforms, General Waziri said. As the war in Afghanistan has escalated and security forces suffer high casualty rates, the 400-bed Sardar Daud Khan hospital in Kabul, the capital, remains the main care center for wounded army soldiers. The hospital is busy on any given day, as the bodies of those who are killed around the country are also brought there for their families to pick up.
The Afghan Ministry of Defense said that in addition to the 30 people killed, 50 were injured. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack on the hospital through its Amaq News Agency, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, hours after the Taliban denied involvement.
Zahir Ziya, a doctor at the hospital, said he feared that the casualties would be high, with Afghan soldiers accounting for most of them. As the war has escalated and the Afghan security forces have suffered record casualties, the hospital is busy on any given day. It is the main care center for wounded Afghan army soldiers, and the bodies of those who are killed are brought there daily. Last year there was a record number of civilian and military casualties from fighting that is raging across the country. Much of the fighting is waged by the Taliban, an insurgency emboldened by territorial gains in recent years, but a group affiliated with the Islamic State has also been trying to gain a foothold in the east of the country.
Sediq Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said initial information suggested it was a “complex attack,” with two or three assailants having entered the hospital. He said the first explosion targeted one of the hospital’s rear entrances, not the main entrance. After repeated operations by Afghan forces and airstrikes by the United States military, the group has been reduced to about 700 fighters, according to United States military officials. Despite that, the Islamic State has claimed responsibility for an increasing number of suicide missions in Kabul, the one on the hospital being the most sophisticated. Their deadliest attack was at a peaceful protest last summer, which left at least 80 people dead.
Hours after the Taliban denied their involvement, the Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack through its Amaq news agency, according to the SITE Intelligence Group. The attack on Wednesday began around 9 a.m., a busy time for the hospital’s staff as well as family members visiting loved ones.
A group affiliated with the Islamic State has been trying to gain a foothold in the east of the country. But it has been the target of repeated operations from Afghan forces and airstrikes by the United States military, which have taken out about 700 fighters, according to a United States military spokesman. The attack began with a suicide bomber on foot detonating his explosives at one of the hospital’s rear entrances, after which other attackers, believed to number four, entered the building.
Despite that, the group has said that it was responsible for an increasing number of suicide missions in Kabul, the one on the hospital being the most sophisticated of them yet. Maj. Gen. Dawlat Waziri, the spokesman for the Afghan Defense Ministry, said the attackers were wearing medical uniforms.
Mortaza Ahmadi, a hospital worker trapped in the building, said by telephone that there had been five attackers, four of whom blew themselves up. “Now Afghan forces have come to rescue us,” Mr. Ahmadi said. “Some patients are still in their rooms, others have escaped.” “Thirty people have been killed, including hospital personnel and patients, and more than 50 have been wounded,” Gen. Waziri said after the attack ended around 4 p.m.
Sediq Sediqqi, the spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry, said all the attackers involved in the assault had been killed.
Survivors recounted harrowing stories of hiding under beds and holding their breath, or trying to escape through windows. Caretakers tried to evacuate patients on gurneys. Hundreds of family members anxiously waited outside the police cordon for hours.
Fazel Mohammed, 46, who works in the neurology department on the fifth floor, said he had been on duty the night before and was waiting for the morning handover when the initial explosion occurred.
“I heard firing in the corridor of the fifth floor, and I saw gunmen shooting everyone they saw,” Mr. Mohammed said. “They hit one of our colleagues with a bullet in the chest, and they fired at a girl who was a relative of a patient. Then they shot a cleaner and then another guy.”
Mr. Mohammed said he and others tried to lock themselves in one of the rooms, barricading the door. They stayed in the room for three hours before security forces rescued them.
“We understand that on the second, third, fourth and fifth floors, casualties were very high, because everywhere was full of blood,” said Dr. Akramuddin Kakar, who was stuck in the hospital for much of the seven hours. “The attackers killed whoever they saw in the main building of the hospital.”
As the elite forces who cleared the building were leaving, more than dozen vans filled with civilians and men in military uniforms were driven in to donate blood — a sign that the number of casualties could be higher than reported by the government.
The United Nations condemned the attack, asking all parties to respect medical facilities.
“On behalf of the U.N. humanitarian agencies, I strongly emphasize that medical facilities, personnel and those receiving treatment must never be placed at risk and under no circumstances be subject to attack,” Adele Khodr, the United Nations interim humanitarian coordinator for Afghanistan, said in a statement.
The attack comes at a difficult time for medical workers in Afghanistan. From January 2015 to December 2016, about 240 attacks have been recorded against health facilities or medical personnel, according to a new report by the nongovernmental organization Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict.
According to the United Nations, 3,498 civilians were killed and 7,920 were wounded in Afghanistan in 2016. Afghan officials say more than 6,200 Afghan soldiers and police officers were killed and more than 12,000 were wounded.