Jan 14, 2008, 16:28 GMT
Kabul - A suicide attack in luxury hotel in Afghan capital on Monday killed at least two guards, officials said. The former ruling Taliban claimed responsibility, saying four of their fighters stormed the hotel.
At least two militants tried to enter the fortified Serena Hotel in Kabul city on Monday night, a police source told Deutsche Presse- Agentur dpa, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The militants threw hand grenades at the guards and killed two of them, while the third attacker jumped inside the hotel compound and detonated himself, the official said, adding that the guards also opened fire at the attackers.
Taliban spokesman Zabeeullah Mujahid said that four of the militant group's fighters attacked the hotel and opened fire on the 'foreign guests and local police guards, killing several of them.'
'As three of our hero mujahideen opened fire on the guests, the fourth one detonated the explosives hidden around his body, causing a huge explosion,' Mujahid told dpa by phone from an undisclosed location.
The area around the only city's five-star hotel was cordoned off by Afghan security forces and reporters were not allowed to get closer the site.
In Oslo, media and government reports noted that Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store was staying in the hotel.
The Foreign Ministry said that Store was unharmed in the attack. Store had arrived with a 10-person delegation earlier Monday.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Kristin Melsom told the Norwegian news agency NTB that 'according to what we know Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store is unharmed and is safe in the basement of the hotel.' She said there were reports that the hotel would be evacuated, but said details were sketchy due to the chaos.
Earlier, a report by the Oslo newspaper Aftenposten said that two Norwegian nationals, a foreign ministry official and a photographer for the daily Dagbladet newspaper, had been injured in the attack.
But the Norwegian Foreign Ministry said it had no information about any Norwegian nationals being injured.
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