Kabul - Thousands of police were patrolling Kabul
streets on Monday as the US commander in Afghanistan warned the
public of possible attacks based on 'credible intelligence' during
the country's 89th anniversary of independence from Britain.
Most of the citizens in the capital city stayed home Monday and
7,000 security personnel closed several roads leading into the centre
of the city.
Unlike previous years, when the celebrations were held in
the city's sport's stadium in the presence of senior Afghan and
foreign officials as well as thousands of Kabul residents, the
location was changed to the heavily guarded presidential palace, a
senior government official said.
'In order to minimize the risk for the people, we decided to hold
the ceremony inside the presidential palace,' the official, who
declined to be named, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
Meanwhile, the top commander for US-led coalition forces in
Afghanistan said in a statement that 'credible intelligence' reports
'indicate that the enemies of the people of Afghanistan intend to
attack civilian, military and government targets during Afghan
Independence celebrations.'
Taliban gunmen fired at a military parade in Kabul in April
marking the 16th anniversary of the mujahideen's victory over the
Soviet Union invasion. Afghan President Hamid Karzai and other senior
Afghan and foreign officials were present.
Karzai escaped unharmed, but three people, including a lawmaker,
were killed and a dozen more were wounded.
Taliban militants have stepped up their attacks in and around
fortified Kabul, where thousands of Afghan and international
forces have their military bases.
Three Western female aid workers were killed in an attack last
week outside Kabul, while the city has witnessed at least five
attacks, including a rocket attack, against the only international
airport since the beginning of this month.
A suicide bomber on Monday morning detonated his explosive-laden
vehicle outside a US military base in the south-eastern province of
Khost, killing nine civilians and wounding 13 others, said Arsala
Jamal, the provincial governor.
President Karzai condemned the attack and said that his country
would remain free and independent despite the efforts by the
'terrorists.'
'The enemies, by killing the civilians on our independence day,
showed that they have enmity with Afghanistan's freedom and can not
see the happiness of Afghan people during their independence day,'
Karzai said in a statement issued by the presidential palace.
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