BFF-05 Gunmen storm Kabul luxury hotel, multiple casualties

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AFGHANISTAN-UNREST

Gunmen storm Kabul luxury hotel, multiple casualties

KABUL, Jan 21, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Gunmen burst into Kabul’s luxury
Intercontinental Hotel on Saturday, shooting at guests and staff and setting
the building on fire, officials said, as security forces battled to end the
more than eight hours-long assault.

Special forces were lowered by helicopters onto the roof of the landmark
hilltop hotel during the night-time siege, interior ministry deputy spokesman
Nasrat Rahimi told AFP, adding two attackers had been killed.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the latest assault in
the war-torn Afghan capital that followed a series of security warnings in
recent days to avoid hotels and other locations frequented by foreigners.

It is not clear how many people are still inside the hotel, which was
previously attacked by Taliban militants in 2011, or whether any foreigners
are among them.

A guest hiding in a room told AFP he could hear gunfire inside the 1960s
hotel where dozens of people attending an information technology conference
on Sunday were staying.

“I don’t know if the attackers are inside the hotel but I can hear gunfire
from somewhere near the first floor,” the man, who did not want to be named,
said by telephone.

“We are hiding in our rooms. I beg the security forces to rescue us as soon
as possible before they reach and kill us.”

His phone was switched off when AFP tried to contact him again.

– ‘Hostages taken’ –

Local resident Abdul Sattar said he had spoken by phone to some of his
friends who are chefs and waiters at the hotel and are trapped inside.

“Suddenly they attacked the dinner gathering… (then) they broke into the
rooms, took some people hostage and they opened fire on some of them,” he
told AFP.

An official at Afghanistan’s spy agency told AFP at the beginning of the
attack that four assailants were inside the building.

They are “shooting at guests”, the National Directorate of Security
official said.

Rahimi said the attackers were armed with small weapons and rocket-
propelled grenades when they stormed the hotel, which is a popular venue for
weddings, conferences and political gatherings.

“Seven wounded people have been taken to hospital,” Rahimi said.

“Some other guests have been rescued. We will be able to release casualty
figures once the operation ends.”

But several hours after the attack started Afghan security spokesmen
switched off their mobile phones or refused to answer AFP’s calls for an
update on casualties.

Afghan media is reporting multiple casualties in the attack, which comes
days after a UN Security Council delegation visited Kabul for a close-up view
of the conflict.

MORE/MSY/0844 hrs

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The fourth floor of the hotel, which boasts several restaurants and an
outdoor swimming pool, had been set on fire during the raid, the NDS official
said.

– Security questioned –

The last major attack on a high-end hotel in Kabul was in March 2014 when
four teenage gunmen raided the Serena, killing nine people including AFP
journalist Sardar Ahmad.

The Intercontinental was previously targeted in June 2011 when a suicide
attack claimed by the Taliban killed 21 people, including 10 civilians.

Even before Saturday’s attack was over, authorities were questioning how
the assailants got past the hotel’s security, which was taken over by a
private company two weeks ago, interior ministry spokesman Najib Danish told
AFP.

“They probably used a back door in the kitchen to enter,” he said.

Abdullah Sabet, an official at the communications and information
technology ministry, said IT officials from around the country were staying
at the hotel ahead of a conference on Sunday.

“There were 40 of them in the hotel. We don’t know if any of them have been
killed or wounded,” Sabet said.

Security at the Intercontinental, which is not part of the global
InterContinental chain, is relatively lax compared with other luxury hotels
in Kabul.

A conference on Afghanistan-China relations was held in one of its function
rooms earlier Saturday, attended by the Chinese embassy’s political
counsellor Zhang Zhixin.

An AFP reporter who attended the conference passed through two vehicle
security checkpoints.

At the entrance to the building, there was a physical inspection that could
be easily evaded by scaling a low-level barrier and entering the lobby.

Security alerts sent in recent days to foreigners living in the Afghan
capital warned that “extremist groups may be planning an attack against
hotels in Kabul” as well as public gatherings and other locations “where
foreigners are known to congregate”.

US State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said it was not known if any
American citizens had been caught up in the attack.

Security in Kabul has been tightened since May 31 when a massive truck bomb
ripped through the diplomatic quarter, killing some 150 people and wounding
around 400 others — mostly civilians. No group has yet claimed that attack.

The Islamic State group has claimed most of the recent attacks in the
Afghan capital, but authorities suspect that the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani
Network has been involved in at least some of them.

The deadliest of the recent attacks happened at a Shiite cultural centre on
December 29 when a suicide bomber blew himself up, killing more than 40
people.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0844 hrs