A suicide
bomber and a roadside bomb have struck the convoy of Afghanistan’s
presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah as it left a campaign event in
the capital Kabul, the Interior Ministry said.
Friday’s explosions killed four civilians but left the candidate himself unharmed.
In a televised statement shortly after the
attack, Abdullah said that several of his security guards had been
wounded in the attack.
The interior ministry spokesman said the number of dead was likely to rise, the Associated Press news agency reported.
The assassination attempt on Abdullah came
ahead of a second-round presidential election on June 14, which Taliban
fighters have threatened to disrupt.
No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, the AFP news agency reported.
Afghanistan is in the middle of elections to
choose a successor to President Hamid Karzai, who has ruled since the
fall of the country’s Taliban government in 2001.
Abdullah fell short of the 50 percent
threshold needed for an outright victory in the April first round and
will face former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani in the run-off.
“We condemn the attack on respected presidential candidate Dr. Abdullah Abdullah,” Ghani said on Twitter.
US President Barack Obama recently outlined
the US strategy to end the war in Afghanistan, saying the US presence in
the country would be scaled back to around 9,800 troops by the start of
2015.
Those forces would be halved by the end of
2015 before eventually being reduced to a normal embassy presence with a
security assistance component by the end of 2016.
The drawdown relies on Afghanistan signing a
long-delayed Bilateral Security Agreement laying out the terms of the US
military presence in the country after this year.
The outgoing Karzai refuses to sign the pact, but both Afghan presidential candidates have vowed to sign it if elected.
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