Afghanistan hints at Pakistan link to Kabul hotel attack

Published March 23, 2014
Bashad (C), a brother of Afghan AFP reporter Sardar Ahmad, mourns his brother's passing during the funeral ceremonies in Kabul on March 23, 2014. – AFP
Bashad (C), a brother of Afghan AFP reporter Sardar Ahmad, mourns his brother's passing during the funeral ceremonies in Kabul on March 23, 2014. – AFP
Agence France-Presse (AFP) text correspondent Sardar Ahmad poses for a photograph with his daughter Nilofar (L) and son Omar (R) at the AFP office in Kabul on February 16, 2012. – AFP
Agence France-Presse (AFP) text correspondent Sardar Ahmad poses for a photograph with his daughter Nilofar (L) and son Omar (R) at the AFP office in Kabul on February 16, 2012. – AFP

KABUL: Afghanistan on Sunday said an attack on a Kabul hotel that left nine civilians dead, including an AFP journalist, was planned “outside the country” in a veiled reference to Pakistan.

The National Security Council (NSC), which is chaired by President Hamid Karzai, also alleged that a Pakistani diplomat was seen scoping out the corridors of the Serena hotel ahead of the Thursday night raid.

Pakistan was the main supporter of the former Taliban regime in Afghanistan, and Afghan officials have long voiced suspicions about connections between the hardline movement and Islamabad's powerful intelligence services.

The latest accusation could damage relations with Pakistan which is battling its own homegrown Taliban insurgency and is seen as crucial to encouraging the Afghan Taliban to open talks.

Afghanistan made a similar allegation following a deadly restaurant bombing in Kabul in January that killed 21 people including 13 foreigners.

The NSC said the attack on the hotel, which was carried out by four teenage gunmen and claimed by the Taliban, was in fact the work of “foreign intelligence services”.

“Witness testimony and preliminary information analysis shows that this terrorist attack was directly executed or carried out by foreign intelligence services outside the country,” the council said in a statement.

“Another information of the NDS (National Directorate of Security) shows that earlier when one Pakistani diplomat entered the Kabul-Serena hotel to use its sport club, he filmed the corridors of the hotel which the hotel staff raised objections to,” it added.

The NDS is Afghanistan's main intelligence agency.

The victims of Thursday's attack included AFP journalist Sardar Ahmad, his wife and two of their three children, along with another Afghan and four foreigners – two Canadians, an American and a Paraguayan.

The couple's youngest son, two-year-old Abozar, survived with bullet wounds to the head, chest and leg and remained in intensive care on Sunday.

Meanwhile, hundreds of mourners turned out in pouring rain earlier today to lay to rest Sardar Ahmad together with his wife and two of their children who were among the victims of the Taliban attack.

After the funeral, procession made its way through the capital, they were buried side by side at a cemetery on the outskirts of Kabul, as those who came to pay their respects wept under umbrellas.

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