Gunmen target Afghan wedding

Groom, 8 other civilians slain

June 10, 2011|By Amir Shah, Associated Press
  • Villagers prayed during the funeral ceremony yesterday for nine people slain at a wedding party late Wednesday in the Dur Baba district of Nangarhar Province in Afghanistan. No one claimed responsibility for the attack. Family members said the assailants had briefly held one of the attendees at the party, saying he was an American spy.
Villagers prayed during the funeral ceremony yesterday for nine people…

KABUL — Gunmen opened fire on a wedding party in eastern Afghanistan, killing nine people, including the groom, officials said yesterday.

The assailants entered a field where the groom and his family had gathered Wednesday night in a remote district of Nangarhar Province and started shooting, said Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, the provincial government spokesman. The attackers also set fire to a nearby house and a car.

No one claimed responsibility for the attack, which occurred on the eve of a NATO meeting in Brussels to discuss the alliance’s mission in Afghanistan. President Obama is expected to announce soon how many troops he will cut from the 100,000-strong US force in Afghanistan in July, leading to fears that other NATO allies involved in the fight against Taliban insurgents may follow suit.

US Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said yesterday in Brussels that there will be no “rush for the exits’’ by the United States. Germany has warned that pulling too many Americans out of the 10-year war could jeopardize NATO’s strategy.

The cousin of the groom killed in Wednesday’s attack is the chief administrator for the local Dur Baba district, suggesting the shooting may have been an insurgent strike against the family for being allied with the government. Officials are investigating, Abdulzai said.

The Taliban and other allied groups have regularly targeted both government officials and those seen as in league with the Afghan administration or international forces. The insurgents have said they do not consider these people civilians.

The assailants briefly held one of the attendees, saying he was an American spy, said the district administrator, Hamisha Gul. Gul said he was not at the gathering but had spoken to family members.

Among the dead were the groom, his father, and one of his brothers, Gul said. He said about 20 men had gathered to celebrate and organize the wedding ceremony, which was scheduled for yesterday.

Yesterday, villagers laid out the bodies of the dead, covered in white sheets for a funeral service.

Civilian casualties blamed on insurgents have risen sharply in recent years. In 2010, at least 2,777 civilians were killed in Afghanistan, a 15 percent increase over the previous year, according to the United Nations. The increase was attributed entirely to insurgent attacks.

Afghan and international forces also continue to record more casualties. Yesterday, two NATO service members were killed in bomb attacks in the south, the coalition said. The latest deaths bring the total of international troops killed so far this month to 19.

Fighting typically rises in the warmer months in Afghanistan. June 2010 was the deadliest month of the war for the country’s military allies, with 103 international troops killed.

In Brussels, Gates sought to ease concerns about the troop cut at a meeting of defense ministers at the alliance’s headquarters.

“Even as the United States begins to draw down next month, I assured my fellow ministers that there will be no rush to the exits on our part and we expect the same from our allies,’’ Gates said.

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he was confident the US troop withdrawals would not affect security in Afghanistan.

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