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Suicide bomber strikes U.S. Embassy convoy, killing Afghan teen and wounding 5 guards

The Associated Press

Issue date: 3/20/07 Section: News
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KABUL, Afghanistan - A suicide bomber exploded his car next to a U.S. Embassy convoy Monday, breaking months of relative calm in the Afghan capital with an attack that killed a teenage pedestrian and wounded five security guards on a notoriously dangerous stretch of road.

The first suicide attack in Kabul since December knocked one armored SUV across Jalalabad Road, which sees more bombings and rocket attacks than any other area in Kabul. Two other Chevrolet Suburbans also were damaged by the blast, which left the attack car a burning wreck.

A 15-year-old Afghan on the side of the road was killed, said Hasib Arian, the district police chief.

Five U.S. Embassy guards were injured, one seriously, said Col. Tom Collins, spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force. The U.S. ambassador, Ronald Neumann, was not in the convoy, embassy spokesman Joe Mellott said.

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said in a phone call to The Associated Press that a Taliban militant from Khost province conducted the attack.

The explosion, witnessed by an Associated Press reporter traveling behind the convoy, occurred about 2 miles from the embassy on the road leading to the U.S. military base at Bagram and on to the city of Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan.

Last month, a suicide bomber killed 23 people outside the Bagram base during a visit by Vice President Dick Cheney. In September, a suicide bombing near the U.S. Embassy in Kabul killed 16 people, including two U.S. soldiers.

The U.S. Embassy closed after Monday's attack and issued a warning to Americans in Kabul.

U.S. Embassy security teams initially prevented Afghan police, NATO soldiers and journalists from getting close to the vehicles.

"When I reached the bomb site, I told them, 'I am the chief of district No. 9. It is my duty to investigate, let me go,'" said Arian, the police chief. "But they didn't listen. They pushed me, they humiliated me."

Also Monday, Daniele Mastrogiacomo, a reporter for the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, was released by the Taliban after two weeks in captivity in Helmand province. Italian Premier Romano Prodi said securing his freedom "was not simple." The reporter is in good health, Prodi said in Rome.
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