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Suicide bomb near Afghan school kills 8
By AMIR SHAH,Associated Press Writer AP - 2 hours 47 minutes ago
KABUL, Afghanistan - A suicide bomber tried to attack a meeting of tribal elders and blew himself up near an Afghan primary school on Sunday, killing eight people and wounding 51, officials said. At least five schoolchildren were among the dead.
Meanwhile, a roadside bomb killed two Canadian soldiers and two Afghans working alongside them in a dangerous region of southern Afghanistan, Canada's military said Sunday.
The suicide blast went off near the entrance to a police and army post, said Yacoub Khan, the deputy police chief of the eastern province of Khost. U.S. troops are also stationed inside the outpost, but no troops were wounded or killed in the attack.
Five young schoolchildren were among the dead and 15 more were wounded, Khan said. At least one Afghan soldier and one private security guard were also killed, he said.
Dr. Abdul Rahman, a doctor at a hospital near the blast, said the children were aged 8 to 10.
Abdullah Fahim, spokesman for the Ministry of Health in Kabul, said eight people in total died and 51 were wounded. Asif Nang, spokesman for the Ministry of Education, said 15 students were among the wounded, many by flying broken glass.
Khan said the attack came at a time when Pashtun tribal elders from Mandozai district were meeting inside the compound to discuss security issues. It was not immediately clear how many _ if any _ of those tribal leaders were wounded or killed.
The attack came on the last day of school for the year. Students had gathered in the classrooms to receive end-of-year certificates, Nang said.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack and called it "un-Islamic."
"Those who ordered and executed this attack cannot escape the revenge of Afghans and God's punishment," Karzai said in a statement.
A U.N. spokesman said the U.N. mission in Afghanistan was "appalled" at the suicide attack.
"The deaths of young children who were receiving their end-of-year education certificates are particularly galling," said Dan McNorton.
The blast in Khost province came only hours after a late-night rocket attack in Kabul on Saturday killed three teenage sisters. McNorton said that attack "also reminds us of the true impact this conflict has on those who play no part in it."
Violence has spiked across Afghanistan the last two years, and the U.S. plans to send between 20,000 and 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan over the next six months to reinforce the 32,000 U.S. forces already in the country.
More than 6,100 people have died in insurgency-related violence this year, according to an Associated Press count of figures from Western and Afghan officials.
The year has also been the deadliest for NATO soldiers since the 2001 invasion to oust the Taliban.
In addition to those killed in Saturday's roadside bomb attack, four Canadian soldiers and one Afghan interpreter were wounded, the military said.
The two Afghans killed in the blast in the Panjwayi district of Kandahar province included an interpreter and a police officer.
NATO officials have said that Canadian troops have suffered more deaths per capita than any other foreign military in the country. More than 100 Canadians have been killed.
Elsewhere, coalition forces killed five militants and detained six during operations in Kabul and Paktika provinces on Saturday, the U.S.-led coalition said Sunday.
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